Utilisateur
That DNA is the genetic material.
%G = %C and %A = %T.
DNA is a double helix.
Proposed the DNA double helix model.
Streptococcus pneumoniae.
Smooth (S) strain; it has a polysaccharide capsule that protects from immune attack.
Heat-killed S + live R → mice died; R bacteria transformed into virulent S by a “transforming principle.”
DNA.
DNA fraction could confer s phenotype on r bacteria; transformation unaffected by protease or RNase, but destroyed by DNase.
Showed DNA, not protein, carries genetic information using T2 phages.
DNA → ³²P, Protein → ³⁵S.
infect bac with labelled t2 phages, agitate bac in blender to seperate phage coats from bac. 70% ³²P entered bacteria and was passed to progeny phage; 80% ³⁵S stayed outside in phage coats. progeny phages had majority (30%- 32P) label.
that heredity is similar both in bacteria (prokaryotes) and higher organisms (eukaryotes)- both contain DNA as genetic material
Deoxynucleotides (base + sugar + phosphate).
Phosphodiester bonds (5′ carbon to 3′ carbon).
5′ phosphate and 3′ hydroxyl.
Antiparallel.
Hydrogen bonds between complementary bases. DNA is more stable than RNA, DNA lacks the 2′-OH group on its sugar, making it less prone to hydrolysis.
purines: Adenine Guanine
pyrmidine: Cytosine Uracil Thymine (CUT)
G≡C pairs have 3 hydrogen bonds vs 2 in A=T, plus stronger base stacking interactions, making DNA with high G≡C content more stable. Higher G≡C content → higher melting temperature → more stability.
A mass of DNA in bacteria representing ~1000× condensation of the chromosome.
~400 loops, each ~10 kb, connected to a central core.
Its position is carefully coordinated within the cell.
DNA replication, recombination, and transcription.
Dynamic — its shape and organization change with cell activities.
Organize DNA and regulate gene expression.
They bend, wrap, and bridge DNA.
They alter nucleoid shape and regulate gene expression.
Bending of DNA back on itself due to under- or over-winding of the double helix.
DNA is over-wound (strands wrap around each other more than relaxed DNA).
DNA is under-wound (strands wrap around each other less than relaxed DNA).
constrain super coils to prevent twisting. changes in nap binding can lead to unconstrained super coils, aids strand separation in replication, recombination, transcription.
Topoisomerase I (Type I): Cuts one strand of DNA.Relieves negative supercoiling (relaxes underwound DNA).
DNA gyrase introduces negative supercoils (not positive) and helps remove positive supercoils ahead of replication/transcription.
They create positive supercoils ahead of replication/transcription forks.
Enzymes that modulate supercoiling by cutting, passing, and resealing DNA strands.
Type I: Cuts one strand, passes the other through, reseals; removes negative supercoils (TopA). ends as an infinity.
Type II: Cuts both strands, passes two strands through (from same or different DNA), reseals; includes Topo IV (decatenates chromosomes) and Gyrase (introduces negative supercoils). ends as an oval.
Range 0.5 Mb (~500 genes) to 10 Mb (~10,000 genes).
Fewer introns, less repetitive DNA, densely packed (~1 gene/1 kb).
Proteins, rRNAs, tRNAs, sRNAs, and small peptides.
Conservation of genetic linkage/order across bacterial genomes.
Indicates evolutionary conservation of genome structure.. bac genomes have high degree of synteny.
By insertions of DNA acquired through horizontal gene transfer. (DNA from different sources not ancestors)
Prophages, insertion sequences, genetic islands.
O157:H7 has an extra 1 Mb of DNA (toxins & virulence factors) from HGT → pathogenic.
5′ → 3′.
A 3′ OH group from a primer.
Pol III: large complex; Main enzyme for replication.
Pol I: Replaces RNA primers with DNA- DNA repair.
Synthesizes short RNA primers for replication.
Break down DNA. Endonucleases cut inside strands, exonucleases cut at ends (5′- pol 1 primer removal or 3′- editing).
Seals nicks in DNA by making phosphodiester bonds between 5′ phosphate and 3′ OH.
Helicase: unwinds DNA.
Topoisomerase: relieves supercoiling.
Sliding clamp: holds Pol on template.
