<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
	xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/"
	>

<channel>
	<title>BORZUYA UNIVERSITY &#187; Biologie</title>
	<atom:link href="http://brussels-scientific.com/?cat=416&#038;feed=rss2" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://brussels-scientific.com</link>
	<description>Just another world</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Fri, 25 Jul 2025 12:33:13 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<language>fr-FR</language>
	<sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency>
	<generator>https://wordpress.org/?v=4.2.39</generator>
	<item>
		<title>Chapitre   : culture cellulaire</title>
		<link>http://brussels-scientific.com/?p=8925</link>
		<comments>http://brussels-scientific.com/?p=8925#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Mar 2020 09:32:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Dr ABDOLMOHAMMADI AKBAR]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1ère année]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Biologie]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Universitaire spécialisée]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://brussels-scientific.com/?p=8925</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Introduction Permet la culture à grande échelle dans le but de produire divers molécules biologiques Cependant la culture in vitro ne permet pas : &#8211; la prolifération et la différenciation normale des cellules &#8211; la reproduction de l’architecture tissulaire de l’organe &#8211; les interactions cellules-cellules et cellules-matrice extracellulaire I Lignées cellulaires La culture de cellules [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="http://brussels-scientific.com/?p=8925">Chapitre   : culture cellulaire</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="http://brussels-scientific.com/?page_id=42">BORZUYA UNIVERSITY</a>.</p>
]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1><strong>Introduction</strong></h1>
<p>Permet la culture à grande échelle dans le but de produire divers molécules biologiques</p>
<p>Cependant la culture in vitro ne permet pas :</p>
<p>&#8211; la prolifération et la différenciation normale des cellules</p>
<p>&#8211; la reproduction de l’architecture tissulaire de l’organe</p>
<p>&#8211; les interactions cellules-cellules et cellules-matrice extracellulaire</p>
<h1>I Lignées cellulaires</h1>
<h2><b>La culture de cellules primaires</b></h2>
<p>Il s&rsquo;agit de cellules issues du tissu d’un animal qui peuvent être dérivées de tissus normaux, d’embryons, de tumeurs. Ils peuvent provenir :</p>
<p>&#8211; d’un fragment de tissu (mélange de plusieurs types cellulaires)</p>
<p>&#8211; de cellules individualisées (désagrégation d’un fragment de tissu)</p>
<p>Méthodes de désagrégation du tissu :</p>
<p>&#8211; forces mécaniques : homogénéisation, sonication légère</p>
<p>&#8211; méthode enzymatique : trypsine, collagénase</p>
<p>&#8211; agents chélateurs : EDTA, EGTA</p>
<p>Enfin il faudra procéder au comptage des cellules et ensemencement (105-106 cellules / cm3).</p>
<h2><b>La culture de cellules finies</b></h2>
<p>Ce sont des cellules qui vont se diviser pendant un nombre donné de passage puis entrer en senescence (=ralentissement progressif de la prolifération cellulaire, puis la mort) et se diviser de moins en moins.</p>
<p>A noter que les lignées cellulaire finies provenant d’embryons vont se diviser plus que celles originaires d’un tissu adulte.</p>
<p><u>Exemple</u> : W138 (fibroblastes humains) et MRC5 (tissu pulmonaire d’un fœtus)</p>
<p><a href="http://brussels-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/MRC5.png" rel="lightbox-0"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-7344" src="http://brussels-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/MRC5.png" alt="mrc5" width="262" height="282" /></a></p>
<h2><b>La culture de cellules continues</b></h2>
<p>Il s&rsquo;agit ici de lignées cellulaires qui ont été transformées et immortalisées.</p>
<ul>
<li>La transformation</li>
</ul>
<p>consiste en l&rsquo; introduction de changements dans une cellule conduisant à un phénotype de croissance et à l’immortalisation.</p>
<ul>
<li>Agents transformant :</li>
</ul>
<p>&#8211; carcinogènes chimiques</p>
<p>&#8211; radiations ionisantes</p>
<p>&#8211; infection virale</p>
<h1>  II Origine des lignées cellulaires</h1>
<p>Organes à partir desquels les cellules peuvent être cultivées :</p>
<p>&#8211; système tégumentaire et muscle (mélanocytes, kératinocytes, muscles, cellules graisseuses)</p>
<p>&#8211;  tractus gastro-intestinal : épithéliums salivaire et intestinal, pancréas, foie</p>
<p>&#8211; système respiratoire : poumon, alvéole, bronche</p>
<p>&#8211; système reproducteur : utérus, cellules de Sertoli</p>
<p>&#8211; système endocrine : thyroïde, pancréas</p>
<p>&#8211; système ostéo-articulaire : chondrocytes, ostéoblastes</p>
<p>&#8211; système nerveux  : cellules gliales, ganglions</p>
<p>&#8211; système cardiovasculaire : myocytes, cellules endothéliales</p>
<p>&#8211; système hématopoïétique : progéniteurs, macrophages, lymphocytes</p>
<p>Ces lignées cellulaires proviennent principalement de l&rsquo;homme et de la souris.</p>
<p>Il existe actuellement deux collections majeures de lignées cellulaires :</p>
<p>&#8211; ATCC : American Type Culture Collection</p>
<p>&#8211; ECACC : European Collection of Animal Cell Cultures</p>
<h1>III Les types de lignées cellulaires</h1>
<h2>Cellules non adhérentes</h2>
<div>Certaines cellules peuvent croître en suspension dans un liquide sans adhérer les unes aux autres.</div>
<div>
<ul>
<li><strong>Les lignées lymphoblastoides</strong></li>
</ul>
<p>&#8211; qui dérivent de lymphocytes</p>
<p>&#8211; et peuvent se diviser à l’infini par transformation</p>
<ul>
<li><b>Les hybridomes</b></li>
</ul>
<p>qui sont issues de la fusion d’un   lymphocyte B avec une cellule de myélome</p>
<p><a href="http://brussels-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/hybridome.png" rel="lightbox-1"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-7346" src="http://brussels-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/hybridome.png" alt="hybridome" width="424" height="344" /></a></p>
<h2>Cellules adhérentes</h2>
<div>Toutes les autres cellules animales nécessitent un «point d’ancrage» pour se reproduire. Elles croissent en s’attachant les unes aux autres pour former des tissus puis des organes.</div>
</div>
<div>
<ul>
<li><b>Les cellules épithéliales ou épithéliales-</b><b>like</b> dérivent d’un épithélium</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><b>Les fibroblastes ou cellules fibroblastes-</b><b>like </b>constituent le tissu conjonctif sous forme de fuseau</li>
</ul>
<h1>IV Les conditions nécessaires à la croissance</h1>
<p>&#8211; Stérilité :</p>
<p>Le matériel nécessaire à la culture doit être stérilisé ainsi que tout les éléments utilisés dans la salle de culture. Travail sous hotte a flux laminaire équipé d’un filtre HEPA.</p>
<p><a href="http://brussels-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/hotte.jpg" rel="lightbox-2"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-7347" src="http://brussels-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/hotte.jpg" alt="hotte" width="350" height="298" /></a></p>
<p>&#8211; la température : en règle générale, 37°C</p>
<p>&#8211; la pression osmotique : 260 &#8211; 320 mOsm/kg</p>
<p>&#8211; le pH : environ 7,4. Indicateur = rouge de phénol (devient jaune en milieu acide). Certains tampon vont maintenir le pH (HEPES)</p>
<p>&#8211; les ions inorganiques (sels minéraux, exple : Ca2+ pour attachement et signalisation)</p>
<p>&#8211; les métabolites (acides aminés)</p>
<p>&#8211; les hormones et facteurs de croissance</p>
<p>&#8211; une surface solide</p>
<p>Les supports de culture sont en plastiques :</p>
<p>-Polystyrène stérilisé par irradiation-gamma</p>
<p>-Polytétrafluoroéthylène  (hydrophile ou hydrophobe selon les cas)</p>
<p>Possibilité de coater ces supports avec un agent tel que le collagène, la fibronectine, le poly-L-arginine, la gélatine ou encore le DEAE-dextran qui va faciliter la croissance cellulaire.</p>
<h1>V Les milieux de culture</h1>
<h2>Milieux de base</h2>
<table width="930">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td width="265"><b>Composant</b></td>
<td width="665"><b>Fonction</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="265">Solution saline</td>
<td width="665">Maintien du pH, de la pression osmotique, du potentiel de membrane, contient des cofacteurs pour certaines enzymes</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="265">Tampon (HEPES)</td>
<td width="665">Compensation de la production de CO1 et lactate</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="265">Carbohydrates (Glucose)</td>
<td width="665">Source d’énergie</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="265">Acides aminés</td>
<td width="665">Aa essentiels pas produits par la celluleAa non-essentiels peuvent être perdu par la cellules dans le milieu</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="265">Vitamines</td>
<td width="665">Précurseurs de cofacteurs</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="265">Hormones/Facteurs de Croissance (insuline, EGF, FGF)</td>
<td width="665">Stimulation de la prolifération et de la différenciation</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="265">Protéines (albumine)</td>
