LEC29: DNA Replication Flashcards
where and how (broadly) does DNA replicaton begin?
ORI, origins of replication, must be bound by ORC, origina recognition complex
throughout the genome, located on average 100,000 bp apart
what signals it’s time to replicate DNA?
all of the ORI of the genome fire at the same time, simultaneously
(S phase)
during which phase of cell cycle does replication occur?
S phase
how does replication from an ORI occur?
bi-directional
double stranded DNA opens into a replication fork as **DNA polymerase **synthesizes new DNA bidirectionally from that fork, in both directions simultaneously
what opens DNA for replication?
helicase opens dbl stranded DNA helix for replication
what keeps double stranded DNA unwound for replication?
**SSB, single stranded binding protein **keeps helix unwound once helicase opens it up
**topoisomerase unwinds the double helix, **creates tension
what is the nature of DNA replication?
it is processive: once initiated, DNA polymerase synthesizes chain w/o releasing the template strand for hundrands of thousands of nucleotides
what does this show?
explain process of PIC formation for DNA replication
DNA replication occurs when ORC binds the ORI
helicase opens up the DNA; single stranded binding protein (SSB)ensures strands stay separate;topoisomerase creates tension by unwinding the double helix
what do DNA polymerases require in order to initiate DNA replication?
they need a primer w/ an existing 3’OH to which they can add the next nucleoside
DNA Primase does this
what is the direction of DNA replication?
how is this dealt w/ for double stranded DNA replication?
always 5’ to 3’ synthesis of new strand
**bi-directional DNA replication **away from an origin thus must be discontinuous, i.e. 1 template strand DNA polymerase synthesizes new DNA continuously (leading strand), other strand in short fragments (lagging strand)
which DNA polymerases do elongation on which strands?
leading strand: alpha, epsilon
lagging strand: delta
what is DNA primase?
a **DNA-dependent RNA polymerase **that is a subunit of DNA Pol-alpha
non-specific, non-processive
action: starts at different ORIs; lays down a short RNA primer, which DNA polymerase then extends
happens once on leading strand, multiple times on lagging strand
what happens to RNA primers involved w/ DNA replication?
they are eventually replaced w/ DNA
DNA is then ligated together to form a continuous double-helix from 1 end of the chromosome to the other
describe process of leading strand synthesis
DNA primase of DNA pol-alpha starts at different ORIs
DNA pol-alpha extends the primer a bit along the strand
DNA pol-epsilon continues synthesis from DNA-pol alpha’s initiation
describe time sequence of leading/lagging strand synthesis
leading/lagging strand synthesis occur simultaneously **as replication forks go bidirectionally away from the ORI **