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DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3 Jim Borowiec September 28, 2006 QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture.

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DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3. Jim Borowiec. September 28, 2006. Overview of DNA replication. Telomere. Centromere. Telomere. DNA chromosome. Origin of DNA replication. Specialized elements termed 'origins of DNA replication’ occur many times on a chromosome. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

Jim Borowiec

September 28, 2006

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

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Page 2: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

Overview of DNA replication

TelomereTelomere Centromere

DNA chromosome

Specialized elements termed'origins of DNA replication’

occur many times on achromosome

Origin of DNA replication

Initiation of DNA replicationfrom origin of replicationgenerates structures termed'DNA replication bubbles'

Page 3: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

End replication problem

DNA replication(from internal regions of the chromosome)

3’

5’

3’

5’

by leading strand synthesis

+3’

5’

by lagging strand synthesis

iDNA

RNA primer

Processing

3’

5’

DNA

replication

3’

5’

loss of DNA

After multiple rounds of DNA replication, genetic information will be lost

Page 4: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

Replication of telomeres

•Telomeres contain many copies of a specific DNA repeat

(TTAGGG)nTTAGGGTTAGGG-3’(AATCCC)nAATCCC-5’

•Involves special RNA-containing polymerase called telomerase

TelomeraseCCAAUCCC

RNA template

5’

•Telomerase adds one or more copies of the TTAGGG repeat, preventing DNA loss

(TTAGGG)nTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGG-3’(AATCCC)nAATCCC CCAAUCCC

5’

Page 5: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

Senescence

‘Hayflick limit’

Somatic cells

‘Hayflick limit’

Widespread cell death

Crisis

Germ line cells

Senescence

p53 mutation

Somatic cells

‘Hayflick limit’

Widespread cell death

Crisis

Germ line cells

Senescence

p53 mutation

Telomerase activation

Telomere stabilization

Somatic cells

Telomere length

Cell Divisions

Germ line cells

Telomerase needed for cell immortalization

Most somatic cells do not have telomerase activity

Page 6: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

Mechanisms to repair damaged DNAor mispaired DNA

Usually involves synthesis of portions of only one DNA strand

Involves synthesis of 1 to >1000 nt depending on type of repair reaction

Page 7: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

Types of DNA damage

1. Spontaneous

C. Oxidative damage to bases (life span of an organism is inversely correlated with metabolic rate/DNA oxidation)

B. Loss of bases - depurination and depyrimidation (~5000 purines are lost per human cell per day)

A. Base deamination (ex: cytosine is converted to uracil at a rate of ~100 bases per human cell per day)

2. Environmental damage

B. Chemical agents (e.g., benzo[a]pyrene)

A. Radiation (ionizing and ultraviolet)

Page 8: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

Surveillance

•For all types of DNA damage

•Surveillance factors with different recognition specificities continually scanning the DNA for damage or mispairs

•Upon finding a damage or mistakes, surveillance factors recruit other repair factors

Signal to recruitadditional repair

factors

Page 9: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

sugar-phosphatebackbone

Cytidine

NH 2

H

O NH

N

Deamination of cytidine to uridine (spontaneous)

O

H

O NH

HN

sugar-phosphatebackbone

Uridine

NH 4+

H 2O

Page 10: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

Cytidine

NH 2

H

O NH

N

sugar-phosphatebackbone

O

H

O NH

HN

sugar-phosphatebackbone

Uridine

NH 4+

H 2O

Recognized byDNA glycosylase

Uridine in DNA repaired by Base Excision Repair (BER)

Page 11: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

MANY DNA GLYCOSYLASES EXIST

DIFFER IN SUBSTRATE SPECIFICITY

GENERALLY RECOGNIZE MONO-ADDUCT DAMAGE

Page 12: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

Cytidine

NH 2

H

O NH

N

sugar-phosphatebackbone

O

H

O NH

HN

sugar-phosphatebackbone

Uridine

NH 4+

H 2O

Uracil-DNA glycosylase

sugar-phosphatebackbone

AP site

OH

H 2O

+

O

H

O NH

HN

H

Free uracil

Uridine in DNA repaired by Base Excision Repair (BER)

Page 13: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3
Page 14: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3
Page 15: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3
Page 16: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3
Page 17: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3
Page 18: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

Thymine Dimer - a common DNA lesion

Page 19: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

Nucleotide excision repair - Part I(bacteria)

Page 20: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

Nucleotide excision repair - Part II(bacteria)

(uvrD)

Page 21: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

Human nucleotide excision repair (NER)

•Xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) - an inherited disease in which patients show an extreme sensitivity to sunlight

•XP is a result of mutation of various genes involved in NER

Page 22: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

Xeroderma Pigmentosum Society, Inc.Camp Sundown for XP children

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressorare needed to see this picture.