<td width="665">Transport des hormones, vitamines, lipides</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="265">Acides gras/Lipides</td>
<td width="665">Biosynthèse de la membrane</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="265">Autres</td>
<td width="665">Cofacteurs d’enzymes</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<table width="930">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td width="265"><b>Composant</b></td>
<td width="665"><b>Fonction</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="265">Solution saline</td>
<td width="665">Maintien du pH, de la pression osmotique, du potentiel de membrane, contient des cofacteurs pour certaines enzymes</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="265">Tampon (HEPES)</td>
<td width="665">Compensation de la production de CO1 et lactate</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="265">Carbohydrates (Glucose)</td>
<td width="665">Source d’énergie</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="265">Acides aminés</td>
<td width="665">Aa essentiels pas produits par la celluleAa non-essentiels peuvent être perdu par la cellules dans le milieu</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="265">Vitamines</td>
<td width="665">Précurseurs de cofacteurs</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="265">Hormones/Facteurs de Croissance (insuline, EGF, FGF)</td>
<td width="665">Stimulation de la prolifération et de la différenciation</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="265">Protéines (albumine)</td>
<td width="665">Transport des hormones, vitamines, lipides</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="265">Acides gras/Lipides</td>
<td width="665">Biosynthèse de la membrane</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="265">Autres</td>
<td width="665">Cofacteurs d’enzymes</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p>Exemples de milieux de base :</p>
<p>MEM (Modified Eagle’s Media), DMEM (Dubelcco-MEM), RPMI (Roswell Park Memorial Institute …)</p>
<h2>Le sérum</h2>
<p>Le sérum est la partie du liquide sanguin débarrassé des protéines de coagulation et des globules rouges. De façon générale, les milieux de culture contiennent 5-20% de sérum.</p>
<p>Le sérum le plus utilisé est le <b>sérum de veau fœtal </b>(SVF) car il contient des facteurs de croissance embryonnaires.</p>
<table style="height: 566px;" width="837">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td width="321"><b>Composant</b></td>
<td width="609"><b>Fonction</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="321">Facteurs de croissance</td>
<td width="609">Stimulation de la prolifération et de la différenciation</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="321">Albumine</td>
<td width="609">Transport des hormones, vitamines, lipides</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="321">Transferrine</td>
<td width="609">Transport des ions</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="321">Anti-protéases (antitrypsine)</td>
<td width="609">Prévention des dommages protéolytiques sur la cellules</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="321">Facteurs d’attachement (fibronectine, laminine)</td>
<td width="609">Permet l’adhésion des cellules au substrat</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
<p>Le sérum est décomplémenté par chauffage à 56°C pendant 30 min. Ce qui permet d’inactiver les protéines du complément qui pourraient nuire aux cellules. En effet le sérum peut-être une source majeure de contamination (virus, bactéries).</p>
<h2><strong>Les antibiotiques</strong></h2>
<p>Afin de prévenir d&rsquo;éventuelles contaminations.</p>
<table width="930">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td width="321"><b>Antibiotiques</b></td>
<td width="609"><b>Utilisation</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="321">Ampicilline</td>
<td width="609">Bactéries Gram+ et Gram-</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="321">Gentamicine</td>
<td width="609">Bactéries Gram+ et Gram-, mycoplasmes</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="321">Streptomycine</td>
<td width="609">Bactéries Gram+ et Gram-</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="321">Pénicilline</td>
<td width="609">Bactéries Gram+</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="321">Nystatine</td>
<td width="609">Champignons et levures</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="http://brussels-scientific.com/?p=8925">Chapitre   : culture cellulaire</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="http://brussels-scientific.com/?page_id=42">BORZUYA UNIVERSITY</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://brussels-scientific.com/?feed=rss2&#038;p=8925</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Chapitre 1 : La réplication de l&#8217;ADN</title>
		<link>http://brussels-scientific.com/?p=8376</link>
		<comments>http://brussels-scientific.com/?p=8376#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Dec 2017 22:10:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Dr ABDOLMOHAMMADI AKBAR]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[1ère année]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Biologie]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Universitaire spécialisée]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://brussels-scientific.com/?p=8376</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Bien avant que la structure de l&#8217;ADN ne soit connue, les scientifiques se sont interrogés sur la capacité des organismes à créer des copies fidèles d&#8217;eux mêmes et, plus tard, sur la capacité des cellules à produire plusieurs copies identiques de macromolécules complexes. La spéculation à propos de ces problèmes était centrée sur le concept [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="http://brussels-scientific.com/?p=8376">Chapitre 1 : La réplication de l&rsquo;ADN</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="http://brussels-scientific.com/?page_id=42">BORZUYA UNIVERSITY</a>.</p>
]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: justify;">Bien avant que la structure de l&rsquo;ADN ne soit connue, les scientifiques se sont interrogés sur la capacité des organismes à créer des copies fidèles d&rsquo;eux mêmes et, plus tard, sur la capacité des cellules à produire plusieurs copies identiques de macromolécules complexes. La spéculation à propos de ces problèmes était centrée sur le concept d&rsquo;un &laquo;&nbsp;modèle&nbsp;&raquo;, une structure qui permettrait aux molécules d&rsquo;être alignées dans un ordre spécifique et jointes, pour créer une macromolécule avec une séquence et une fonction uniques. Les années 1940 ont apporté la révélation que l&rsquo;ADN était ce modèle (la molécule génétique), mais ce n&rsquo;est que lorsque Watson et Crick ont décrit sa structure, que la façon dont l&rsquo;ADN pourrait servir de modèle pour la réplication et la transmission de l&rsquo;information génétique est devenue claire.: chaque brin est le complément de l&rsquo;autre. Les règles d&rsquo;appariement de bases strictes signifient que chaque brin fournit le modèle pour un brin frère avec une séquence prévisible et complémentaire</p>
<p><a href="http://brussels-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/DNA-structure1.png" rel="lightbox-0"><img class=" wp-image-8371 aligncenter" src="http://brussels-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/DNA-structure1.png" alt="DNA structure" width="300" height="350" /></a></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Les nucléotides (les éléments constitutifs des acides nucléiques) et les propriétés fondamentales du processus de réplication de l&rsquo;ADN et les mécanismes utilisés par les enzymes qui le catalysent se sont révélés essentiellement identiques chez toutes les espèces. La recherche précoce sur la réplication de l&rsquo;ADN bactérienne et ses Enzymes ont permis d&rsquo;établir les propriétés fondamentales qui sont applicables à la réplication de l&rsquo;ADN chez tous les organismes.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">La réplication de l&rsquo;ADN est semiconservative Chaque brin d&rsquo;ADN sert de modèle pour la synthèse d&rsquo;un nouveau brin, produisant deux nouvelles molécules d&rsquo;ADN, chacune avec un nouveau brin et un ancien brin. C&rsquo;est une réplication semi-conservative. Watson et Crick ont proposé l&rsquo;hypothèse d&rsquo;une réplication semi-conservatrice peu après la publication de leur article de 1953 sur la structure de l&rsquo;ADN, et leur l&rsquo;hypothèse a été prouvé par des expériences conçues par Matthew Meselson et Franklin Stahl en 1957.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://brussels-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/semi-conservative.jpg" rel="lightbox-1"><img class="alignnone wp-image-8381" src="http://brussels-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/semi-conservative.jpg" alt="semi conservative" width="1393" height="721" /></a></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Meselson et Stahl ont cultivé des cellules d&rsquo;E. coli pendant de nombreuses générations dans un milieu où la seule source d&rsquo;azote (NH4Cl) contenait 15N, l&rsquo;isotope «lourd» de l&rsquo;azote. , au lieu de l&rsquo;isotope &laquo;&nbsp;léger&nbsp;&raquo; normal de 14N, plus abondant dans la nature. L&rsquo;ADN isolé à partir de ces cellules avait une densité supérieure d&rsquo;environ 1% à celle de l&rsquo;ADN [14N] normal (figure 25-2a). Bien que ce soit seulement une petite différence, un mélange d&rsquo;ADN lourd [15N] et d&rsquo;ADN léger [14N] peut être séparé par centrifugation jusqu&rsquo;à l&rsquo;équilibre dans un  gradient de densité de  chlçorure de césium. Les cellules d&rsquo; E. coli cultivées dans le milieu 15N étaient transférés dans un milieu frais contenant uniquement l&rsquo;isotope 14N, où ils ont été laissés pousser jusqu&rsquo;à ce que la population cellulaire ait juste doublé. L&rsquo;ADN isolé de ces cellules de première génération ont formé une seule bande dans le gradient de densité de CsCl gradient à une position indiquant que le double helice des molécules d&rsquo;ADN des cellules filles étaient des hybrides contenant un nouveau brin 14N et un parent 15N.