Nucleotides and nucleic acids - - Get a Free

36
Nucleotides and nucleic acids Lecture 5 Dr. Mamoun Ahram

Transcript of Nucleotides and nucleic acids - - Get a Free

Page 1: Nucleotides and nucleic acids -   - Get a Free

Nucleotides and nucleic acids

Lecture 5

Dr. Mamoun Ahram

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Nucleic acids

• Monomers

• Polymers

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Chemical composition and bonds

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DNA vs. RNA

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Nitrogenous bases

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Other nucleotides

• Xanthine, hypoxanthine and uric acid

– intermediates in purine metabolism)

• N6-methyl adenine

• 5-methyl-cytosine and N4-methyl cytosine

• pseudouracil

– has the ribose attached to C5 instead of N1 of uracil

– Pseudouridine

• 1,3,7-trimethylxanthine (caffeine)

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N6-methyl

adenineC5-methyl

cytosineN4-methyl

cytosine

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Nucleotides are acidic

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Nucleotides vs. Nucleosides

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Nucleic acid polymer

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A new era

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DNA structure

• A double helix

• Backbone vs. side chains

• Antiparallel

• Specific base-pairing

– Chargaff's rules

• Stable

• Flexible

• Groovings

• Stability vs. flexibility

• Chargaff's rules

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Chemical forces

• Ionic interactions

• Hydrogen bonds

• van der Waals interactions

• Hydrophobic interactions (Base stacking)

• Both van der Waals and hydrophobic interactions drive the formation of DNA (and RNA) double helices

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B-DNA

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Other forms

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Chromosomal packaging

• 2 meters of DNA/cell

– 40 km of thread in a tennis ball!

• How?

– Histones

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What is a chromatin?

• Chromatin = DNA molecule + proteins

• The proteins that bind to the DNA:

– histones (H1, H2A, H2B, H3, and H4)

– nonhistone chromosomal proteins

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Nucleosomes

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Chromatosome

• H1 is bound to the DNA forming with the octamer and wrapped DNA a chromatosome

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DNA-histone interaction

• Histones are positively charged

– Interaction

– Charge neutralization

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RNA

• Vs. DNA

• Secondary structures

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Molecular processes

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Types of RNA

Messenger RNA (mRNA)

• Localization

• Modification

• Variable size

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Types of RNA

Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) • Ribosomal RNA molecules comprise 65 to 70% of the mass of the

ribosome

• The rRNA maintains the structure of the ribosome and provides sites for the binding of mRNA and protein synthesis

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Types of RNA

Transfer RNA (tRNA)

• tRNA is a ~75 base molecule that carries the amino acids, and transfers them to the growing protein

• tRNAs have a common tertiary structure

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Modified nucleotides in tRNA

• tRNAs contain modified bases

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Other RNA molecules

• Small nuclear RNA (snRNA)

– RNA processing

• MicroRNA (miRNA)

– Natural

– translation regulation

• Small interfering RNA (siRNA)

– Synthetic

– Translation regulation

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Light absorbance of nucleic acids

• Aromatic pyrimidines and purines can absorb UV light

• The peak absorbance is at 260 nm wavelength

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The unit of absorbance

• The absorbance of 260 nm (A260) is constant – dsDNA: A260 of 1.0 = 50

ug/ml

– ssDNA: of 1.0 = 30 ug/ml

– ssRNA: A260 of 1.0 =40 ug/ml

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Exercise

What is the concentration of a double stranded DNA sample diluted at 1:10 and the A260 is 0.1?

DNA concentration = 0.1 x 10 x 50 µg/ml

= 50 µg /ml

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Denaturation-renaturation

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Observation of denaturation

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Factors influencing Tm

• G·C pairs

• pH

• Salt and ion concentration

• Destabilizing agents (alkaline solutions, formamide, urea)

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G-C content