Molecular Genetics - DNA Replication Flashcards
Helicase function
- “Unzips” DNA molecule
- Produces replication fork (template for replication)
Single stranded binding proteins (SSBPs) function
Bond to strand to prevent the strands from reconnecting by preventing formation of hydrogen bonds
Topoisomerase function
- After strands are separated, tension is created in still joined sections
- Cuts one of the strands near replication fork to allow them to untangle
- Cut strand is then rejoined
RNA primase function
- In order for new strand of DNA to be synthesized, RNA primer must be added (starting point for synthesis)
- Places RNA primers
- On lagging strand, new primer must be places each time the replication fork is extended
DNA polymerase III function
- During elongation, it adds new nucleotides to RNA primer
- Can only build new strand in 5’ to 3’ direction
- Moves continuously along leading strand, but on lagging strand it eventually runs into primer placed ahead
DNA polymerase I function
Removes RNA primers and replaces with DNA nucleotides
DNA ligase function
- Joins Okazaki fragments once leading + laggings strands are formed and RNA primers are removed
- Catalyzes formation of phosphodiester bond between last nucleotide of one fragment and first nucleotide of the next
DNA polymerase II function
- Reads newly formed strands and checks for distortions (areas w/ mismatched base pairs)
- If distortion detected, it will remove a small section of the DNA
- Section will be replaced with appropriate nucleotides and fragments are joined by DNA ligase
Order of enzymes used in DNA replication
Helicase, SSBPs, topoisomerase, RNA primase, DNA polymerase III, DNA polymerase I, DNA ligase, DNA polymerase II
What is semiconservative replication?
- One strand from the parent DNA becomes half (semi) of each of the new DNA molecules
- Parent strands are used as templates to build new strands by matching base pairs
What are Okazaki fragments and why do they form? How do they affect rate of replication?
- Lagging strand is made up of multiple primers and short DNA fragments
- Form since DNA polymerase III can only synthesize 5’ to 3’ (lagging strand runs 3’ to 5’) so new primer must be places each time replication fork is extended
- Lagging strand replicates slower because it takes time to remove primers, replace with nucleotides, and join fragments
What are two ways to correct errors that occur in replication?
- DNA polymerase III cannot move forward if base pairs are mismatched, so it backs up tp replace the incorrect bases and then continues
- DNA polymerase II checks newly formed strands for distortions and cuts out small DNA section where they are detected. That section is then replaced with proper nucleotides and joined by DNA ligase