Lecture 2b Flashcards
(29 cards)
(DNA Rep Initiation) How many subunits are there in the protein complex of ORC
6 subunits
(DNA Rep Initiation) Which subunit contains a BAH domain?
ORC1
(DNA Rep Initiation) The ORC1 BAH domain containing subunit mediates binding to what?
Mediates binding to H4K20me2, which are heavily enriched in Rep Origins
(DNA Rep Initiation) What associates with the ORC complex
Cdc6 and Cdt1
(DNA Rep Initiation) The association of Cdc6 and Cdt1 with the ORC is required for the recruitment of what?
Recruiting the Mcm helicase and formation of the pre-RC
(DNA Rep Initiation) In what phase does the formation of the pre-RC take place?
G1
(DNA Rep Initiation) Once S phase begins, what happens to Cdc6
Gets phosphorylated
(DNA Rep Initiation) The phosphorylation of Cdc6 is by what?
By the cyclin dependent kinase complex, Cdk
(DNA Rep Initiation) What happens to Cdc6 after phosphorylation?
Becomes inactivated and degraded
(DNA Rep Initiation) What happens to the ORC while Cdc6 is degraded?
The ORC becomes phosphorylated
(DNA Rep Initiation) After phosphorylation of ORC, what happens?
Leads to recruitment of other protein factors
Activation of the Mcm Helicase
Start of DNA replication
What is the main problem with DNA replication?
Okazaki fragments near the end of the chromosome can not be primed
What is a telomere?
Repeating DNA sequences at both ends of a linear chromosome
What is the issue with chromosomes lacking telomeres?
They become unstable and may be involved in chromosomal rearrangements
The subtelomeric region is often rich in what?
Pseudo-genes and transposable elements
The telomere repeat is complementary to what?
A section of the RNA portion
How does telomerase extend the telomeric DNA?
Extends it at the 3’-end using the RNA in its structure
DNA synthesis occurs using what protein component of telomerase?
Reverse transcriptase (TERT)
What are the functions for telomeres?
Prevent chromosomes from losing base pair sequences at their ends (Degradation)
prevent chromsomes from fusing to each other
describe the mechanism of telomerase briefly
telomerase binds to 3’ flanking end of telomere that is complementary to telomerase RNA. So it binds to the 3’ end of the leading strand. Bases are added to the leading strand using Telomerase RNA as a template. Telomerase then relocates and this step is repeate. DNA polymerase then complements the lagging strand.
Telomerase activity is high where and low where?
High in stem cells , germ cells and cancer cells
Low activity or absent in somatic cells, decreases with age and cells senesce (Stop dividing)
How does depurinatoin and depyrimidination and deamination happen?
Via hydrolysis
What is depurination? What can it cause?
Loss of G or A
Causes 1bp deletions, so after replication the old strand is mutated as that base pair is deleted and the other stand remains unchanged
Deamination of C
a) is what?
b) leads to what
c) describe what happens after replication
a) the removal of NH3 on cytosine, so a h20 and NH3 is produced as a byproduct and a Uracil is produced in place of the cytosine
b) Lead to a G–> A mutation
c) The mutated strand has an U+A pairing. The U base from the original strand is paired with an A.
The other strand remains unchhanged and has a C + G pairing