Clamp loader: loads clamp, binds pol on both strands and helicase
1. pol 3 replicates DNA on leading strand, primase synthesizes primer in opposite direction on lagging
2. pol 3 extends rna primer (Okazaki fragment)
3. primase synthesizes another primer
4. pol 3 extends this primer till it touches previous primer
5. pol 1 removes rna primer and replaces it with dna
6. ligase seals nick
Leading strand: continuous synthesis by Pol III.
Lagging strand: synthesized in short Okazaki fragments.
Pol I removes RNA primer → fills gap with DNA → ligase seals nick.
forms ring that Unwinds dsDNA using ATP- lots of energy; requires DnaC to load onto ssDNA.
Coat unwound DNA to prevent reannealing.
Pols on both strands interact with sliding clamp (DnaN).
Connected by τ protein (also binds DNAB helicase).
Helicase interacts with primase.
DNA template on lagging strand is looped around
Ensures polymerization & unwinding occur at the same speed on both strands.
Lagging strand loops out as Okazaki fragments are synthesized, resembling a trombone slide.
Dissociates at completed fragment, leaves clamp, hops to next primer site, continues synthesis.
Yes, they remain connected during replication.
Broken DNA, damaged DNA, supercoiling, and proteins bound to DNA (like RNA polymerase).
Pol III releases at lesion, leaving DnaN clamp.
Pol III reinitiates synthesis at a new primer.
DNA gap repaired later by another mechanism.
(stalled lagging strand DNA polymerase recycled to new DNA primer)
DnaG primase synthesizes a new primer on sites of stalled pol III on leading strand.
Pol III releases at lesion, reinitiates synthesis from new primer.
Clamp loader complex (3 τ subunits/proteins in it) may bind 3 pol III, so that one is in reserve to recontinue DNA synthesis on other side of lesion
Its catalytic pocket checks base-pairing accuracy → highly accurate but unable to bypass damage.
Pol II, Pol IV, Pol V.
They are less accurate and less processive, but can replicate across DNA lesions.
By polymerase switching and DNA-damage–induced expression.
Collisions with transcription machinery (RNA polymerase).
Head-on conflicts (most detrimental).
Co-directional conflicts (less severe but still problematic).
t’s when DNAP and RNAP collide while moving in opposite directions. These conflicts are highly detrimental, causing replication stress due to positive supercoiling and fork stalling. By orienting most highly transcribed genes co-directionally with replication forks, especially rRNA & tRNA genes, and by evolving accessory proteins that remove stalled RNAPs.
When DNAP and RNAP move in the same direction, causing DNAP to catch up and collide with RNAP. Less harmful than head-on conflicts but still problematic at highly transcribed genes. detrimental when multiple RNA pol involved (ex. at rrn operons)
Replication fork moves much faster than RNA polymerase. DNAP III = ~1000 nts/sec; RNAP = 30–90 nts/sec.
Highly transcribed genes (like rRNA & tRNA) are oriented co-directionally with replication.
Prevents lethal head-on collisions.
Minimizes transcription-replication clashes at essential, highly expressed genes.
Dissociate stalled RNAP from DNA → reduce replication barriers.
Recruits UvrAB repair proteins. In response to stress.
mutation frequency decline
ppGpp, DksA, GreA, GreB.
Dislodge RNAP complexes stalled at lesions or during normal transcription → prevent replication-transcription conflicts. also can dislodge elongating RNAP in efforts of prevention of conflict in absence of DNA lesions (during normal growth) .
Insert coiled-coil domains into RNAP’s secondary channel to promote dislodging.
Rep, UvrD, DinG.
Remove stalled RNAPs or other DNA-bound proteins → prevent head-on collisions. help rep fork get through genomic regions where DNA binding proteins are found or recA coated ssDNA is found.
Yes — Pol III can knock RNAP off DNA. occurs in co directional conflicts
The RNA transcript can serve as a primer for DNA synthesis restart. occurs on leading strand.
A) DnaG primase can act on the leading strand → leading strand synthesis can be discontinuous (in vivo evidence).
B) Pol III may use RNA transcript as primer after co-directional collision to restart dna synth (in vitro evidence).
C) Replisome can switch Pol III for another Pol (II, IV, V) or another DNA pol II when needed (in vitro & in vivo evidence).
