- Prokaryotic DNA replication
DNA replication inprokaryote s is exemplified in "E. coli ". It is bi-directional and originates at a singleorigin of replication (OriC).Initiation
The initiation of replication is mediated by a
protein that binds to a region of the origin known as the DnaA box. In "E. coli", there are 5 DnaA boxes, each of which contains a highly conserved 9 bpconsensus sequence 5' - TTATCCACA - 3'. Binding of DnaA to this region causes it to become negatively supercoiled. Following this, a region of OriC upstream of the DnaA boxes (known as DnaB boxes) become melted. There are three of these regions, and each are 13 bp long, and AT-rich (which facilitates melting because less energy is required to break the twohydrogen bond s that form between A and Tnucleotide s). This region has the consensus sequence 5' - GATCTNTTNTTTT - 3. Melting of the DnaB boxes requires ATP (which is hydrolyzed by DnaA). Following melting, DnaA recuits a hexamerichelicase (six DnaB proteins) to opposite ends of the melted DNA. This is where thereplication fork will form. Recruitment of helicase requires six DnaC proteins, each of which is attached to one subunit of helicase. Once this complex is formed, an additional five DnaA proteins bind to the original five DnaA proteins to form five DnaA dimers. DnaC is then released, and the prepriming complex is complete. In order for DNA replication to continue, SSB protein is needed to prevent the single strands of DNA from forming anysecondary structure s and to prevent them from reannealing, andDNA gyrase is needed to relieves the stress (by creating negative supercoils) created by the action ofDnaB helicase . The unwinding of DNA by DnaB helicase allows forprimase (DnaG ) andRNA polymerase to prime each DNA template so that DNA synthesis can begin.Elongation
Once priming is complete,
DNA polymerase III holoenzyme is loaded into the DNA and replication begins. The catalytic mechanism of DNA polymerase III involves the use of two metal ions in theactive site , and a region in the active site that can discriminate betweendeoxynucleotide s andribonucleotide s. The metal ions are general divalent cations that help the 3' OH initiate anucleophilic attack onto the alphaphosphate of the deoxyribonucleotide and orient and stabilize the negatively charged triphosphate on the deoxyribonucleotide. Nucleophilic attack by the 3' OH on the alpha phosphate releasespyrophosphate , which is then subsequently hydrolyzed (by inorganic phosphatase) into two phosphates. This hydrolysis drives DNA synthesis to completion.Furthermore, DNA polymerase III must be able to distinguish between correctly paired bases and incorrectly paired bases. This is accomplished by distinguishing Watson-Crick base pairs through the use of an active site pocket that is complementary in shape to the structure of correctly paired nucleotides. This pocket has a tyrosine residue that is able to form van der Waals interactions with the correctly paired nucleotide. In addition, dsDNA in the active site has a wider and shallower
minor groove that permits the formation of hydrogen bonds with the thirdnitrogen ofpurine bases and the secondoxygen ofpyrimidine bases. Finally, the active site makes extensive hydrogen bonds with the DNA backbone. These interactions result in the DNA polymerase III closing around a correctly paired base. If a base is inserted and incorrectly paired, these interactions could not occur due to disruptions in hydrogen bonding and van der Waals interactions.DNA is read in the 3' → 5' direction, therefore, nucleotides are synthesized (or attached to the
template strand ) in the 5' → 3' direction. However, one of the parent strands of DNA is 3' → 5' while the other is 5' → 3'. To solve this, replication occurs in opposite directions. Heading towards the replication fork, the leading strand in synthesized in a continuous fashion, only requiring one primer. On the other hand, the lagging strand, heading away from the replication fork, is synthesized in a series of short fragments known as Okazaki fragments, consequently requiring many primers. The RNA primers ofOkazaki fragment s are subsequently degraded byRNAse H andDNA Polymerase I (exonuclease ), and the gap (or nicks) are filled with deoxyribonucleotides and sealed by the enzymeligase .Termination
Termination of DNA replication in "E. coli" is completed through the use of termination sequences and the Tus protein. These sequences allow the two replication forks to pass through in only one direction, but not the other. However, these sequences are not required for termination of replication.
Regulation of DNA replication is achieved through several mechanisms. Mechanisms involve the ratio of ATP to ADP, of DnaA to the number of DnaA boxes and the hemimethylation and sequestering of OriC. The ratio of ATP to ADP indicates that the cell has reached a specific size and is ready to divide. This "signal" occurs because in a rich medium, the cell will grow quickly and will have a lot of excess DNA. Furthermore, DnaA binds equally well to ATP or ADP, and only the DnaA-ATP complex is able to initiate replication. Thus, in a fast growing cell, there will be more DnaA-ATP than DnaA-ADP. Because the levels of DnaA are strictly regulated, and 5 DnaA-DnaA dimers are needed to initiate replication, the ratio of DnaA to the number of DnaA boxes in the cell is important. After DNA replication is complete, this number is halved, thus DNA replication cannot occur until the levels of DnaA protein increases. Finally, DNA is sequestered to a membrane-binding protein called SeqA. This protein binds to hemi-methylated GATC DNA sequences. This four bp sequences occurs 11 times in OriC, and newly synthesized DNA only has its parent strand methylated. DAM methyltransferase methylates the newly synthesized strand of DNA only if it is not bound to SeqA. The importance of hemi-methylation is twofold. Firstly, OriC becomes inaccessible to DnaA, and secondly, DnaA binds better to fully methylated DNA than hemi-methylated DNA.
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