Lecture 6 Flashcards

1
Q

What attributes of DNA replication make it irreversible

A

The formation of a new phosphodiester bond and the production of pyrophosphate is coupled to a second reaction catalysed by pyrophosphatase that converts pyrophosphate to two molecules of inorganic phosphate (2Pi)

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2
Q

An incoming nucleotide can only be added to the free 5’ hydroxyl group on the terminal deoxyribose sugar of an existing polynucleotide chain, T or F

A

F - incoming nucleotides can only be added to the free 3’ hydroxyl group

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3
Q

What two features are required for synthesis of RNA primers

A

DNA template strand and nucleotide trisphosphates

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4
Q

Explain how DNA polymerase synthesises the lagging strand

A

Lagging strand DNA polymerase completes Okazaki fragments in the 5’ to 3’ direction and then starts synthesising a completely new fragment further along towards the 5’ end of the parental template strand

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5
Q

Which enzyme joins 3’ and 5’ ends of the Okazaki fragments together

A

DNA ligase

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6
Q

How is cyclin-dependant kinase (cdk) activity important in limiting pre-RC formation and activation to specific points in the cell cycle

A

Cdk levels are high during S phase of the cell cycle. High cdk levels leads to the phosphorylation of already formed pre-RC thus activating them and leading to formation of the replication origin. Cdk also acts to phosphorylate the individual components of the pre-RC, particularly the Cdc6, Cdt1 and ORC elements. Phosphorylation of these constituent elements leads to their inactivation and hence inhibition of new pre-RC formation during S phase. During G1 cdk levels are low and thus there is little phosphorylation of Cdc6 and Cdt1 and hence more pre-RC formation

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7
Q

RNA primers are required throughout both the leading and lagging strand synthesis, T or F

A

F – they are only required at the start of lagging strand synthesis but throughout leading strand synthesis

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8
Q

Explain the role of ribonuclease H in DNA replication

A

Ribonuclease H removes the RNA primers in the initial DNA-RNA hybrid molecule

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9
Q

State the general equation for the addition of a nucleotide to the grown polynucleotide chain

A

dNTP + (dNMP)n –> (dNMP)n+1 + 2Pi

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10
Q

How do topoisomerases act

A

Topoisomerases release the tension created in the polynucleotide chains created by unwinding of the two ssDNA strands. This is achieved by the selective nicking and resealing of regions in the DNA molecule

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11
Q

How does DNA helicase separate parental DNA strands at the replication fork

A

DNA Helicase sits like a nut on a bolt and uses the energy released by ATP hydrolysis to drive a rotational energy which is translated to a force that opens up the replication fork

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12
Q

Give an example of another helicase mutation that causes disease, other than Werner’s syndrome

A

Bloom syndrome is another loss of function mutation that occurs in another Rec-Q family DNA helicase. The role of this helicase is to maintain genome integrity. This mutation causes a rare cancer phenotype with tumours in multiple tissues

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13
Q

Describe the ternary structure formed by proteins that increase processivity and how this complex acts

A

Sliding clamp positioning is ATP-dependant. A ternary structure is formed by the sliding clamp and clamp loader proteins and the associated ATP. This complex sits behind the DNA polymerase and provides an extra impetus to drive it forward

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14
Q

Which enzyme works with ribonuclease H to repair gaps in the DNA sequence

A

DNA polymerase – extends across the gaps created by RNA primer removal by ribonuclease H

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15
Q

Cyclin dependent kinases are important in the temporal control of DNA replication. During which stage of the cell cycle are cdk levels particularly high and particularly low

A

G1 phase – low cdk activity. S phase – high cdk activity

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16
Q

What is different between the synthesis of the leading and lagging strand during DNA replication

A

The leading strand is synthesised continuously and precedes the synthesis of the lagging strand. The lagging strand however, is synthesised discontinuously i.e. with breaks in the polynucleotide chain

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17
Q

What can be said about the orientation of the two polynucleotide chains in a dsDNA molecule

A

They are orientated antiparallel to each other

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18
Q

What attribute of the ligation of DNA fragments makes it another example of an irreversible reaction

A

Like DNA synthesis ligation results in the formation of another molecule of pyrophosphate. This reaction is then coupled to a reaction the converts PPi to 2Pi

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19
Q

What bonds are formed during the process of DNA replication

A

Phosphodiester bonds

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20
Q

Ligation of newly synthesised adjacent DNA fragments is a two-step reaction, requiring ATP hydrolysis, T or F

A

T

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21
Q

Where in the cell cycle does replicator selection and formation of the pre-replicative complex occur

A

G1

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22
Q

How do proteins that increase polymerase processivity act

A

Sliding clamp proteins keep the DNA polymerase enzyme at the primer template junction by fixing itself to the primer template junction through association with a protein called a clamp loader.

