Central Dogma
DNA Replication
Watson and Crick were particularly excited about their model because the
complementary nature of the DNA
molecule suggested a way in which it might self-replicate. The two strands
could separate from one another, each still containing the complete information,
and synthesize a new strand. However, experiments still had to be done to prove
that this model was true:
Messelson and Stahl
In 1957, Matthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl did an
experiment to determine which of the following models best represented DNA
replication:
- Did the two strands unwind and each act as a template for new strands?
This is semiconservative replication, because each new strand is half
comprised of molecules from the old strand.
- Did the strands not unwind, but somehow generate a new double stranded DNA
copy of entirely new molecules? This is conservative replication.
In order to determine which of these models was true, the following
experiment was performed: The original DNA strand was labelled with the heavy
isotope of nitrogen, N-15. This DNA was allowed to go through one round of
replication with N-14, and then the mixture was centrifuged so that the heavier
DNA would form a band lower in the tube, and the intermediate (one N-15 strand
and one N-14 strand) and light DNA (all N-14) would appear as a band higher in
the tube. The expected results for each model were:
The actual results were as expected for the semiconservative model and thus
Watson and Crick's suspicion was borne out.
Biochemical Mechanism of DNA Replication
It is very important to know
that DNA replication is not a passive and spontaneous process. Many enzymes are
required to unwind the double helix and to synthesize a new strand of DNA. We
will approach the study of the moelcular mechanism of DNA replication from the
point of view of the machinery that is required to accomplish it. The unwound
helix, with each strand being synthesized into a new double helix, is called the
replication fork.
The Enzymes of DNA Replication
- Topoisomerase is responsible for initiation of the unwinding of the
DNA. The tension holding the helix in its coiled and supercoiled structure can
be broken by nicking a single strand of DNA. Try this with string. Twist two
strings together, holding both the top and the bottom. If you cut only one of
the two strings, the tension of the twisting is released and the strings
untwist.
- Helicase accomplishes unwinding of the original double strand, once
supercoiling has been eliminated by the topoisomerase. The two strands very
much want to bind together because of their hydrogen bonding affinity for each
other, so the helicase activity requires energy (in the form of ATP
) to break the strands apart.
- DNA polymerase proceeds along a single-stranded molecule of DNA,
recruiting free dNTP's (deoxy-nucleotide-triphosphates) to hydrogen bond with
their appropriate complementary dNTP on the single strand (A with T and G with
C), and to form a covalent phosphodiester bond with the previous nucleotide of
the same strand. The energy stored in the triphosphate is used to covalently
bind each new nucleotide to the growing second strand. There are different
forms of DNA
polymerase , but it is DNA polymerase III that is responsible for the
processive synthesis of new DNA strands. DNA polymerase cannot start
synthesizing de novo on a bare single strand. It needs a primer with a
3'OH group onto which it can attach a dNTP. DNA polymerase is actually an
aggregate of several different protein subunits, so it is often called a
holoenzyme. The holoenzyme also has proofreading activities, so that it
can make sure that it inserted the right base, and nuclease (excision of
nucleotides) activities so that it can cut away any mistakes it might have
made.
- Primase is actually part of an aggregate of proteins called the
primeosome. This enzyme attaches a small RNA primer to the
single-stranded DNA to act as a substitute 3'OH for DNA polymerase to begin
synthesizing from. This RNA primer is eventually removed by RNase H and
the gap is filled in by DNA polymerase I.
- Ligase can catalyze the formation of a phosphodiester bond given an
unattached but adjacent 3'OH and 5'phosphate. This can fill in the unattached
gap left when the RNA primer is removed and filled in. The DNA polymerase can
organize the bond on the 5' end of the primer, but ligase is needed to make
the bond on the 3' end.
- Single-stranded binding proteins are important to maintain the
stability of the replication fork. Single-stranded DNA is very labile, or
unstable, so these proteins bind to it while it remains single straded and
keep it from being degraded.
The Replication Fork
Why can DNA polymerase only act from 5' to 3'? The reason is the relative
stability of each end of DNA. A triphosphate is required to provide energy for
the bond between a newly attached nucleotide and the growing DNA strand.
However, this triphosphate is very unstable and can easily break into a
monophosphate and an inorganic pyrophosphate, which floats away into cell. At
the 5' end of the DNA, this triphosphate can easily break, so if a strand has
been sitting in the cell for a while, it would not be able to attach new
nucleotides to the 5' end once the phosphate had broken off. On the other hand,
the 3' end only has a hydroxyl group, so as long as new nucleotide triphosphate
are always brought by DNA polymerase, synthesis of a new strand can continue no
matter how long the 3' end has remained free.
This presents a problem, since one strand of the double helix is 5' to 3' ,
and the other one is 3' to 5'. How can DNA polymerase synthesize new copies of
the 5' to 3' strand, if it can only travel in one direction? This strand is
called the lagging strand, and DNA polymerase makes a second copy of this
strand in spurts, called Okazaki fragments, as shown in the diagram. The
other strand can proceed with synthesis directly, from 5' to 3', as the helix
unwinds. This is the leading strand.
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