The program schedule is 9:00 p.m. to 5:00 a.m. to maximize night time hours for play and minimize need for protective arrangements.

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressorare needed to see this picture.

Page 23: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

Mismatch repair

Primary source of DNA alterations arising during normal DNA metabolism is mispairing of bases during DNA synthesis

In eukaryotes, deamination of 5-methyl cytosine generates a thymine (and a T:G base pair) and is corrected by mismatch repair

A

A

Examples:

C

T

G

T

Question: Bases are not damaged, only incorrectly paired. How does the mismatch repair machinery determine which is the correct base and which is the incorrect base?

Page 24: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

Determination of new strand (bacteria)

AT

CH3

CH3

DNA replication

New strand

AT

CH3

AT

CH3

New strand

+

CH3

CH3

Re-methylation (slow)

AT

CH3

AT

CH3+

CTAG

CH3

GATC

CH3

Page 25: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

Mismatch repair (bacteria)

AT

CH3

CH3

G

T

DNA

replication CH3

Mismatch Recognition

mutS

G

T CH3

Binding ofmismatch factors

mutH

mutL

G

T CH3

G

T

Translocation ofmutL and mutH to

hemimethylated siteCH3

Page 26: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

G

T CH3

Mismatch repair (bacteria)

AT

CH3

DNA synthesisby DNA Pol, SSB

& ligation

T

Exonucleasedigestion

CH3

Nicking of

non-methylated(new) strand

by mutH

G

T CH3

Nick

AT

CH3

CH3

Re-methylation

Page 27: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

Hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancer (HNPCC)

•HNPCC is a hereditary cancer syndrome with individuals having increased incidence of colon cancer, ovarian cancer, and endometrial tumors

•Caused by defects in human mismatch repair genes that are homologous to bacterial mismatch repair genes

- Defects in hMSH2 (human mutS homolog) account for ~60% of HNPCC cases

- Defects in hMLH1 (human mutL homolog) account for ~30% of HNPCC cases

•Cells from HNPCC patients are 100-fold more mutable than normal patients

Page 28: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

Reduction in error rate

Base pairing can lead to error frequency of ~10-1 -10-2 (i.e., errors per nucleotide incorporated)

DNA polymerase actions (polymerase specificity and 3’ --> 5’ proofreading) can lead to error frequency of ~10-5-10-6

Accessory proteins (e.g., SSBs) can lead to error frequency of ~10-7

Post replicative mismatch repair can lead to error frequency of ~10-10

Page 29: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

Involvement of ATM and p53 in the cellular checkpoint response

M

G1

G2

G2/M(ATM, p53)

S phase(ATM, ATR, ...) G1/S

(ATM, p53)

S

Ionizingradiation

Severe damage

Apoptosis

Page 30: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

AT is a genetic disorder with a incidence of 1 per 40,000 births

Ataxia Telangiectasia (AT)

Approx. 10% of individuals with AT develop neoplasms, such as Hodgkin’s disease, with most of these occurring with people less than 20 years of age

The overall cancer incidence in homozygotes is ~100-fold increased.

AT individuals have defects in gene encoding the checkpoint kinase ATM

Page 31: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

The tumor suppressor p53The tumor suppressor p53

•The 'guardian of the genome’

•Functions as a sequence-specific transcription factor regulating a large number of genes

•The most frequently mutated gene in cancer

•Responsive to a wide array of signals that stress the cell including:

DNA damagehypoxiahyperproliferative signals emanating from oncogenes

Page 32: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

p53-dependent apoptosis suppresses tumor growthp53-dependent apoptosis suppresses tumor growth

Choroid plexusepithelium

Van Dyke, 1994

Page 33: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

p53 status is a determinant of tumor response to therapyp53 status is a determinant of tumor response to therapy

p53 +/+ p53 -/-

+ adriamycin)

Lowe, Science 266:807, 1994

tum

or v

olum

e (c

m3 )

+ adriamycin

Page 34: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

Pathway of Carcinogenesis

Non-repairedmismatchDNA replication

Non-critical gene or non-coding

sequence

Cancer

Little or no effect on cell

viability

Essential region of

essential gene

Cell death through apoptosis

Potential for unregulated cell

growth

Additional mutations(genomic

instability)

Gene involved in growth

stimulation or tumor

suppression

Page 35: DNA replication and repair - Lecture 3

Pathway of Carcinogenesis(colorectal cells)

Normalcell

Mutation of: PTGS2

(proto-oncogene)

p53

(tumorsuppressor)

(tumorsuppressor)

18q LOH

Carcinoma

Ras

(proto-oncogene)

LateAdenoma

APC

(tumorsuppressor)

EarlyAdenoma