Replication Initiation Flashcards

1
Q

When does replication end in bacteria?

A

When two forks meet at the other side of the circular chromosome.

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2
Q

How many ORIs do bacteria have in their chromosome?

A

1

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3
Q

What is oriC?

A

ORI of E. coli

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4
Q

How long is the oriC?

A

~245 bps long

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5
Q

What are the two regions of the oriC?

A

4 repeats of TTATCCACA
AT-rich region beside it

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6
Q

Why is the AT-rich region beneficial in DNA replication?

A

Only double bonds opposed to the triple bonds in GC. Thus, easier for enzymes to separate dsDNA.

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7
Q

What are the four proteins in E.coli required to open the replicaiton bubble?

A

DnaA (initiator protein), DnaB (DNA helicase), DnaC (helicase loader/inhibitor), SSB protein

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8
Q

What is the function of DnaA?

A

Binds to TTATCCACA sequence and opens up DNA at AT-rich sequence.

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9
Q

What is the function of DnaB?

A

Binds to opened DNA and further unwinds DNA

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10
Q

What is the function of DnaC?

A

Loads DnaB onto opened DNA and releases it at appropriate time.

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11
Q

What is the function of SSB proteins?

A

Bind to and stabilizes ssDNA for other proteins to function properly.

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12
Q

Outline the process of opening the replication bubble in E. coli oriC

A
  1. DnaA binds to the TTATCCACA sequence and bends DNA. Stress from bending destabilizes the AT-rich region, opening up part of it.
  2. DnaC binds to DnaB and helps it bind to opened DNA
  3. DnaC suppresses DnaB function until loading is complete
  4. DnaG binds to DnaB
  5. DnaC releases DnaB, which moves along the DNA to further open it.
    Whole time, SSB proteins are binding to ssDNA to stabilize it.
  6. Dna C carries DnaG while DnaG starts to place primers on ssDNA
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13
Q

Why are SSB proteins important?

A

When single stranded, DNA has a chance to start binding to itself, forming structures that would interfere with synthesis. SSB proteins prevent DNA from forming such structures.

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14
Q

Explain the structure of DnaB and how this makes it necessary for DnaC to help it with loading onto DNA.

A

Donut-shaped made out of multiple subunits. Due to its ring shape, the closed complex is inable to bind to DNA.

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15
Q

How many DnaB/DnaC units are loaded onto each strand of ssDNA? Why?

A

2; each will move in opposite directions to open two replication forks.

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16
Q

What is DnaG? What does it do?

A

DNA primase; adds RNA primers onto ssDNA templates for DNA polymerases.

17
Q

Outline the different interactions the different domains of DnaG have.

A

One part of protein hypothesized to interact with ssDNA, bringing it to RNA polymerase active site in correct orientation.
C-terminal domain interacts with DnaB

18
Q

Which strand do DnaB/DnaC move along?

A

Lagging stranf

19
Q

If DnaB/DnaG move 5’ to 3’, does that mean DnaG is synthesizing RNA primers in 3’ to 5’ direction?

A

No, hypothesized that DnaG has a binding site which bends DNA in the correct orientation for 5’ to 3’ polymerization.