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23
Q

What is significant about sliding clamp proteins across Eukaryotes

A

Extremely highly conserved

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24
Q

Recall the carbon nomenclature for a deoxyribose sugar

A

Carbon 1 (1’) is the carbon to the right of the oxygen atom in the deoxyribose ring. Move round in a clockwise direction so that carbon 5 (5’) is the CH2OH group attached to the deoxyribose ring

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25
Q

Werner’s syndrome is an example of a disease caused by mutations in a helicase. Describe the aetiology and symptoms of this condition

A

Werner’s syndrome is a progeria (premature ageing) caused by a autosomal recessive mutation (loss of function) in the RECQ helicase encoded by the WRN gene

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26
Q

What is the initial product of DNA replication

A

A DNA-RNA hybrid molecule

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27
Q

What DNA replication event occurs in S phase

A

Origin activation – the unwinding of DNA and recruitment of DNA polymerase

28
Q

Which proteins maintain the unwound parental DNA strands in a single stranded conformation and hence ease replication fork progression

A

SSBs – single stranded binding proteins

29
Q

How do SSBs ease replication fork progression

A

They act to prevent hydrogen bond formation between complimentary base pairs within the same ssDNA strand by binding to the sugar-phosphate backbone and allowing easy progress of polymerase

30
Q

Due to the fact that DNA synthesis can only occur in a 5’–>3’ direction, how many polymerase enzymes are required per replication fork

A

2

31
Q

Describe the composition of telomeric repeat sequences

A

Telomeres consist of a hexanucleotide repeat sequence (TTAGGG)

32
Q

Whilst in yeast, autonomously replicating sequences (ARS) direct DNA replication initiation, similar structures in humans have proven elusive but seem to be defined by chromatin structure rather than DNA sequence, T or F

A

T

33
Q

Eukaryotic DNA replication is monophasic, T or F

A

F – its biphasic

34
Q

What causes the synthesis of each Okazaki fragment in the lagging strand to halt

A

When DNA polymerase reaches the RNA primer attached to the 5’ end of another fragment

35
Q

What is the role of topoisomerases

A

Prevent the DNA from becoming tangled and supercoiled during DNA replication

36
Q

Give example of helicase loading proteins that bind to ORC

A

Cdc6 and Cdt1

37
Q

Near to which genes have human DNA replication initiation sequences been found

A

LMNB2 (laminin B), MYC and HBB (Haemoglobin B)

38
Q

How does the telomerase enzyme act to create and maintain these telomeric repeats at the end of linear chromosomes

A

Telomerase is a ribonucleoprotein with an intrinsic RNA component containing the complimentary RNA sequence to the telomeric repeat sequence (AAUCCC). This RNA component acts as a template on which telomere repeat sequences are synthesised in a step-wise process known as the telomere shuffle. This allows addition of multiple TTAGGG repeats to the 3’-OH at each telomere.

39
Q

What is the approximate size Eukaryotic primers and how often do they occur in the lagging strand

A

10 nucleotides long, occurring every 100-200 nucleotides in the lagging strand

40
Q

What accounts for the end replication problem during DNA replication

A

The need for an RNA primer for initiation of DNA synthesis. Ribonuclease H removes the last RNA primer in the linear chromosome sequence however DNA polymerase can no longer extend the DNA sequence. This would result in a gradual reduction in the length of replicated DNA by the length of one primer with each subsequent replication

41
Q

Which enzyme is responsible for breaking the hydrogen bonds between complimentary base pairs

A

DNA helicase

42
Q

Recall the general and word equation for the reaction coupled to DNA ligase activity that accounts for its irreversible nature

A

PPi –> 2Pi + Free energy. Pyrophosphate is converted to two molecules of inorganic phosphate by pyrophosphatase, which also releases energy

