mcb 110:biochemistry of the central dogma of mb

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MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB. Part 1. DNA replication, repair and genomics (Prof. Alber). Part 2. RNA & protein synthesis. Prof. Zhou. Part 3. Membranes, protein secretion, trafficking and signaling. Prof. Nogales. MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB
Page 2: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Prof. Nogales

Part 3. Membranes, protein secretion, trafficking and signaling

Part 2.RNA & protein

synthesis.Prof. Zhou

Part 1.DNA

replication, repair and genomics

(Prof. Alber)

Page 3: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Part 2.RNA & protein

synthesis.Prof. Zhou

Prof. Nogales

Part 3. Membranes, protein secretion, trafficking and signaling

Part 1.DNA

replication, repair and genomics

(Prof. Alber)

Page 4: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

DNA structure summary 1

1. W & C (1953) modeled average DNA (independent of sequence) as an: anti-parallel, right-handed, double helix with H-bonded base pairs on the inside and the sugar-phosphate backbone on the outside.

2. Each chain runs 5’ to 3’ (by convention).

Profound implications: complementary strands suggested mechanisms of replication, heredity and recognition.

MissingStructural variation in DNA as a function of

sequenceTools to manipulate and analyze DNA (basis for

biotechnology, sequencing, genome analysis)

Page 5: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

DNA schematic (no chemistry)

3. Duplex strands are antiparallel and complementary. Backbone outside;H-bonded bases stacked inside.

2. DNA strands are directional

1. Nucleotide = sugar-phosphate + base

4. The strands form a double helix

Page 6: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Nucleic-acid building blocks

nucleoside

nucleotide

glycosidicbond

Page 7: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Geometry of DNA bases and base pairs!

C G T A

H-bonds satisfiedSimilar widthSimilar angle to glycosidic bondsPseudo-symmetry of 180° rotation

Page 8: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Major groove and minor groove definitions

Major groove Major groove

Minor groove Minor grooveSubtended by the glycosydic bonds

Opposite the glycosydic bonds

Page 9: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Comparison of B DNA and A DNA (formed at different humidity)

bp/turnBase tiltMajor grooveMinor grooveP-P distance

10smallwide

Narrow6.9 Å

1120°

narrow & deepwide & shallow

5.9 Å

Major groove(winds around)

Minor groove(winds around)

3.4- 3.6 Å

Bps near helix axis Bps off helix axis

Page 10: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Average structure of dsRNA (like A DNA)

“side” view

“End” view

3’

5’

5’

3’

Minor groove shallow and wide

Major groove deep and narrow (distortions needed for proteins to contact bases)

Twist/bp ~32.7°~11 bp/turn

Bases tilted

Page 11: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

DNA structure varies with sequence1. “Dickerson dodecamer” crystal structure2. Twist, roll, propeller twist and displacement3. Variation in B-DNA and A-DNA

Proteins recognize variations in DNA structure

DNA stabilityDepends on sequence & conditionsForces that stabilize DNA: H-bonds, “stacking”,

and interactions with ions and water

DNA structure and stability

Page 12: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Crystal structure of the “Dickerson dodecamer”

Synthesize and purify 12-mer: d(CGCGAATTCGCG) = sequenceCrystallizeShine X-ray beam through crystal from all anglesRecord X-ray scattering patternsCalculate electron density distributionBuild model into e- density and optimize fit to predict the dataDisplay and analyze model

Experiment -- 1981

ResultsB-DNA!!The structure was not a straight regular rod.There were sequence-dependent variations

(that could be read out by proteins).

Page 13: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Two views of the Dickerson dodecamer

1. Double helix: Anti-parallel strands, bps “stacked” in the middle

2. Not straight (19° bend/12 bp, 112 Å radius of curvature)

3. Core GAATTC: B-like with 9.8 bp/turn4. Flanking CGCG more complex, but P-P distance =

6.7 Å (like B)5. Bps not flat. Propeller twist 11° for GC and 17° for

AT6. Hydration: water, water everywhere on the outside

(not shown).

Page 14: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Nomenclature for helical parameters

Propeller twist: dihedral angle of base planes.

