DNA Replication (Copying DNA Prior to Cell Division) (movies)
Transcription
DNA Replication (Copying DNA Prior to Cell Division) (movies)
DNA Replication (Copying DNA Prior to Cell Division) (movies) QuickTime™ and a Animation decompressor are needed to see this picture. http://www.dnai.org/a/index.html Why high expectations are a good thing. Today’s goals: 1) What is nanoscale in biology? Scale down through the human body to get an idea. 2) Complexity: What has to be done to replicate DNA? Next time transcription and translation 3) A picture of the nanoscale machines that pull off these feats. 4) Periodic questions for the class to get a collective answer: distance between base pairs in DNA double helix? How many bases must be copied to make an adult human? How do we know that DNA replication isn’t perfect? SIZE SCALE The human body is about 1-2 meters in height Scale down factors of ten 1meter nerves 1million cells 1 meter blood vessels 10 cm 1 cm .1 cm = 1mm .01 cm = 100 um A capillary and red blood cells (movie) 10 um Red blood cell capillary QuickTime™ and a YUV420 codec decompressor are needed to see this picture. 100 um http://www.asahi-net.or.jp/~qw9m-mnmy/micmov01.mpg 5-10 um white blood cell 2 um red blood cell capillary endothelial cell Rhodes University http://www.ru.ac.za/administrative/emu//gr10p4.htm 23 Chromosomes from each parent (46 total) Cytoplasm Nucleus DNA Alberts Figure 4-20 B. Hamkalo V. Foe QuickTime™ and a Animation decompressor are needed to see this picture. DNA Fibers Photo 51, Franklin Watson & Crick Nature, 1953 Alberts Figure 4-3 Alberts Figure 4-5 SCALE: NUMBER OF CELLS & COMPLEXITY The Human Body Number of cells and their complexity http://www.visembryo.com/baby/ http://www.visembryo.com/baby/ Day 1 Fertilization Zygote Development http://www.visembryo.com/baby/ Day 5 Blastocyst The Human Body 100+ trillion cells (50,000,000 replaced as you read this sentence) 200-300 cell types 23 Chromosomes from each parent (46 total) Cytoplasm Nucleus DNA Scale of the replication problem: How much DNA is copied? Cytosol Nucleus DNA •23 Chromosomes= 1 genome= 3 billion bases • 2 sets of chromosomes (one from each parent) • 2 strands per DNA duplex Cytosol Nucleus DNA 12 billion bases copied in one cell division! Cytosol Nucleus DNA Alberts Figure 4-8 100 trillion cells 1 cell Zygote 50 trillion cell divisions 50 trillion cell divisions X 12 billion DNA bases replicated cell division = 600 Sextillion bases that must be accurately copied 1) How big is 600 sextillion? Answer: 6 X 1024 (Stars in the visible universe = 7 X 1023) WHAT MOLECULAR MACHINE CAN ACHIEVE THIS REPLICATION SPEED AND FIDELITY? Drew Berry (Aussie computer animator) DNA Replication (Copying DNA Prior to Cell Division) (movies) QuickTime™ and a Animation decompressor are needed to see this picture. QuickTime™ and a Animation decompressor are needed to see this picture. http://www.dnai.org/a/index.html DNA Replication (Copying DNA Prior to Cell Division): 1) Unwind with a helicase DNA Helicase (unwinds duplex) Alberts Figure 5-16 DNA Replication (Copying DNA Prior to Cell Division): 2) Copy the leading strand with a polymerase DNA polymerases (make copies) DNA polymerases are often described as a right hand DNA Replication (Copying DNA Prior to Cell Division): 2b) holding the polymerase on with a sliding clamp DNA polymerases (make copies) Holding the polymerase on with a sliding clamp Alberts Figure 5-19 DNA Replication:Review the leading strand QuickTime™ and a Animation decompressor are needed to see this picture. The intuitive and logical approach that torpedoed many careers a few decades ago Alberts 5-7 What actually happens: Okazaki fragments Alberts Figure 5-13 Alberts Figure 5-12 DNA Replication (Copying DNA Prior to Cell Division) (movies) QuickTime™ and a Animation decompressor are needed to see this picture. QuickTime™ and a Animation decompressor are needed to see this picture. http://www.dnai.org/a/index.html How long does it take to replicate a bacterial (E. coli) genome? 1) 4.6 million base-long circular chromosome. 2) 1000 bases added per second. 3) Two replisomes work In opposite directions from replication origin. Figure 5-6 How do we know DNA replication is not perfect? 1)Changes in DNA sequence (copying mistakes) drive evolution. 2) Cancer often begins as a single cell that has accumulated 3-5 base substitutions in critical genes. Bert Vogelstein video later this Summer?