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Cell Biology & Molecular Biology

Cell Biology & Molecular Biology. Lecturer Dr. Kamal E. M. Elkahlout , Assistant Professor of Biotechnnolgy Lecture 3 (Nucleic Acids Structure & Function). Introduction.

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Cell Biology & Molecular Biology

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  1. Cell Biology & Molecular Biology Lecturer Dr. Kamal E. M. Elkahlout, Assistant Professor of Biotechnnolgy Lecture 3 (Nucleic Acids Structure & Function)

  2. Introduction • Life depends on the ability of cells to store, retrieve, and translate the genetic instructions required to make and maintain a living organism. • The hereditary information is passed on from a cell to its daughter cells at cell division, and • from one generation of an organism to the next through the organism's reproductive cells. • These instructions are stored within every living cell as its genes, the information-containing elements that determine the characteristics of a species as a whole and of the individuals within it.

  3. Introduction • Biologists in the 1940s had difficulty in accepting DNA as the genetic material because of the apparent simplicity of its chemistry. • Early in the 1950s, DNA was first examined by x-ray diffraction analysisindicating that DNA was composed of two strands of the polymer wound into a helix.

  4. Figure 4-2. Experimental demonstration that DNA is the genetic material. These experiments, carried out in the 1940s, showed that adding purified DNA to a bacterium changed its properties and that this change was faithfully passed on to subsequent generations. Two closely related strains of the bacterium Streptococcus pneumoniae differ from each other in both their appearance under the microscope and their pathogenicity.

  5. It was thought DNA was unlikely to carry hereditary info • it has only 4 types of subunits • The elucidation of the DNA structure immediately solved the problem of how the information in this molecule might be copied, or replicated • X-ray diffraction results indicated a double-stranded helix

  6. A DNA Molecule Consists of Two Complementary Chains of Nucleotides • A DNA molecule consists of two long polynucleotide chains composed of four types of nucleotide subunits. • Each of these chains is known as a DNA chain, or a DNA strand. Hydrogen bonds between the base portions of the nucleotides hold the two chains together.

  7. O H C N 6 C N 7 5 1 H C 8 2 4 C C 9 Pyrimidines Purines 3 N O N NH2 NH2 2' deoxyribose Ribose H P O O H C guanine (G) 4 N C 5 3 O 2 6 C C 1 N H O NH2 H C cytosine (C) N 6 C N 7 5 1 H C O 8 2 4 C C 9 3 N H H3C C H N 4 C N 5 3 H 2 6 C C adenine (A) 1 N H O inorganic phosphate H thymine (T) Nucleic Acid Composition

  8. NH2 C N 6 C N 7 5 1 H C 8 2 4 C C 9 O O O nucleoside linkage 3 N H N CH2 O O O O P P P O 5' 5' phosphates O O O 1' C C 4' H H H C C H 3' 2' 3' hydroxyl OH H sugar + base + phosphate = nucleotide dATP (deoxyadenosine triphosphate)

  9. 5' T CH2 O 4' 1' H H H H 3' 2' phosphodiester bond H C 5' CH2 O 4' 1' H H H H 3' 2' H G 5' to 3' 5' CH2 O 4' 1' H H H H 2' H OH 3' O O O O O O P P P O O O O O O C C C C C C C C C C C C DNA Structure • 2 long polynucleotide chains = strands or chains • Each strand = sugar-phosphate backbone held together by covalent bonds • 2 chains held together by H bonds between the nitrogenous bases • One end of the chain has a 3’-hydroxyl and the other a 5’-phosphate at its terminus. • This polarity in a DNA chain is indicated by referring to one end as the 3’ end and the other as the 5’ end.

  10. Figure 4-3. DNA and its building blocks. DNA is made of four types of nucleotides, which are linked covalently into a polynucleotide chain (a DNAstrand) with a sugar-phosphate backbone from which the bases (A, C, G, and T) extend. A DNA molecule is composed of two DNA strands held together byhydrogen bonds between the paired bases. The arrowheads at the ends of the DNA strands indicate the polarities of the two strands, which run antiparallelto each other in the DNA molecule. In the diagram at the bottom left of the figure, the DNA molecule is shown straightened out; in reality, it is twisted into a double helix, as shown on the right.

  11. Figure 4-4. Complementary base pairs in the DNA double helix. The shapes and chemical structure of the bases allow hydrogen bonds to form efficiently only between A and T and between G and C, where atoms that are able to form hydrogen bonds can be brought close together without distorting the double helix. As indicated, two hydrogen bonds form between A and T, while three form between G and C. The bases can pair in this way only if the two polynucleotide chains that contain them are antiparallelto each other.

  12. H H O N H N H C C C C C G C N N C N C H H H N C N C H H3C N H O N H N O H H C C H C C C 3 hydrogen bonds A N T N C N C H H H N C N C H H O 2 hydrogen bonds Chargaff’s rules • The members of each base pair can fit together within the double helix only if the two strands of the helix are antiparallel • Thus each strand of a DNA molecule contains a sequence of nucleotides that is exactly complementary to the nucleotide sequence of its partner strand.