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><a href="http://brussels-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/meselson.png" rel="lightbox-2"><img class="alignnone wp-image-8383 size-full" src="http://brussels-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/meselson.png" alt="meselson" width="790" height="347" /></a></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Ce résultat plaide contre la réplication conservatrice, une hypothèse alternative dans laquelle la molécule d&rsquo;ADN fille consisterait en deux brins d&rsquo;ADN nouvellement synthétisés et l&rsquo;autre contiendrait les deux brins parentaux, cela ne donnerait pas de molécules d&rsquo;ADN hybrides dans l&rsquo;expérience de Meselson-Stahl. L&rsquo;hypothèse de réplication semiconservative a été soutenue dans la prochaine étape de l&rsquo;expérience. Les cellules ont à nouveau été autorisées à doubler en nombre dans le milieu 14N. Le produit d&rsquo;ADN isolé de ce second cycle de réplication exhibait deux bandes dans le gradient de densité, l&rsquo;une avec une densité égale à celle de l&rsquo;ADN léger et l&rsquo;autre avec la densité de l&rsquo;ADN hybride observée après le doublement de la première cellule.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color: #800080;">La réplication commence à une origine et se poursuit de manière bidirectionnelle  :</span></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Suite à la confirmation du mécanisme semi-conservateur de la réplication, une foule de questions ont surgi. Les brins d&rsquo;ADN parents sont-ils complètement déroulés avant que chacun soit répliqué? La réplication commence-t-elle au hasard à un endroit ou à un point unique? Après l&rsquo;initiation à un point donné<br />
la réplication se poursuit elle dans une direction ou dans deux directions? Une indication précoce que la réplication est un processus hautement coordonnée dans lequel les brins parents sont simultanément déroulés et répliqués a été fourni par John Cairns .Il a créé des E. coli avec un ADN radioactif par culture de cellules dans un milieu contenant la thymidine marquée avec du tritium (3H). Quand l&rsquo;ADN a été soigneusement isolé, étalé et recouvert d&rsquo;une émulsion  photographique pendant plusieurs semaines, les résidus de thymidine ont généré des «traces» de grains d&rsquo;argent, produisant une image de la molécule d&rsquo;ADN. Ces traces ont révélé que le chromosome intact de E. coli est un grand cercle de 1,7 mm de long. L&rsquo;ADN radioactif isolé des cellules durant la réplication a montré un boucle supplémentaire (figure 25-3a). Cairns a conclu que la boucle résulte de la formation de deux copies radioactives des brins, chacun complémentaire d&rsquo;un brin parent. Un ou les deux extrémités de la boucle sont des points dynamiques, appelés fourches de réplication, où l&rsquo;ADN parent est en train d&rsquo;être déroulé et les brins séparés rapidement reproduits.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><a href="http://brussels-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/JOHN-CAIRNS.gif" rel="lightbox-3"><img class=" wp-image-8389 size-full aligncenter" src="http://brussels-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/JOHN-CAIRNS.gif" alt="JOHN CAIRNS" width="507" height="238" /></a></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Les résultats de Cairns ont démontré que les deux brins d&rsquo;ADN sont répliqué simultanément, et une variation sur son expérience a indiqué que la réplication des chromosomes des batéries est bidirectionnelle: les deux extrémités de la boucle ont des fourches de réplication actives. Pour savoir si les boucles de réplication débutaient à un point unique dans les repères d&rsquo;ADN a requis la connaissance de ces repères le long de la molécule d&rsquo;ADN. Ceux-ci ont été fournis par une technique appelée cartographie de dénaturation, développé par Ross Inman et ses collègues. Utilisant le 48,502 pb chromosomes  du bactériophage λ, Inman a montré que L&rsquo;ADN pourrait être sélectivement dénaturé à des séquences exceptionnellement riche en paires de bases A = T, générant un  modèle de bulles à simple brin reproductible :</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><a href="http://brussels-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/inmad.png" rel="lightbox-4"><img class=" wp-image-8394 size-full aligncenter" src="http://brussels-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/inmad.png" alt="inmad" width="380" height="293" /></a></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">ADN isolé contenant des boucles de réplication peut être partiellement dénaturé de la même manière. Cela permet la mesure et la cartographie des différentes position et la progression des fourches de réplication en utilisant les régions dénaturées comme des points de référence. La technique a révélé que dans ce système les boucles de réplication démarrent toujours à un point unique, qui a été appelé  l&rsquo;origine. Il a également confirmé la précédente observation que la réplication est généralement bidirectionnelle. Pour les molécules d&rsquo;ADN circulaires, les deux fourches de réplication se rencontrent à un point du côté du cercle opposé à l&rsquo;origine. Les origines spécifiques de la réplication ont depuis été identifiées et caractérisées dans les bactéries et eucaryotes inférieures.<br />
La synthèse d&rsquo;ADN a lieu dans une direction 5 &lsquo;→ 3&prime; et est semi-continue. Un nouveau brin d&rsquo;ADN est toujours synthétisé dans le sens  5′ →3′, avec le 3′ OH libre comme le point à laquelle l&rsquo;ADN est allongé. Parce que les deux brins d&rsquo;ADN sont antiparallèles, le brin servant de modèle est lu à partir de son extrémité 3′ vers son extrémité 5′.<br />
Si la synthèse se poursuit toujours dans le sens 5′→ 3′, comment les deux brins peuvent-ils être synthétisés simultanément? Si les deux brins sont synthétisés en continu pendant que la fourche de réplication se déplace, alors un brin devrait subir la synthèse de 3′→5′. Ce problème a été résolu par Reiji Okazaki et ses collègues dans les années 1960. Okazaki a trouvé que l&rsquo;un des nouveaux brins d&rsquo;ADN est synthétisé en petits  morceaux séparés, maintenant appelés fragments d&rsquo;Okazaki. Ce travail finalement conduit à la conclusion qu&rsquo;un brin est synthétisé en continu et l&rsquo;autre en discontinu.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><a href="http://brussels-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/okazaki-frag.jpg" rel="lightbox-5"><img class="alignnone wp-image-8395 size-full" src="http://brussels-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/okazaki-frag.jpg" alt="okazaki frag" width="1280" height="720" /></a>Le brin continu, ou brin principal, est celui dans lequel la synthèse se déroule dans le sens 5′→3′ c.à.d dans la même direction que le mouvement de la fourche de réplication. Le brin discontinu, ou brin secondaire (lagging), est celui dans lequel  la synthèse se déroule de 5′ →3′ mais dans la direction opposée à celle du mouvement de la fourche. Les fragments d&rsquo;Okazaki ont une longueur de quelques centaines à quelques milliers de nucléotides, en fonction du type de cellule. La synthèses des brins leaders et secondaires est étroitement coordonné.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><strong><span style="color: #0000ff;">L&rsquo;ADN est dégradé par les nucléases:</span></strong></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Pour expliquer l&rsquo;enzymologie de la réplication de l&rsquo;ADN, nous introduisons d&rsquo;abord les enzymes qui dégradent l&rsquo;ADN plutôt que de le synthétisent. Ces enzymes sont connues sous le nom de nucléases, ou DNases si elles sont spécifiques de l&rsquo;ADN plutôt que de l&rsquo;ARN. Chaque cellule contient plusieurs nucléases différentes, appartenant à deux grandes classes: <strong><span style="color: #800080;">les exonucléases et les endonucléases</span></strong>. Les exonucléases dégradent les acides nucléiques d&rsquo;une<br />