Displacement: distance fromhelix axis to bp center

Slide: Translation along the C6-C8 line

Twist: relative rotation aroundhelix axis

Roll: rotation angle of mean bp plane around C6-C8 line

Tilt: rotation of bp plane aroundpseudo-dyad perpendicularto twist and roll axes

Slide

Page 15: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Propeller twist, roll and slide

No roll or propeller twist

20° propeller twist

Slide = -1 Å to avoid clash *

Or roll = 20 ° and slide = + 2Å topromote cross-chain purine stacking

Page 16: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Slide and helical twist

Slide = translation along the long (C6-C8) axis of the base pair

Page 17: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Regular DNA variations

B-like A-like

Page 18: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Helical parameters of the dodecamer

C1/G24

G12/C13

Range 4.9-18.6° 32.2-41.4° 8.1-11.2 3.14-3.54 Å

Page 19: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Helical parameters of the dodecamer

C1/G24

G12/C13

Range 4.9-18.6° 32.2-41.4° 8.1-11.2 3.14-3.54 Å

Page 20: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Helical parameters of the dodecamer

C1/G24

G12/C13

Range 4.9-18.6° 32.2-41.4° 8.1-11.2 3.14-3.54 Å

Page 21: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Base “stacking” maximizes favorable interactions

Clashes due to propeller twist can be alleviatedby positive roll (bottom left) or changes in helical twist (right)

N atoms close

N atoms separated

roll helical twist

Page 22: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Different patterns of H-bond donors and acceptors bases in different base pairs (gray)

Major groove side (w)

Minor groove side (S)

Most differences inH-bond donors andacceptors occur inthe major groove!

Sequence-specificrecognition usesmajor-groove contacts.

Seeman, Rosenberg & Rich (1976),Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 73, 804-8.

Page 23: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Lac repressor headpiece binds differently to specific and nonspecific DNAs

Nonspecific DNA

Symmetric operator Natural operator

Bent DNA

Straight DNA

Page 24: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

E. coli lac repressor tetramer binds 2 duplexes

Headpiece

Hinge helix

NH2

N-subdomain

C-subdomain

Tetramerization helixLacI tetramer

Page 25: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

E. coli lac repressor tetramer binds 2 duplexes

Headpiece

Hinge helix

NH2

N-subdomain

C-subdomain

Tetramerization helixRepressor tetramer

loops DNA

Page 26: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

E. coli catabolite activator protein (CAP)

Stabilizes kinks in the DNA

Page 27: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Human TATA binding protein binds in the minor groove and stabilizes large bends

Twist along the DNA

DNAbent

Page 28: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Human TATA binding protein binds in the minor groove and stabilizes large bends

View into the saddle End view

DNA

TBP TBP

Page 29: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

DNA bending by E. coli AlkA DNA glycosylase

Leu125 insertedinto the DNA

duplex!

66° bend

Page 30: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Base flipping in DNA repair enzymes

Human AlkylAdenine DNAGlycosylase

Phage T4A

Glycosyl Transfera

se,AGT

Page 31: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

What causes bases to flip out?

Page 32: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

What cause bases to flip out?

Thermal fluctuations

Page 33: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Fluctuations include denaturation

T

+

Native Denatured

Tm = 50/50 native/denatured

Page 34: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Tm depends on?

Page 35: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Tm depends on?

DNA LengthBase composition

DNA SequenceSalt concentration

Hydrophobic and charged solutesBound proteins

Supercoiling density

Page 36: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Length dependence of DNA stability

Fract

ion

den

atu

red

Temperature °C

10

20

30

No further increase> ~50 base pairs

Page 37: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Tm depends on G+C content

Why?

Page 38: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Tm depends on G+C content

Why? GC bps contain 3 H-bonds and stack better.

Page 39: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Calculated base stacking energies

AT worst

GC best

Page 40: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Tm depends on ionic strength

High KCl stabilizes duplex DNAWhy?

Page 41: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Mg2+ ionsPolyamines: spermidine and spermine + + +NH3-CH2-CH2-CH2-NH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-NH3

NH3-CH2-CH2-CH2-NH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-NH2-CH2CH2-CH2-NH3

+ + + +

DMSO formamide

H3C CH3 HC NH2

C

Other conditions that change Tm

OO

Stabilize (why?)

Destabilize (why?)

}

}

Page 42: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Two formulas for oligonucleotide Tm

1. Tm = (# of A+T) x 2 + (# of G+C) x 4

2. Tm= 64.9 +41 x ((yG+zC-16.4)/

(wA+xT+yG+zC)) where w, x, y, z are the

numbers of the respective nucleotides.

Duplex stability depends on length (to a point)and base composition (GC content)

Page 43: MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

Summary1. DNA structure varies with sequence.2. Propeller twist, helix twist, roll, slide, and

displacement (local features) vary in each base step.3. These differences alter the positions of interacting

groups relative to ideal DNA.4. Structural adjustments maximize stacking.5. Proteins can read out base sequence directly and

indirectly (e.g. H2O, PO4 positions, structure and motions).

6. Proteins can trap transient structures of DNA.7. Duplex stability varies with sequence, G+C > A+T8. High salt, Mg2+, polyamines increase duplex

stability.9. DMSO and formamide decrease duplex stability. 10. Stability increases with oligonucleotide length up to

a point.