DNA Replication
DNA Replication
Semiconservative mechanism
Enzymes that catalyze the addition of deoxynucleotides are
called DNA polymerases
There are five different DNA polymerases in Escherichia coli,
called DNA polymerases I, II, III, IV, and V
DNA polymerases synthesize DNA in the 5 to 3 direction
To start a new chain, a primer, a nucleic acid molecule to
which DNA polymerase can attach the first nucleotide, is
required. In most cases this primer is a short stretch of RNA.
Initiation
Elongation
termination
Each polymerase is held on the DNA by a sliding clamp, which encircles and
slides along the single template strands of DNA.
Consequently, the replication fork contains two polymerase core enzymes
and two sliding clamps, one set for each strand.
However, there is only a single clamp-loader complex. This is needed to
assemble the sliding clamps onto the DNA. After assembly on the lagging
strand, the elongation component of Pol III, DnaE, then adds
deoxyribonucleotides until it reaches previously synthesized DNA At this
point, Pol III stops.
The next enzyme to take part, Pol I, it removes the RNA primer
When the primer has been removed and replaced with DNA, Pol I is
released. The last phosphodiester bond is made by an enzyme called DNA
ligase which seals the nicks in DNA
Termination:
In E.coli, there are 10 replication termini (Ter) located in a
region opposite to the replication origin
The Ter sites interact with the replication terminator
protein called Tus, to stops DNA unwinding activity of DnaB
At the end, replication forms as catenated (two circular
chromosomes joined at ter region) ring.
Catenated rings are separated by topoisomerases IV
Topoisomerase IV transiently breaks both DNA strands of
one chromosome and allowing the other chromosome to
pass through the break
Plasmids
Plasmid Replication
Two methods
Theta formation
Rolling circle replication
RepA
3 OH
Helicase
Ss binding
protein
RNA poly
Ligase
Transposons are larger than IS elements, but have the same two
essential components: inverted repeats at both ends and a gene that
encodes transposase.
The transposase recognizes the inverted repeats and moves the
segment of DNA flanked by them from one site to another.
Consequently, any DNA that lies between the two inverted repeats is
moved and is, in effect, part of the transposon.