extrémité de la molécule. Beaucoup fonctionnent seulement dans le sens 5′ →3′ ou le sense opposé 3′ →5′, en enlevant des nucléotides seulement à partir de l&rsquo;extrémité 5′ ou 3′, respectivement, d&rsquo;un brin d&rsquo;ADN double brin ou d&rsquo;un ADN simple brin. Les endonucléases peuvent commencer à dégrader à des sites internes spécifiques dans un brin ou une molécule d&rsquo;ADN, en le réduisant en fragments de plus en plus petits. Quelques exonucléases et endonucléases dégradent seulement l&rsquo;ADN simple brin. Il existe quelques classes importantes d&rsquo;endonucléases qui ne coupent qu&rsquo;à des séquences nucléotidiques spécifiques (telles que les endonucléases de restriction qui sont si importantes en biotechnologie. Vous rencontrerez de nombreux types de nucléases dans ce chapitre et les suivants.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><strong><span style="color: #0000ff;">L&rsquo;ADN est synthétisé par des ADN polymérases :</span></strong></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color: #000000;">La recherche d&rsquo;une enzyme capable de synthétiser l&rsquo;ADN a commencé en 1955.</span> Les travaux d&rsquo;Arthur Kornberg et de ses collègues ont condui à la purification et à la caractérisation de l&rsquo;ADN polymérase provenant des cellules d&rsquo; E. coli, une enzyme à polypeptide unique appelée maintenant ADN polymérase I. Beaucoup plus tard, les chercheurs ont découvert qu&rsquo;E. coli contenaient au moins quatre autres ADN polymérases distinctes, décrites ci-dessous. Des études détaillées de l&rsquo;ADN polymérase I ont révélé des caractéristiques du processus de synthèse de l&rsquo;ADN qui sont maintenant connues pour être communes à toutes les ADN polymérases. La réaction fondamentale est un transfert de groupe phosphoryle :</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><a href="http://brussels-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/dna-pol-1.png" rel="lightbox-6"><img class=" wp-image-8400 size-full aligncenter" src="http://brussels-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/dna-pol-1.png" alt="dna pol 1" width="356" height="82" /></a></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">dNMP et dNTP sont désoxynucleoside 5′-monophosphate et 5′-triphosphate, respectivement. Le nucléophile est le groupe 3′-hydroxyle du nucléotide au niveau de l&rsquo;extrémité 3′ du brin croissant. L&rsquo;attaque nucléophile se produit au niveau du phosphore α du désoxynucléoside 5′-triphosphate entrant. Le pyrophosphate inorganique est libéré dans la réaction.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><a href="http://brussels-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/DNA-POLY-4.png" rel="lightbox-7"><img class="alignnone wp-image-8402 size-full" src="http://brussels-scientific.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/DNA-POLY-4.png" alt="DNA POLY 4" width="2690" height="1706" /></a></p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">La réaction semble se dérouler avec seulement un changement minime de l&rsquo;énergie libre, étant donné qu&rsquo;une liaison phosphodiester est formée aux dépens d&rsquo;un anhydride phosphate un peu moins stable. Cependant, les interactions non-covalentes d&rsquo;empilement de bases et d&rsquo;appariements de bases fournissent une stabilisation supplémentaire au produit d&rsquo;ADN allongé par rapport au nucléotide libre. En outre, la formation de produits est facilitée dans la cellule par les 19 kJ / mol générés lors de l&rsquo;hydrolyse subséquente du produit pyrophosphate par l&rsquo;enzyme pyrophosphatase.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Early work on DNA polymerase I led to the definition of two central requirements for DNA polymerization. First, all DNA polymerases require a template. The polymerization reaction is guided by a template DNA strand according to the base-pairing rules predicted by Watson and Crick: where a guanine is present in the template, a cytosine deoxynucleotide is added to the new strand, and so on. This was a particularly important discovery, not only because it provided a chemical basis for accurate semiconservative DNA replication but also because it represented the first example of the use of a template to guide a biosynthetic reaction. Second, the polymerases require a primer. A primer is a strand segment (complementary to the template) with a free 3-hydroxyl group to which a nucleotide can be added; the free 3 end of the primer is called the primer terminus. In other words, part of the new strand must already be in place: all DNA polymerases can only add nucleotides to a preexisting strand. Most primers are oligonucleotides of RNA rather than DNA, and specialized enzymes synthesize primers when and where they are required. After adding a nucleotide to a growing DNA strand, a DNA polymerase either dissociates or moves along the template and adds another nucleotide. Dissociation and reassociation of the polymerase can limit the overall polymerization rate—the process is generally faster when a polymerase adds more nucleotides without dissociating from the template. The average number of nucleotides added before a polymerase dissociates defines its processivity. DNA polymerases vary greatly in processivity; some add just a few nucleotides before dissociating, others add many thousands. Nucleotide Polymerization by DNA Polymerase Replication Is Very Accurate Replication proceeds with an extraordinary degree of fidelity. In E. coli, a mistake is made only once for every 109 to 1010 nucleotides added. For the E. coli chromosome<br />
of ~4.6  106 bp, this means that an error occurs only once per 1,000 to 10,000 replications. During polymerization, discrimination between correct and incorrect nucleotides relies not just on the hydrogen bonds that specify the correct pairing between complementary bases but also on the common geometry of the standard AUT and GmC base pairs (Fig. 25–6). The active site of DNA polymerase I accommodates only base pairs with this geometry. An incorrect nucleotide may be able to hydrogen-bond with a base in the template, but it generally will not fit into the active site. Incorrect bases can be rejected before the phosphodiester bond is formed. The accuracy of the polymerization reaction itself, however, is insufficient to account for the high degree of fidelity in replication. Careful measurements in vitro have shown that DNA polymerases insert one incorrect nucleotide for every 104 to 105 correct ones. These mistakes sometimes occur because a base is briefly in an unusual tautomeric form (see Fig. 8–9), allowing it to hydrogen-bond with an incorrect partner. In vivo, the error rate is reduced by additional enzymatic mechanisms. One mechanism intrinsic to virtually all DNA polymerases is a separate 3n5 exonuclease activity that double-checks each nucleotide after it is added. This nuclease activity permits the enzyme to remove a newly added nucleotide and is highly specific for mismatched base pairs (Fig. 25–7). If the polymerase has added the wrong nucleotide, translocation of the enzyme to the position where the next nucleotide is to be added is inhibited. This kinetic pause provides the opportunity for a correction. The 3n5 exonuclease activity removes the mispaired nucleotide, and the polymerase begins again. This activity, known as proofreading, is not simply the reverse of the polymerization reaction (Eqn 25–1), because pyrophosphate is not involved. The polymerizing and proofreading activities of a DNA polymerase can be measured separately. Proofreading improves the inherent accuracy of the polymerization reaction 102- to 103-fold. In the monomeric DNA polymerase I, the polymerizing and proofreading activities have separate active sites within the same polypeptide. When base selection and proofreading are combined, DNA polymerase leaves behind one net error for every 106 to 108 bases added. Yet the measured accuracy of replication in E. coli is higher still. The additional accuracy is provided by a separate enzyme system that repairs the mismatched base pairs remaining after replication. We describe this mismatch repair,<br />
along with other DNA repair processes, in Section 25.2.<br />
E. coli Has at Least Five DNA Polymerases<br />
More than 90% of the DNA polymerase activity observed<br />
in E. coli extracts can be accounted for by DNA polymerase<br />
I. Soon after the isolation of this enzyme in 1955,<br />
however, evidence began to accumulate that it is not<br />
suited for replication of the large E. coli chromosome.<br />
First, the rate at which it adds nucleotides (600 nucleotides/<br />
min) is too slow (by a factor of 100 or more)<br />
to account for the rates at which the replication fork<br />
moves in the bacterial cell. Second, DNA polymerase I<br />
has a relatively low processivity. Third, genetic studies<br />
have demonstrated that many genes, and therefore<br />
many proteins, are involved in replication: DNA polymerase<br />
I clearly does not act alone. Fourth, and most<br />
important, in 1969 John Cairns isolated a bacterial strain<br />
with an altered gene for DNA polymerase I that produced<br />
an inactive enzyme. Although this strain was abnormally<br />
sensitive to agents that damaged DNA, it was<br />
nevertheless viable!<br />
A search for other DNA polymerases led to the<br />
discovery of E. coli DNA polymerase II and DNA<br />
polymerase III in the early 1970s. DNA polymerase II<br />
is an enzyme involved in one type of DNA repair (Section<br />
25.3). DNA polymerase III is the principal replication<br />
enzyme in E. coli. The properties of these three<br />
DNA polymerases are compared in Table 25–1. DNA<br />
25.1 DNA Replication 955<br />
DNA polymerase I<br />
OH<br />
Before the polymerase<br />
moves on, the cytosine<br />
undergoes a tautomeric<br />
shift from C* to C. The<br />
new nucleotide is now<br />
mispaired.<br />
is a rare tautomeric<br />
form of cytosine (C*)<br />
that pairs with A and<br />
is incorporated into<br />
the growing strand.<br />
The mispaired 3-OH<br />
end of the growing<br />
strand blocks further<br />
elongation. DNA<br />
polymerase slides back<br />
to position the<br />
mispaired base in the<br />
