Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
DNA Replication & Repair
2
We already know… Replication means copy
DNA is replicated during interphase of the cell cycle Replicated DNA is separated during anaphase of mitosis & anaphase II of meiosis Cell cannot pass the G2 checkpoint if the DNA has not replicated fully
3
Remember: One strand of DNA runs 5’ 3’
The other strand runs 3’ 5’ Complementary Antiparallel Two strands are held together by hydrogen bonds H bonds are easily broken Especially at sites rich in A-T base pairs (why?)
4
Semi-conservative replication
“New” DNA has one strand from the original DNA & one new strand
5
How do we know? Read about Meselson & Stahl’s experiments on p in your textbook Animation:
6
Each strand of DNA acts as a template to build the complementary strand
Template = pattern New nucleotides are added to the template from 5’ 3’
7
Step 1 Separate the strands
DNA helicase (enzyme) binds to the replication origin site and breaks the H bonds
9
Separated strands might anneal (stick back together)
SSBs (single-stranded binding proteins) Stick to the exposed strands so they cannot reform
10
Take a piece of string. Use a pen or pencil to poke a hole in between the strands. Now continue to separate the strands up the length of the string. What happens? Why?
11
DNA Gyrase Enzyme Loosens the tension in the separated strands
Cuts the DNA & allows it to reattach after it relaxes Also helps to relax DNA & unwind it initially
12
Replication bubble Place where DNA replication takes place
New strands are synthesized on both sides
13
Many replication bubbles are formed to speed up the process
14
Step 2 Complementary strands are assembled DNA Polymerase III
Adds nucleotides to the template in the 5’ – 3’ direction Actually adds “deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates” (just like a nucleotide but with 2 extra phosphate groups)
15
Deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate
16
A small segment of RNA is added as a “primer”
Each new nucleotide is added to the 3’ carbon of the previous nucleotide A small segment of RNA is added as a “primer” Gets the strand started 10 – 60 base pairs in length Built by the enzyme primase Temporary
17
DNA polymerase III breaks off the extra 2 phosphate groups
Dehydration synthesis Provides energy to add the next nucleotide Extra phosphates recycled by the cell
19
Remember… DNA strands are antiparallel
New nucleotides are only added in one direction So… Only 1 strand can be synthesized continuously
21
Continuous strand = leading strand
Synthesized from 5’ 3’ on a 3’ 5’ template Built toward the replication fork Discontinuous strand = lagging strand Synthesized from 5’ 3’ in short pieces on the opposite template Built away from the replication fork
22
Lagging strand… cont’d
Primers are added for each segment as the replication fork opens further Short segments are called Okazaki Fragments
23
Step 3 New DNA is finished DNA Polymerase I DNA ligase
Removes RNA primers (from both strands) Replaces them with DNA nucleotides DNA ligase Creates phosphodiester bonds to connect the Okazaki fragments
24
Finished! 2 copies of DNA, each with 1 old strand, 1 new strand
Twist into double helix shape
25
Quality Control DNA polymerase III & I check the strands as they are built “proofread” If there is a mistake, either enzyme can be a “exonuclease” & cut out the mistake
26
Summary: Enzymes involved in DNA replication
DNA helicase DNA gyrase DNA polymerase III RNA Primase DNA polymerase I DNA ligase Describe the role of each enzyme…
28
Homework Questions Page 223: #2, 4, 5, 6 Page 230: #2-4, 6, 9-14
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com Inc.
All rights reserved.