  13. To maximize the efficiency of base-pair packing, the two sugar-phosphate backbones wind around each other to form a double helix, with one complete turn every ten base pairs Same distance across molecule at each base pair (20Å)

  14. A space-filling model of 1.5 turns of the DNA double helix. Each turn of DNA is made up of 10.4 nucleotide pairs and the center-to-center distance between adjacent nucleotide pairs is 3.4 nm. The coiling of the two strands around each other creates two grooves in the double helix. As indicated in the figure, the wider groove is called the major groove, and the smaller the minor groove. = is wider 10 nucleotides per helical turn = 34Å

  15. What kind of instructions does the genetic information contain?? • The genetic information consists primarily of instructions for making proteins • Proteins serve as building blocks for cellular structures • They form the enzymes that catalyze all of the cell's chemical reactions • They regulate gene expression • They enable cells to move and to communicate with each other

  16. 3’ 5’ 5’ 3’ Biological Functions How can information be carried in chemical form of DNA, and how is it accurately copied??? The linear sequence of nucleotides in a gene must therefore somehow spell out the linear sequence of amino acids in a protein The linear amino acids sequence of a protein determine its structure The three-dimensional structure of a protein is responsible for its biological function

  17. 5’- CCCTGTGGAGCCACACCCTAGGGTTGGCCA -3’ 3’- GGGACACCTCGGTGTGGGATCCCAACCGGT -5’ 5’→ • The complete set of information in an organism’s DNA is called its genome • human genome – 3.2 x 109 nucleotides • The complete sequence of the human genome would fill more than 1000 books ← 3’

  18. Figure 4-8. DNA as a template for its own duplication. As the nucleotide A successfully pairs only with T, and G with C, each strand of DNA can specify the sequence of nucleotides in its complementary strand. In this way, double-helical DNA can be copied precisely.

  19. In Eucaryotes, DNA Is Enclosed in a Cell Nucleus • Nearly all the DNA in a eucaryotic cell is sequestered in a nucleus, which occupies about 10% of the total cell volume. • The nuclear envelope allows the many proteins that act on DNA to be concentrated where they are needed in the cell • it also keeps nuclear and cytosolic enzymes separate, (Compartmentalization) a feature that is crucial for the proper functioning of eucaryotic cells.

  20. Chromosomal DNA and Its Packaging in the Chromatin Fiber

  21. What is so special about chromosomes? • They are huge: • One bp≈ 600 Dalton • an average chromosome is 107 bp long = (109-1010 ) Dalton • for comparison a protein of 3x105 is considered very big. • They contain a huge amount of non- redundant information (it is not just a big repetitive polymer but it has a unique sequence) • There is only one such molecule in each cell. (unlike any other molecule when lost it cannot be re-synthesized or imported)

  22. What is so special about chromosomes? • Each human cell contains approximately 2 meters of DNA if stretched end-to-end • The nucleus of a human cell, which contains the DNA, is only about 6 mm in diameter. • This is geometrically equivalent to packing 40 km of extremely fine thread into a tennis ball !!!!! • How is this possible???

  23. The complex task of packaging DNA is accomplished by specialized proteins • They bind to and fold the DNA • They generate a series of coils and loops that provide increasingly higher levels of organization • Amazingly • The DNA is very tightly folded • But available to the many enzymes in the cell that replicate it, repair it, and use its genes to produce proteins.

  24. 3’ 5’ 3’ 5’ Chromosomes Contain Long Strings of Genes Coding sequence Regulatory sequences GENE A gene is a segment of DNA that contains the instructions for making a particular protein (or a set of closely related proteins). structural functions catalytic functions

  25. Human Chromosomes • Each cell contains two copies of each chromosome: one maternal and one paternal which are called homologous chromosomes (homologs) • Exceptions: • The germ cells contain only one copy • A few highly specialized cell types that cannot multiply lack DNA (ex. red blood cells) • The XY-sex chromosomes pair in males are the only nonhomologous chromosomes.

  26. The display of the 46 human chromosomes at mitosis is called the human karyotype. • If parts of chromosomes are lost, or switched between chromosomes, these changes can be detected by changes in the banding patterns or by changes in the pattern of chromosome painting . • Cytogeneticists use these alterations to detect chromosome abnormalities that are associated with inherited defects or with certain types of cancer that arise through the rearrangement of chromosomes in somatic cells.

  27. DNA hybridization can be used to distinguish these human chromosomes by "painting“ each one a different color . • Chromosome painting is typically done at the stage in the cell cycle when chromosomes are especially compacted and easy to visualize • Human genome pproximately 3.2 x 109 nucleotides.

  28. Two pairs of chromosomes, stained with Giemsa, from a patient with ataxia, a disease characterized by progressive deterioration of motor skills.