3→5 exonuclease<br />
active site.<br />
The mispaired<br />
nucleotide is removed.<br />
DNA polymerase slides<br />
forward and resumes its<br />
polymerization activity.<br />
DNA polymerase<br />
active site<br />
3→5 (proofreading)<br />
exonuclease</p>
<p>FIGURE 25–7 An example of error correction by the 3n5 exonuclease<br />
activity of DNA polymerase I. Structural analysis has located<br />
the exonuclease activity ahead of the polymerase activity as the enzyme<br />
is oriented in its movement along the DNA. A mismatched base<br />
(here, a C–A mismatch) impedes translocation of DNA polymerase I<br />
to the next site. Sliding backward, the enzyme corrects the mistake<br />
with its 3n5 exonuclease activity, then resumes its polymerase activity<br />
in the 5n3 direction.<br />
polymerases IV and V, identified in 1999, are involved<br />
in an unusual form of DNA repair (Section 25.2).<br />
DNA polymerase I, then, is not the primary enzyme<br />
of replication; instead it performs a host of clean-up<br />
functions during replication, recombination, and repair.<br />
The polymerase’s special functions are enhanced by its<br />
5n3 exonuclease activity. This activity, distinct from<br />
the 3n5 proofreading exonuclease (Fig. 25–7), is located<br />
in a structural domain that can be separated from<br />
the enzyme by mild protease treatment. When the<br />
5n3 exonuclease domain is removed, the remaining<br />
fragment (Mr 68,000), the large fragment or Klenow<br />
fragment (Fig. 25–8), retains the polymerization and<br />
proofreading activities. The 5n3 exonuclease activity<br />
of intact DNA polymerase I can replace a segment of<br />
DNA (or RNA) paired to the template strand, in a<br />
process known as nick translation (Fig. 25–9). Most<br />
other DNA polymerases lack a 5n3 exonuclease<br />
activity.<br />
DNA polymerase III is much more complex than<br />
DNA polymerase I, having ten types of subunits (Table<br />
25–2). Its polymerization and proofreading activities reside<br />
in its  and  (epsilon) subunits, respectively. The<br />
 subunit associates with  and  to form a core polymerase,<br />
which can polymerize DNA but with limited<br />
processivity. Two core polymerases can be linked by<br />
956 Chapter 25 DNA Metabolism<br />
TABLE 25–1 Comparison of DNA Polymerases of E. coli<br />
DNA polymerase<br />
I II III<br />
Structural gene* polA polB polC (dnaE)<br />
Subunits (number of different types) 1 7 10<br />
Mr 103,000 88,000† 791,500<br />
3n5 Exonuclease (proofreading) Yes Yes Yes<br />
5n3 Exonuclease Yes No No<br />
Polymerization rate (nucleotides/s) 16–20 40 250–1,000<br />
Processivity (nucleotides added 3–200 1,500 500,000<br />
before polymerase dissociates)<br />
*For enzymes with more than one subunit, the gene listed here encodes the subunit with polymerization activity. Note that dnaE<br />
is an earlier designation for the gene now referred to as polC.<br />
†Polymerization subunit only. DNA polymerase II shares several subunits with DNA polymerase III, including the , , , , ,<br />
and<br />
subunits (see Table 25–2).<br />
TABLE 25–2 Subunits of DNA Polymerase III of E. coli<br />
Number of<br />
subunits per<br />
Subunit holoenzyme Mr of subunit Gene Function of subunit<br />
 2 129,900 polC (dnaE) Polymerization activity<br />
 2 27,500 dnaQ (mutD) 3n5 Proofreading exonuclease Core polymerase<br />
 2 8,600 holE<br />
2 71,100 dnaX Stable template binding;<br />
core enzyme dimerization Clamp-loading () complex that<br />
 1 47,500 dnaX* Clamp loader loads  subunits on lagging<br />
 1 38,700 holA Clamp opener strand at each Okazaki fragment<br />
 1 36,900 holB Clamp loader<br />
1 16,600 holC Interaction with SSB</p>
<p>1 15,200 holD Interaction with  and<br />
 4 40,600 dnaN DNA clamp required for<br />
optimal processivity<br />
*The  subunit is encoded by a portion of the gene for the  subunit, such that the amino-terminal 66% of the  subunit has<br />
the same amino acid sequence as the  subunit. The  subunit is generated by a translational frameshifting mechanism (see<br />
Box 27–1) that leads to premature translational termination.<br />
<br />
<br />
another set of subunits, a clamp-loading complex, or <br />
complex, consisting of five subunits of four different<br />
types, 2. The core polymerases are linked through<br />
the  (tau) subunits. Two additional subunits,  (chi) and<br />
 (psi), are bound to the clamp-loading complex. The<br />
entire assembly of 13 protein subunits (nine different<br />
types) is called DNA polymerase III* (Fig. 25–10a).<br />
DNA polymerase III* can polymerize DNA, but with<br />
a much lower processivity than one would expect for<br />
the organized replication of an entire chromosome. The<br />
necessary increase in processivity is provided by the addition<br />
of the  subunits, four of which complete the DNA<br />
polymerase III holoenzyme. The  subunits associate in<br />
pairs to form donut-shaped structures that encircle the<br />
DNA and act like clamps (Fig. 25–10b). Each dimer associates<br />
with a core subassembly of polymerase III* (one<br />
dimeric clamp per core subassembly) and slides along<br />
the DNA as replication proceeds. The  sliding clamp<br />
prevents the dissociation of DNA polymerase III from<br />
DNA, dramatically increasing processivity—to greater<br />
than 500,000 (Table 25–1).<br />
DNA Replication Requires Many Enzymes<br />
and Protein Factors<br />
Replication in E. coli requires not just a single DNA<br />
polymerase but 20 or more different enzymes and proteins,<br />
each performing a specific task. The entire complex<br />
has been termed the DNA replicase system or<br />
replisome. The enzymatic complexity of replication reflects<br />
the constraints imposed by the structure of DNA<br />
and by the requirements for accuracy. The main classes<br />
of replication enzymes are considered here in terms of<br />
the problems they overcome.<br />
Access to the DNA strands that are to act as templates<br />
requires separation of the two parent strands.<br />
This is generally accomplished by helicases, enzymes<br />
that move along the DNA and separate the strands, using<br />
chemical energy from ATP. Strand separation creates<br />
topological stress in the helical DNA structure (see<br />
Fig. 24–12), which is relieved by the action of topoisomerases.<br />
The separated strands are stabilized by<br />
DNA-binding proteins. As noted earlier, before DNA<br />
polymerases can begin synthesizing DNA, primers must<br />
be present on the template—generally short segments<br />
25.1 DNA Replication 957</p>
<p>polymerase I<br />
FIGURE 25–8 Large (Klenow) fragment of DNA polymerase I. This<br />
polymerase is widely distributed in bacteria. The Klenow fragment,<br />
produced by proteolytic treatment of the polymerase, retains the polymerization<br />
and proofreading activities of the enzyme. The Klenow<br />
fragment shown here is from the thermophilic bacterium Bacillus<br />
stearothermophilus (PDB ID 3BDP). The active site for addition of nucleotides<br />
is deep in the crevice at the far end of the bound DNA. The<br />
dark blue strand is the template.<br />
FIGURE 25–9 Nick translation. In this process, an RNA or DNA strand<br />
paired to a DNA template is simultaneously degraded by the 5n3<br />
exonuclease activity of DNA polymerase I and replaced by the polymerase<br />
activity of the same enzyme. These activities have a role in<br />
both DNA repair and the removal of RNA primers during replication<br />
(both described later). The strand of nucleic acid to be removed (either<br />
DNA or RNA) is shown in green, the replacement strand in red.<br />
DNA synthesis begins at a nick (a broken phosphodiester bond, leaving<br />
a free 3 hydroxyl and a free 5 phosphate). Polymerase I extends<br />
the nontemplate DNA strand and moves the nick along the DNA—a<br />
process called nick translation. A nick remains where DNA polymerase<br />
I dissociates, and is later sealed by another enzyme.<br />
End view<br />
of RNA synthesized by enzymes known as primases.<br />
Ultimately, the RNA primers are removed and replaced<br />
by DNA; in E. coli, this is one of the many functions of<br />
DNA polymerase I. After an RNA primer is removed and<br />
the gap is filled in with DNA, a nick remains in the DNA<br />
backbone in the form of a broken phosphodiester bond.<br />
These nicks are sealed by DNA ligases. All these<br />
processes require coordination and regulation, an interplay<br />
best characterized in the E. coli system.<br />
Replication of the E. coli Chromosome<br />
Proceeds in Stages<br />
The synthesis of a DNA molecule can be divided into<br />
three stages: initiation, elongation, and termination,<br />
distinguished both by the reactions taking place and by<br />
the enzymes required. As you will find here and in the<br />
next two chapters, synthesis of the major informationcontaining<br />
biological polymers—DNAs, RNAs, and proteins—<br />
can be understood in terms of these same three<br />
stages, with the stages of each pathway having unique<br />
characteristics. The events described below reflect information<br />
derived primarily from in vitro experiments<br />
using purified E. coli proteins, although the principles<br />
are highly conserved in all replication systems.<br />
Initiation The E. coli replication origin, oriC, consists<br />
of 245 bp; it bears DNA sequence elements that are<br />
highly conserved among bacterial replication origins.<br />
