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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

Chapter 11
Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids
to accompany Biochemistry, 2/e by Reginald Garrett and Charles Grisham
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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

Outline
11.1 Nitrogenous Bases 11.2 The Pentoses of Nucleotides and NA 11.3 Nucleosides are Formed by Joining a Nitrogenous Base to a Sugar 11.4 Nucleotides - Nucleoside Phosphates 11.5 Nucleic Acids are Polynucleotides 11.6 Classes of Nucleic Acids 11.7 Hydrolysis of Nucleic Acids
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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

Information Transfer in Cells


See Figure 11.1 Information encoded in a DNA molecule is transcribed via synthesis of an RNA molecule The sequence of the RNA molecule is "read" and is translated into the sequence of amino acids in a protein.

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

11.1 Nitrogenous Bases


Know the basic structures Pyrimidines
Cytosine (DNA, RNA) Uracil (RNA) Thymine (DNA)

Purines
Adenine (DNA, RNA) Guanine (DNA, RNA)
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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

Properties of Pyrimidines and Purines


Keto-enol tautomerism Acid/base dissociations Strong absorbance of UV light

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

11.2 Pentoses of Nucleotides


Know these structures too D-ribose (in RNA) 2-deoxy-D-ribose (in DNA) The difference - 2'-OH vs 2'-H This difference affects secondary structure and stability

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

11.3 Nucleosides

Linkage of a base to a sugar Base is linked via a glycosidic bond The carbon of the glycosidic bond is anomeric Named by adding -idine to the root name of a pyrimidine or -osine to the root name of a purine Conformation can be syn or anti Sugars make nucleosides more water-soluble than free bases

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

11.4 Nucleotides

Nucleoside phosphates Know the nomenclature "Nucleotide phosphate" is redundant! Most nucleotides are ribonucleotides Nucleotides are polyprotic acids

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

Functions of Nucleotides
Nucleoside 5'-triphosphates are carriers of energy Bases serve as recognition units Cyclic nucleotides are signal molecules and regulators of cellular metabolism and reproduction ATP is central to energy metabolism GTP drives protein synthesis CTP drives lipid synthesis UTP drives carbohydrate metabolism
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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

11.5 Nucleic Acids Polynucleotides


Polymers linked 3' to 5' by phosphodiester bridges Ribonucleic acid and deoxyribonucleic acid Know the shorthand notations Sequence is always read 5' to 3' In terms of genetic information, this corresponds to "N to C" in proteins
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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

11.6 Classes of Nucleic Acids


DNA - one type, one purpose RNA - 3 (or 4) types, 3 (or 4) purposes
ribosomal RNA - the basis of structure and function of ribosomes messenger RNA - carries the message transfer RNA - carries the amino acids

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

The DNA Double Helix



Stabilized by hydrogen bonds! "Base pairs" arise from hydrogen bonds Erwin Chargaff had the pairing data, but didn't understand its implications Rosalind Franklin's X-ray fiber diffraction data was crucial Francis Crick knew it was a helix James Watson figured out the H-bonds

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

The Structure of DNA



An antiparallel double helix Diameter of 2 nm Length of 1.6 million nm (E. coli) Compact and folded (E. coli cell is only 2000 nm long) Eukaryotic DNA wrapped around histone proteins to form nucleosomes Base pairs: A-T, G-C

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

Messenger RNA
Transcription product of DNA In prokaryotes, a single mRNA contains the information for synthesis of many proteins In eukaryotes, a single mRNA codes for just one protein, but structure is composed of introns and exons

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

Eukaryotic mRNA
DNA is transcribed to produce heterogeneous nuclear RNA
mixed introns and exons with poly A intron - intervening sequence exon - coding sequence poly A tail - stability?

Splicing produces final mRNA without introns


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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

Ribosomal RNA
Ribosomes are about 2/3 RNA, 1/3 protein rRNA serves as a scaffold for ribosomal proteins 23S rRNA in E. coli is the peptidyl transferase!

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

Transfer RNA
Small polynucleotide chains - 73 to 94 residues each Several bases usually methylated Each a.a. has at least one unique tRNA which carries the a.a. to the ribosome 3'-terminal sequence is always CCA-a.a. Aminoacyl tRNA molecules are the substrates of protein synthesis
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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

DNA & RNA Differences?

Why does DNA contain thymine? Cytosine spontaneously deaminates to form uracil Repair enzymes recognize these "mutations" and replace these Us with Cs But how would the repair enzymes distinguish natural U from mutant U? Nature solves this dilemma by using thymine (5-methyl-U) in place of uracil

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

DNA & RNA Differences?

Why is DNA 2'-deoxy and RNA is not? Vicinal -OH groups (2' and 3') in RNA make it more susceptible to hydrolysis DNA, lacking 2'-OH is more stable This makes sense - the genetic material must be more stable RNA is designed to be used and then broken down

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

Hydrolysis of Nucleic Acids


RNA is resistant to dilute acid DNA is depurinated by dilute acid DNA is not susceptible to base RNA is hydrolyzed by dilute base See Figure 11.29 for mechanism

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

Restriction Enzymes
Bacteria have learned to "restrict" the possibility of attack from foreign DNA by means of "restriction enzymes" Type II and III restriction enzymes cleave DNA chains at selected sites Enzymes may recognize 4, 6 or more bases in selecting sites for cleavage An enzyme that recognizes a 6-base sequence is a "six-cutter"
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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

Type II Restriction Enzymes


No ATP requirement Recognition sites in dsDNA usually have a 2-fold axis of symmetry Cleavage can leave staggered or "sticky" ends or can produce "blunt ends

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

Type II Restriction Enzymes


Names use 3-letter italicized code: 1st letter - genus; 2nd,3rd - species Following letter denotes strain EcoRI is the first restriction enzyme found in the R strain of E. coli

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Biochemistry 2/e - Garrett & Grisham

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