43
Q

How does Eukaryotic replicator selection occur

A

Origin replication complex (ORC) binds to the replicator sequence. Helicase loading proteins then bind to ORC to convert the single stranded replicator sequence into a pair of replication forks. Mcm2-7 then also binds to complete formation of the pre-RC

44
Q

The primer sequence of DNA synthesis can only grow in a 3’ to 5’ direction, why is this

A

The addition of a dNTP can only occur by the nucleophilic attack of the 3’ carbon and hydroxyl on the 5’ phosphate of the incoming nucleotide

45
Q

What reaction supplies the energy required for DNA synthesis

A

Breakage of 2 high energy phosphate bonds

46
Q

What localised structure is formed by the breaking of hydrogen bonds between complimentary base pairs in the parent strand

A

Replication fork

47
Q

What is meant by DNA replication being semi-conservative

A

Each new daughter strand produced in DNA replication consists of one parental helix and one newly synthesised DNA strand

48
Q

How is the end replication problem overcome

A

Addition of non-coding telomeric repeat sequences to the 3’ end of the DNA sequence. These are long enough to enable DNA primase to bind and initiate new RNA primer synthesis and prevent chromosome shortening

49
Q

Recall the general and word equation for the first reaction in DNA ligase activity

A

ATP + 5’P –> PPi + 5’P-AMP. Adenosine trisphosphate + 5’ phosphate –> pyrophosphate + 5’adenosine diphosphate

50
Q

What enzyme is responsible for the synthesis of RNA primers

A

DNA primase

51
Q

What is meant by the processivity of DNA polymerases

A

Processivity refers the tendency of polymerases to continue to synthesise as long as there is sufficient substrate available

52
Q

What is the name given to specific DNA sequences that direct the initiation of DNA replication by recruiting replication initiation proteins

A

Replicator sequences

53
Q

The human sliding clamp protein, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) has a near identical structure to the homologue in yeast. What is PCNA significance in cancer

A

PCNA is a useful marker for hyperproliferative cells found in tumours

54
Q

What is the significance of DNA polymerases inability to work de novo

A

RNA primers required at the start of the replication of the leading strand and at the start of each Okazaki fragment of the lagging strand

55
Q

The irreversible nature of DNA synthesis accounts for the massive stability that is an inherent property of DNA molecules, T or F

A

T

56
Q

Explain the major differences between the two types of topoisomerases

A

Type I Topoisomerases nick and release one of the 2DNA strands and effective remove one turn in the molecule. This is an ATP-independent reaction. Type II Topoisomerases nick a reseal both DNA strands by causing dsDNA breaks effectively removing two turns of the supercoiled helix. This reaction is ATP-dependent

57
Q

In the reaction catalysed by DNA ligase, two phosphates are removed from ATP to form AMP which then binds to the 5’ phosphate in the polynucleotide chain, the two phosphates are referred to as pyrophosphate, T or F

A

T

58
Q

The ligation process is rendered energetically highly favourable by the conversion of pyrophosphate (PPi) to 2Pi by pyrophosphatase, T or F

A

T

59
Q

DNA polymerase can only synthesis in a 3’ –> 5’ direction, T or F

A

F – vice versa

60
Q

Temporal separation of replicator selection and origin activation ensures what

A

Each origin is used and each chromosome is only replicated once per cell cycle

61
Q

Explain the role of RNA primers in the synthesis of DNA

A

DNA polymerase requires an RNA primer in order to synthesise a new DNA strand. RNA primers supply DNA polymerase with base-paired chain ends to add new nucleotides to.

62
Q

Which enzyme is responsible for the synthesis of new DNA daughter strands

A

DNA polymerase

63
Q

What protein is said to enhance the processivity of polymerases

A

Sliding clamp proteins

64
Q

Describe the chemical mechanism for the addition of a new nucleotide to the growing polynucleotide chain

A

The 3’ deoxyribose sugar undergoes nucleophilic attack on the first phosphate bond of an incoming nucleotide trisphosphate

65
Q

What is the other product formed from the addition of a nucleotide to the growing polynucleotide chain

A

Pyrophosphate

66
Q

What chemical variables explain the irreversible nature of DNA synthesis

A

Equilibrium constant, Keq of the magnitude of 105 and the Gibb’s free energy, ?G = -7kcal mol-1