The general arrangement of the conserved sequences is<br />
958 Chapter 25 DNA Metabolism<br />
t<br />
b clamp<br />
DnaB<br />
helicase<br />
t<br />
b clamp<br />
(open)<br />
Core (aev)<br />
d<br />
g<br />
d<br />
FIGURE 25–10 DNA polymerase III. (a) Architecture of bacterial<br />
DNA polymerase III. Two core domains, composed of subunits , ,<br />
and , are linked by a five-subunit  complex (also known as the<br />
clamp-loading complex) with the composition 2. The  and <br />
subunits are encoded by the same gene. The  subunit is a shortened<br />
version of ; the  subunit thus contains a domain identical to , along<br />
with an additional segment that interacts with the core polymerase.<br />
The other two subunits of DNA polymerase III*,  and (not shown),<br />
also bind to the  complex. Two<br />
clamps interact with the two-core<br />
subassembly, each clamp a dimer of the<br />
subunit. The complex interacts<br />
with the DnaB helicase through the  subunit. (b) Two<br />
subunits<br />
of E. coli polymerase III form a circular clamp that surrounds the<br />
DNA. The clamp slides along the DNA molecule, increasing the processivity<br />
of the polymerase III holoenzyme to greater than 500,000 by<br />
preventing its dissociation from the DNA. The end-on view shows the<br />
two<br />
subunits as gray and light-blue ribbon structures surrounding a<br />
space-filling model of DNA. In the side view, surface contour models<br />
of the<br />
subunits (gray) surround a stick representation of a DNA double<br />
helix (light and dark blue) (derived from PDB ID 2POL). Side view<br />
(b)<br />
(a)<br />
illustrated in Figure 25–11. The key sequences of interest<br />
here are two series of short repeats: three repeats<br />
of a 13 bp sequence and four repeats of a 9 bp sequence.<br />
At least nine different enzymes or proteins (summarized<br />
in Table 25–3) participate in the initiation phase<br />
of replication. They open the DNA helix at the origin<br />
and establish a prepriming complex for subsequent reactions.<br />
The crucial component in the initiation process<br />
is the DnaA protein. A single complex of four to five<br />
DnaA protein molecules binds to the four 9 bp repeats<br />
in the origin (Fig. 25–12, step 1 ), then recognizes and<br />
successively denatures the DNA in the region of the<br />
three 13 bp repeats, which are rich in AUT pairs (step<br />
2 ). This process requires ATP and the bacterial histonelike<br />
protein HU. The DnaC protein then loads the<br />
DnaB protein onto the unwound region. Two ringshaped<br />
hexamers of DnaB, one loaded onto each DNA<br />
strand, act as helicases, unwinding the DNA bidirectionally<br />
and creating two potential replication forks. If<br />
the E. coli single-stranded DNA–binding protein (SSB)<br />
and DNA gyrase (DNA topoisomerase II) are now added<br />
in vitro, thousands of base pairs are rapidly unwound<br />
by the DnaB helicase, proceeding out from the origin.<br />
Many molecules of SSB bind cooperatively to singlestranded<br />
DNA, stabilizing the separated strands and<br />
preventing renaturation while gyrase relieves the topological<br />
stress produced by the DnaB helicase. When additional<br />
replication proteins are included in the in vitro<br />
system, the DNA unwinding mediated by DnaB is coupled<br />
to replication, as described below.<br />
Initiation is the only phase of DNA replication that<br />
is known to be regulated, and it is regulated such that<br />
replication occurs only once in each cell cycle. The<br />
mechanism of regulation is not yet well understood, but<br />
genetic and biochemical studies have provided a few<br />
insights.<br />
The timing of replication initiation is affected by<br />
DNA methylation and interactions with the bacterial<br />
plasma membrane. The oriC DNA is methylated by the<br />
Dam methylase (Table 25–3), which methylates the N6<br />
position of adenine within the palindromic sequence<br />
(5)GATC. (Dam is not a biochemical expletive; it stands<br />
for DNA adenine methylation.) The oriC region of E. coli<br />
is highly enriched in GATC sequences—it has 11 of them<br />
in its 245 bp, whereas the average frequency of GATC in<br />
the E. coli chromosome as a whole is 1 in 256 bp.<br />
25.1 DNA Replication 959<br />
Tandem array of<br />
three 13 bp sequences<br />
Binding sites for DnaA protein,<br />
four 9 bp sequences<br />
Consensus sequence<br />
TTATCCACA<br />
Consensus sequence<br />
GATCTNTTNTTTT<br />
FIGURE 25–11 Arrangement of sequences in the E. coli replication<br />
origin, oriC. Although the repeated sequences (shaded in color) are<br />
not identical, certain nucleotides are particularly common in each position,<br />
forming a consensus sequence. In positions where there is no<br />
consensus, N represents any of the four nucleotides. The arrows indicate<br />
the orientations of the nucleotide sequences.<br />
1<br />
2<br />
3<br />
DnaB helicase<br />
Priming and<br />
replication<br />
DnaB<br />
DnaC<br />
HU<br />
DnaA<br />
Supercoiled<br />
template<br />
Three 13 bp<br />
repeats<br />
Four 9 bp<br />
repeats<br />
oriC<br />
 ATP<br />
 ATP<br />
 ATP<br />
FIGURE 25–12 Model for initiation of replication at the E. coli origin,<br />
oriC. 1 About 20 DnaA protein molecules, each with a bound<br />
ATP, bind at the four 9 bp repeats. The DNA is wrapped around this<br />
complex. 2 The three AUT-rich 13 bp repeats are denatured sequentially.<br />
3 Hexamers of the DnaB protein bind to each strand,<br />
with the aid of DnaC protein. The DnaB helicase activity further unwinds<br />
the DNA in preparation for priming and DNA synthesis.<br />
Immediately after replication, the DNA is hemimethylated:<br />
the parent strands have methylated oriC<br />
sequences but the newly synthesized strands do not. The<br />
hemimethylated oriC sequences are now sequestered<br />
for a period by interaction with the plasma membrane<br />
(the mechanism is unknown). After a time, oriC is released<br />
from the plasma membrane, and it must be fully<br />
methylated by Dam methylase before it can again bind<br />
DnaA. Regulation of initiation also involves the slow hydrolysis<br />
of ATP by DnaA protein, which cycles the protein<br />
between active (with bound ATP) and inactive (with<br />
bound ADP) forms on a timescale of 20 to 40 minutes.<br />
Elongation The elongation phase of replication includes<br />
two distinct but related operations: leading strand synthesis<br />
and lagging strand synthesis. Several enzymes at<br />
the replication fork are important to the synthesis of both<br />
strands. Parent DNA is first unwound by DNA helicases,<br />
and the resulting topological stress is relieved by topoisomerases.<br />
Each separated strand is then stabilized by<br />
960 Chapter 25 DNA Metabolism<br />
TABLE 25–3 Proteins Required to Initiate Replication at the E. coli Origin<br />
Number of<br />
Protein Mr subunits Function<br />
DnaA protein 52,000 1 Recognizes ori sequence; opens duplex at specific sites in<br />
origin<br />
DnaB protein (helicase) 300,000 6* Unwinds DNA<br />
DnaC protein 29,000 1 Required for DnaB binding at origin<br />
HU 19,000 2 Histonelike protein; DNA-binding protein; stimulates initiation<br />
Primase (DnaG protein) 60,000 1 Synthesizes RNA primers<br />
Single-stranded DNA–binding<br />
protein (SSB) 75,600 4* Binds single-stranded DNA<br />
RNA polymerase 454,000 5 Facilitates DnaA activity<br />
DNA gyrase (DNA topoisomerase II) 400,000 4 Relieves torsional strain generated by DNA unwinding<br />
Dam methylase 32,000 1 Methylates (5)GATC sequences at oriC<br />
FIGURE 25–13 Synthesis of Okazaki<br />
fragments. (a) At intervals, primase<br />
synthesizes an RNA primer for a new<br />
Okazaki fragment. Note that if we<br />
consider the two template strands as<br />
lying side by side, lagging strand<br />
synthesis formally proceeds in the<br />
opposite direction from fork movement.<br />
(b) Each primer is extended by DNA<br />
polymerase III. (c) DNA synthesis<br />
continues until the fragment extends as<br />
far as the primer of the previously added<br />
Okazaki fragment. A new primer is<br />
synthesized near the replication fork to<br />
begin the process again.<br />
5<br />
3<br />
5<br />
3<br />
5<br />
3<br />
Replication fork movement<br />
Leading strand synthesis<br />
(DNA polymerase III)<br />
DnaB<br />
helicase<br />
DNA topoisomerase II<br />
(DNA gyrase)<br />
Lagging<br />
strand<br />
Lagging strand synthesis<br />
(DNA polymerase III)<br />
RNA SSB<br />
primer<br />
DNA<br />
primase<br />
(a)<br />
(c)<br />
(b)<br />
RNA primer<br />
from previous<br />
Okazaki<br />
fragment<br />
*Subunits in these cases are identical.<br />
SSB. From this point, synthesis of leading and lagging<br />
strands is sharply different.<br />
Leading strand synthesis, the more straightforward<br />
of the two, begins with the synthesis by primase (DnaG<br />
protein) of a short (10 to 60 nucleotide) RNA primer at<br />
the replication origin. Deoxyribonucleotides are added<br />
to this primer by DNA polymerase III. Leading strand<br />
synthesis then proceeds continuously, keeping pace<br />
with the unwinding of DNA at the replication fork.<br />
Lagging strand synthesis, as we have noted, is accomplished<br />
in short Okazaki fragments. First, an RNA<br />
primer is synthesized by primase and, as in leading<br />
strand synthesis, DNA polymerase III binds to the RNA<br />
