DNA replication Flashcards
Describe Meselson & Stahl’s 1958 experiment into DNA replication
- Grow bacteria in media containing 15N = ‘heavy’ DNA
- Transfer them to media containing 14N = ‘light’ DNA
- Separate heavy and light molecules by ultracentrifugation → caesium chloride gradient
- Heavy DNA sunk towards the bottom of the tube while lighter stays closer to the stop
- Visualise using UV light
What did Meselson & Stahl’s 1958 experiment demonstrate about DNA replication?
That it is semi-conservative
Describe the role of DNA polymerase
- Add nucleotides one at a time, in a 5’-3’ direction (always added to the 3’ end!)
- Using template strand to form H-bonds (how it tells which base to add next)
- 10s or 100s of nucleotides per sec
- Has to have a nucleotide to add on to (primer)
Which direction does DNA polymerase work?
5’-3’ direction - nueclotide added to 3’ end
Describe the role of primase
Generates the primer (made of RNA) thats built on by the DNA
RNA primer is removed
Describe the role of ligase
- Joins loose ends together into a single strand of DNA
- There’s base pairing between nucleobases but gaps in the sugar-phosphate backbone that need to be joined
Describe the role of helicase
Breaks H-bonds between the 2 DNA strands, separating them
Describe the role of single strand binding protein (SSB)
Binds to separated strands, preventing them from reannealing
Describe the role of Topoisomerase in DNA replication
Relieves pressure from overwinding around the replication bubble by making and resealing breaks in the DNA
Describe the leading strand in DNA replication
5’-3’ DNA synthesis points towards the replication fork and can proceed continuously
Describe the lagging strand in DNA replication
5’-3’ DNA synthesis points away from the replication fork and must be discontinuous (multiple primers)
What are okazaki fragments?
Pieces of DNA that are stuck together to make up the lagging
strand of replication
Describe the erosion of genetic material at the ends of linear chromosomes
- Primer removal at the end of the chromosome leaves a gap that can’t be filled (wrong direction for - DNA polymerase to work)
- Theres an overhand with no base pair
- On every round of replication a small piece is lost from the end of the chromosome
- Problem for the lagging strand
Describe telomeres in DNA replication
→ short DNA sequences that are repeated over and over at the end of chromosomes
(Short stretches are lost from telomeres at each round of replication)
- They protect the ends of DNA from eroding
What is the role of telomerase in DNA replication?
enzyme that replenishes telomeres from an RNA template
- Repetitive nature of telomeres also allows them to bind to specific proteins, protecting the vulnerable ends of the chromosome.