  29. The genome of S. cerevisiae (budding yeast) 6000 genes equals 12,147,813 nucleotide pairs long .

  30. The Nucleotide Sequence of the Human Genome Shows How Genes Are Arranged in Humans

  31. Table 4-1. Vital Statistics of Human Chromosome 22 and the Entire Human Genome (determined and published at 1999)

  32. Chromosomes Contain Long Strings of Genes • A gene is usually defined as a segment of DNA that contains the instructions for making a particular protein (or a set of closely related proteins). • Several percent of genes produce RNA molecules performing different catalytic & structural functions. • Chromosomes from many eucaryotes (including humans) contain, in addition to genes, a large excess of interspersed DNA that does not seem to carry critical information. • Sometimes called junk DNA to signify that its usefulness to the cell has not been demonstrated

  33. A few generalizations regarding the arrangement of genes in human chromosomes • Only a few percent of the human genome codes for proteins or structural and catalytic RNAs. • Much of the remaining chromosomal DNA is made up of transposable elements • short, mobile pieces of DNA that have gradually inserted themselves in the chromosome over time.

  34. A few generalizations regarding the arrangement of genes in human chromosomes • The large average gene size of 27,000 nucleotide pairs. • Exons≈ 1300 bp: encode for a protein of average size ≈ 430 aa in humans • IntronsMost of the remaining DNA in a gene: noncoding DNA that interrupt exons • In contrast, the majority of genes from organisms with compact genomes lack introns.

  35. A few generalizations regarding the arrangement of genes in human chromosomes • Each gene is associated with regulatory DNA sequences • Ensure that the gene is expressed at the proper level and time, and the proper type of cell. • In humans, the regulatory sequences for a typical gene are spread out over tens of thousands of nucleotide pairs. • These regulatory sequences are more compressed in organisms with compact genomes.

  36. How to identify coding and additional noncoding DNA sequences that are important? • The strategy is to compare the human sequence with that of the corresponding regions of a related genome, such as that of the mouse. • In general, conserved regions represent functionally important exons and regulatory sequences. • In contrast, nonconserved regions represent DNA whose sequence is generally not critical for function.

  37. Three types of sequences required to propagate a chromosome • Replication origin: the location at which duplication of the DNA begins. • Eucaryotic chromosomes contain many origins of replication for rapid replication • Centromere: allows one copy of each duplicated and condensed chromosome to be pulled into each daughter cell when a cell divides. • kinetochoreprotein complex forms at the centromere • It attaches the duplicated chromosomes to the mitotic spindle, allowing them to be pulled apart

  38. Three types of sequences required to propagate a chromosome • Telomeres: the ends of a chromosome. • Contain repeated nucleotide sequences that enable the ends of chromosomes to be efficiently replicated. • The repeated telomere DNA sequences, together with the regions adjoining them, form structures that protect the end of the chromosome from being recognized by the cell as a broken DNA molecule in need of repair.

  39. Each DNA Molecule That Forms a Linear Chromosome Must Contain a Centromere, Two Telomeres, and Replication Origins

  40. Chromosomes Exist in Different States Throughout the Life of a Cell • To form a functional chromosome, a DNA molecule must be able to do more than simply carry genes: • it must be able to replicate • the replicated copies must be separated and reliably partitioned into daughter cells at each cell division. • This process occurs through an ordered series of stages, collectively known as the cell cycle.

  41. DNA Molecules Are Highly Condensed in Chromosomes • Human chromosome 22 contains about 48 million nucleotide pairs. • When stretched out, its DNA would extend about 1.5 cm. • DNA of a mitotic chromosome 22 measures only about 2 mm in length • end-to-end compaction ratio is nearly 10,000-fold • DNA of interphase chromosomes is still tightly packed but less than mitotic chromosomes • With an overall compaction ratio of approximately 1000-fold

  42. Chromosome structure is dynamic • Chromosomes globally condense in accord with the cell cycle • chromosomes are most condensed during mitosis • Different regions of the interphase chromosomescondense and decondense to allow access to specific DNA sequences for: • gene expression • DNA repair • replication. • The packaging of chromosomes must therefore be flexible to allow rapidlocalized, on-demand access to the DNA.

  43. Interphase Mitosis Note difference in scales

  44. Nucleosomes Nucleosomes Are the Basic Unit and First Level of Eucaryotic Chromosome Structure

  45. Two general classes of proteins bind to the DNA to form eucaryotic chromosomes • The histones chromosomal proteins • present in such enormous quantities in the cell (≈60 million molecules of each per human cell) • their total mass in chromatin is about equal to that of the DNA • The non-histone chromosomal proteins • Chromatin: The complex of both classes of protein with the nuclear DNA of eucaryotic cells

  46. Histones • Responsible for the first and most basic level of chromosome organization, the nucleosome • Under the electron microscope: • Most of interphase chromatin, is in the form of a fiber (about 30 nm in diameter) • When unfolded the 30nm thick chromatin can be seen as a series of "beads on a string". • The string is DNA • Each bead is a "nucleosome core particle" that consists of DNAwound around a protein core formed from histones. • The beads on a string represent the first level of chromosomal DNA packing.

  47. The nucleosome core particle • A disc-shaped histone core around which the DNA was tightly wrapped 1.65 turns in a left-handed coil

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