primer and adds deoxyribonucleotides (Fig. 25–13). On<br />
this level, the synthesis of each Okazaki fragment seems<br />
straightforward, but the reality is quite complex. The<br />
complexity lies in the coordination of leading and lagging<br />
strand synthesis: both strands are produced by a<br />
single asymmetric DNA polymerase III dimer, which is<br />
accomplished by looping the DNA of the lagging strand<br />
as shown in Figure 25–14, bringing together the two<br />
points of polymerization.<br />
25.1 DNA Replication 961<br />
DnaB<br />
Core<br />
Clamp-loading complex<br />
with open b sliding clamp<br />
Lagging strand<br />
RNA primer<br />
of previous<br />
Okazaki<br />
fragment<br />
Leading<br />
strand<br />
(a) Continuous synthesis on the leading strand proceeds<br />
as DNA is unwound by the DnaB helicase.<br />
Primase<br />
New<br />
RNA<br />
primer<br />
Primer of previous<br />
Okazaki fragment<br />
approaches core<br />
subunits<br />
(b) DNA primase binds to DnaB, synthesizes<br />
a new primer, then dissociates.<br />
Primase<br />
Discarded<br />
b clamp<br />
The next b clamp<br />
is readied<br />
New b clamp is loaded<br />
onto new template primer<br />
Synthesis of new<br />
Okazaki fragment<br />
is completed<br />
(c)<br />
New b clamp<br />
(e)<br />
(d)<br />
FIGURE 25–14 DNA synthesis on the leading<br />
and lagging strands. Events at the replication fork<br />
are coordinated by a single DNA polymerase III<br />
dimer, in an integrated complex with DnaB<br />
helicase. This figure shows the replication<br />
process already underway (parts (a) through (e)<br />
are discussed in the text). The lagging strand is<br />
looped so that DNA synthesis proceeds steadily<br />
on both the leading and lagging strand templates<br />
at the same time. Red arrows indicate the 3 end<br />
of the two new strands and the direction of DNA<br />
synthesis. Black arrows show the direction of<br />
movement of the parent DNA through the<br />
complex. An Okazaki fragment is being<br />
synthesized on the lagging strand.<br />
The synthesis of Okazaki fragments on the lagging<br />
strand entails some elegant enzymatic choreography.<br />
The DnaB helicase and DnaG primase constitute a functional<br />
unit within the replication complex, the primosome.<br />
DNA polymerase III uses one set of its core subunits<br />
(the core polymerase) to synthesize the leading<br />
strand continuously, while the other set of core subunits<br />
cycles from one Okazaki fragment to the next on the<br />
looped lagging strand. The DnaB helicase unwinds the<br />
DNA at the replication fork (Fig. 25–14a) as it travels<br />
along the lagging strand template in the 5n3 direction.<br />
DNA primase occasionally associates with DnaB<br />
helicase and synthesizes a short RNA primer (Fig.<br />
25–14b). A new  sliding clamp is then positioned at the<br />
primer by the clamp-loading complex of DNA polymerase<br />
III (Fig. 25–14c). When synthesis of an Okazaki<br />
fragment has been completed, replication halts, and the<br />
core subunits of DNA polymerase III dissociate from<br />
their  sliding clamp (and from the completed Okazaki<br />
fragment) and associate with the new clamp (Fig.<br />
25–14d, e). This initiates synthesis of a new Okazaki<br />
fragment. As noted earlier, the entire complex responsible<br />
for coordinated DNA synthesis at a replication fork<br />
is a replisome. The proteins acting at the replication<br />
fork are summarized in Table 25–4.<br />
The replisome promotes rapid DNA synthesis,<br />
adding ~1,000 nucleotides/s to each strand (leading and<br />
lagging). Once an Okazaki fragment has been completed,<br />
its RNA primer is removed and replaced with<br />
DNA by DNA polymerase I, and the remaining nick is<br />
sealed by DNA ligase (Fig. 25–15).<br />
DNA ligase catalyzes the formation of a phosphodiester<br />
bond between a 3 hydroxyl at the end of one<br />
DNA strand and a 5 phosphate at the end of another<br />
strand. The phosphate must be activated by adenylylation.<br />
DNA ligases isolated from viruses and eukaryotes<br />
use ATP for this purpose. DNA ligases from bacteria are<br />
unusual in that they generally use NAD—a cofactor<br />
that normally functions in hydride transfer reactions<br />
(see Fig. 13–15)—as the source of the AMP activating<br />
group (Fig. 25–16). DNA ligase is another enzyme of<br />
DNA metabolism that has become an important reagent<br />
in recombinant DNA experiments (see Fig. 9–1).<br />
Termination Eventually, the two replication forks of the<br />
circular E. coli chromosome meet at a terminus region<br />
containing multiple copies of a 20 bp sequence called<br />
Ter (for terminus) (Fig. 25–17a). The Ter sequences are<br />
arranged on the chromosome to create a sort of trap<br />
that a replication fork can enter but cannot leave. The<br />
Ter sequences function as binding sites for a protein<br />
called Tus (terminus utilization substance). The Tus-Ter<br />
complex can arrest a replication fork from only one direction.<br />
Only one Tus-Ter complex functions per replication<br />
cycle—the complex first encountered by either<br />
962 Chapter 25 DNA Metabolism<br />
TABLE 25–4 Proteins at the E. coli Replication Fork<br />
Number of<br />
Protein Mr subunits Function<br />
SSB 75,600 4 Binding to single-stranded DNA<br />
DnaB protein (helicase) 300,000 6 DNA unwinding; primosome constituent<br />
Primase (DnaG protein) 60,000 1 RNA primer synthesis; primosome constituent<br />
DNA polymerase III 791,500 17 New strand elongation<br />
DNA polymerase I 103,000 1 Filling of gaps; excision of primers<br />
DNA ligase 74,000 1 Ligation<br />
DNA gyrase (DNA topoisomerase II) 400,000 4 Supercoiling<br />
Modified from Kornberg, A. (1982) Supplement to DNA Replication, Table S11–2, W. H. Freeman and Company, New York.<br />
3 5<br />
5 3<br />
Lagging<br />
strand<br />
dNTPs<br />
rNMPs DNA polymerase I Nick<br />
ATP (or NAD+)<br />
AMP +PPi (or NMN)<br />
DNA ligase<br />
FIGURE 25–15 Final steps in the synthesis of lagging strand segments.<br />
RNA primers in the lagging strand are removed by the 5n3<br />
exonuclease activity of DNA polymerase I and replaced with DNA by<br />
the same enzyme. The remaining nick is sealed by DNA ligase. The<br />
role of ATP or NAD is shown in Figure 25–16.<br />
O<br />
PPi (from ATP)<br />
or<br />
NMN (from NAD)<br />
Enzyme P O<br />
O<br />
O<br />
Ribose Adenine<br />
Enzyme<br />
P<br />
O<br />
DNA ligase<br />
OH O<br />
Nick in DNA<br />
Enzyme-AMP<br />
NH3<br />
<br />
O<br />
P<br />
OH O O<br />
O O<br />
P<br />
O<br />
O O<br />
DNA ligase<br />
P<br />
O<br />
O<br />
O<br />
Ribose Adenine<br />
AMP<br />
O P<br />
O<br />
O<br />
Sealed DNA<br />
Ribose Adenine<br />
R O P O<br />
O<br />
O<br />
Ribose Adenine<br />
AMP from ATP (R  PPi)<br />
or NAD (R  NMN)<br />
NH2<br />
<br />
O O<br />
Enzyme NH3<br />
<br />
1 Adenylylation of<br />
DNA ligase<br />
2 Activation of<br />
5 phosphate in<br />
nick<br />
5<br />
3<br />
3<br />
5<br />
3 Displacement of AMP seals nick<br />
replication fork. Given that opposing replication forks<br />
generally halt when they collide, Ter sequences do not<br />
seem essential, but they may prevent overreplication by<br />
one replication fork in the event that the other is delayed<br />
or halted by an encounter with DNA damage or<br />
some other obstacle.<br />
So, when either replication fork encounters a functional<br />
Tus-Ter complex, it halts; the other fork halts<br />
when it meets the first (arrested) fork. The final few<br />
hundred base pairs of DNA between these large protein<br />
complexes are then replicated (by an as yet unknown<br />
mechanism), completing two topologically interlinked<br />
(catenated) circular chromosomes (Fig. 25–17b). DNA<br />
circles linked in this way are known as catenanes. Separation<br />
of the catenated circles in E. coli requires topoisomerase<br />
IV (a type II topoisomerase). The separated<br />
chromosomes then segregate into daughter cells at cell<br />
division. The terminal phase of replication of other circular<br />
chromosomes, including many of the DNA viruses<br />
that infect eukaryotic cells, is similar.<br />
Bacterial Replication Is Organized in Membrane-<br />
Bound Replication Factories<br />
The replication of a circular bacterial chromosome is<br />
highly organized. Once bidirectional replication is initiated<br />
at the origin, the two replisomes do not travel away<br />
from each other along the DNA. Instead, the replisomes<br />
are linked together and tethered to one point on the<br />
bacterial inner membrane, and the DNA substrate is fed<br />
through this “replication factory” (Fig. 25–18a). The<br />
tethering point is at the center of the elongated bacterial<br />
cell. After initiation, each of the two newly synthesized<br />
replication origins is partitioned into one half of<br />
25.1 DNA Replication 963<br />
FIGURE 25–16 Mechanism of the DNA ligase reaction. In each of<br />
the three steps, one phosphodiester bond is formed at the expense of<br />
another. Steps 1 and 2 lead to activation of the 5 phosphate in<br />
the nick. An AMP group is transferred first to a Lys residue on the enzyme<br />
and then to the 5 phosphate in the nick. In step 3 , the 3-<br />
hydroxyl group attacks this phosphate and displaces AMP, producing a<br />
phosphodiester bond to seal the nick. In the E. coli DNA ligase reaction,<br />
AMP is derived from NAD. The DNA ligases isolated from a<br />
number of viral and eukaryotic sources use ATP rather than NAD,<br />
and they release pyrophosphate rather than nicotinamide mononucleotide<br />
(NMN) in step 1 .<br />
(a)<br />
Origin<br />
Clockwise<br />
fork<br />
Counterclockwise<br />
Clockwise fork trap<br />
fork trap<br />
Counterclockwise<br />
fork<br />
TerG<br />
TerF<br />
TerB TerC<br />
TerA<br />
TerD<br />
TerB<br />
Clockwise<br />
fork<br />
Counterclockwise<br />
fork<br />
completion<br />
of replication<br />
Catenated<br />
chromosomes<br />
Separated<br />
chromosomes<br />
(b)<br />
DNA topoisomerase IV<br />
the cell, and continuing replication extrudes each new<br />
chromosome into that half (Fig. 25–18b). The elaborate<br />
spatial organization of the newly replicated chromosomes<br />
is orchestrated and maintained by many proteins,<br />
including bacterial homologs of the SMC proteins and<br />
topoisomerases (Chapter 24). Once replication is terminated,<br />
the cell divides, and the chromosomes sequestered<br />
in the two halves of the original cell are accurately<br />
partitioned into the daughter cells. When<br />
replication commences in the daughter cells, the origin<br />
of replication is sequestered in new replication factories<br />
formed at a point on the membrane at the center of the<br />
cell, and the entire process is repeated.<br />
Replication in Eukaryotic Cells Is More Complex<br />
The DNA molecules in eukaryotic cells are considerably<br />
larger than those in bacteria and are organized into complex<br />
nucleoprotein structures (chromatin; p. 938). The<br />
essential features of DNA replication are the same in<br />
eukaryotes and prokaryotes, and many of the protein<br />
complexes are functionally and structurally conserved.<br />
However, some interesting variations on the general<br />
principles discussed above promise new insights into the<br />
regulation of replication and its link with the cell cycle.<br />
Origins of replication, called autonomously replicating<br />
sequences (ARS) or replicators, have been<br />
identified and best studied in yeast. Yeast replicators<br />
span ~150 bp and contain several essential conserved<br />
sequences. About 400 replicators are distributed among<br />
the 16 chromosomes in a haploid yeast genome. Initiation<br />
of replication in all eukaryotes requires a multisubunit<br />
protein, the origin recognition complex (ORC),<br />
which binds to several sequences within the replicator.<br />
ORC interacts with and is regulated by a number of<br />
other proteins involved in control of the eukaryotic cell<br />
cycle. Two other proteins, CDC6 (discovered in a screen<br />
for genes affecting the cell division cycle) and CDT1<br />
(Cdc10-dependent transcript 1), bind to ORC and mediate<br />
the loading of a heterohexamer of minichromosome<br />
maintenance proteins (MCM2 to MCM7). The<br />
MCM complex is a ring-shaped replicative helicase, analogous<br />
to the bacterial DnaB helicase. The CDC6 and<br />
CDT1 proteins have a role comparable to that of the<br />
bacterial DnaC protein, loading the MCM helicase onto<br />
the DNA near the replication origin.<br />
The rate of replication fork movement in eukaryotes<br />
(~50 nucleotides/s) is only one-twentieth that observed<br />
in E. coli. At this rate, replication of an average<br />
human chromosome proceeding from a single origin<br />
964 Chapter 25 DNA Metabolism<br />
FIGURE 25–17 Termination of chromosome replication in<br />
E. coli. (a) The Ter sequences are positioned on the chromosome<br />
in two clusters with opposite orientations. (b) Replication<br />
of the DNA separating the opposing replication forks leaves the<br />
completed chromosomes joined as catenanes, or topologically<br />
interlinked circles. The circles are not covalently linked, but<br />
because they are interwound and each is covalently closed,<br />
they cannot be separated—except by the action of topoisomerases.<br />
In E. coli, a type II topoisomerase known as DNA<br />
topoisomerase IV plays the primary role in the separation of<br />
catenated chromosomes, transiently breaking both DNA strands<br />
of one chromosome and allowing the other chromosome to pass<br />
through the break.<br />
35<br />
53<br />
(a)<br />
would take more than 500 hours. Replication of human<br />
chromosomes in fact proceeds bidirectionally from<br />
many origins, spaced 30,000 to 300,000 bp apart. Eukaryotic<br />
chromosomes are almost always much larger<br />
than bacterial chromosomes, so multiple origins are<br />
probably a universal feature in eukaryotic cells.<br />
Like bacteria, eukaryotes have several types of<br />
DNA polymerases. Some have been linked to particular<br />
functions, such as the replication of mitochondrial<br />
DNA. The replication of nuclear chromosomes involves<br />
DNA polymerase , in association with DNA polymerase<br />
. DNA polymerase  is typically a multisubunit<br />
enzyme with similar structure and properties in all<br />
eukaryotic cells. One subunit has a primase activity, and<br />
the largest subunit (Mr ~180,000) contains the polymerization<br />
activity. However, this polymerase has no<br />
proofreading 3n5 exonuclease activity, making it unsuitable<br />
for high-fidelity DNA replication. DNA polymerase<br />
 is believed to function only in the synthesis<br />
of short primers (containing either RNA or DNA) for<br />
Okazaki fragments on the lagging strand. These primers<br />
are then extended by the multisubunit DNA polymerase<br />
. This enzyme is associated with and stimulated<br />
by a protein called proliferating cell nuclear antigen<br />
(PCNA; Mr 29,000), found in large amounts in the<br />
nuclei of proliferating cells. The three-dimensional<br />
structure of PCNA is remarkably similar to that of the<br />
 subunit of E. coli DNA polymerase III (Fig. 25–10b),<br />
although primary sequence homology is not evident.<br />
PCNA has a function analogous to that of the  subunit,<br />
forming a circular clamp that greatly enhances the<br />
processivity of the polymerase. DNA polymerase  has<br />
a 3n5 proofreading exonuclease activity and appears<br />
to carry out both leading and lagging strand synthesis<br />
in a complex comparable to the dimeric bacterial DNA<br />
polymerase III.<br />
Yet another polymerase, DNA polymerase , replaces<br />
DNA polymerase  in some situations, such as in<br />
DNA repair. DNA polymerase  may also function at the<br />
replication fork, perhaps playing a role analogous to that<br />
of the bacterial DNA polymerase I, removing the primers<br />
of Okazaki fragments on the lagging strand.<br />
25.1 DNA Replication 965<br />
Origin<br />
Bacterium<br />
Replisome<br />
replication<br />
begins<br />
origins<br />
separate<br />
cell elongates<br />
as replication<br />
continues<br />
chromosomes<br />
separate<br />
cells<br />
divide<br />
Terminator<br />
(b)<br />
Chromosome<br />
FIGURE 25–18 Chromosome partitioning<br />
in bacteria. (a) All replication is carried<br />
out at a central replication factory that<br />
includes two complete replication forks.<br />
(b) The two replicated copies of the<br />
bacterial chromosome are extruded from<br />
the replication factory into the two halves<br />
of the cell, possibly with each newly<br />
synthesized origin bound separately to<br />
different points on the plasma membrane.<br />
Sequestering the two chromosome copies<br />
in separate cell halves facilitates their<br />
proper segregation at cell division.<br />
Many DNA viruses encode their own DNA polymerases,<br />
and some of these have become targets for<br />
pharmaceuticals. For example, the DNA polymerase of<br />
the herpes simplex virus is inhibited by acyclovir, a compound<br />
developed by Gertrude Elion (p. 876). Acyclovir<br />
consists of guanine attached to an incomplete ribose<br />
ring. It is phosphorylated by a virally encoded thymidine<br />
kinase; acyclovir binds to this viral enzyme with an<br />
affinity 200-fold greater than its binding to the cellular<br />
thymidine kinase. This ensures that phosphorylation occurs<br />
mainly in virus-infected cells. Cellular kinases convert<br />
the resulting acyclo-GMP to acyclo-GTP, which is<br />
both an inhibitor and a substrate of DNA polymerases,<br />
and which competitively inhibits the herpes DNA polymerase<br />
more strongly than cellular DNA polymerases.<br />
Because it lacks a 3 hydroxyl, acyclo-GTP also acts as<br />
a chain terminator when incorporated into DNA. Thus<br />
viral replication is inhibited at several steps.<br />
Two other protein complexes also function in eukaryotic<br />
DNA replication. RPA (replication protein A)<br />
is a eukaryotic single-stranded DNA–binding protein,<br />
equivalent in function to the E. coli SSB protein. RFC<br />
(replication factor C) is a clamp loader for PCNA and<br />
facilitates the assembly of active replication complexes.<br />
The subunits of the RFC complex have significant sequence<br />
similarity to the subunits of the bacterial clamploading<br />
() complex.<br />
The termination of replication on linear eukaryotic<br />
chromosomes involves the synthesis of special structures<br />
called telomeres at the ends of each chromosome,<br />
as discussed in the next chapter.<br />
SUMMARY 25.1 DNA Replication<br />
■ Replication of DNA occurs with very high<br />
fidelity and at a designated time in the cell<br />
cycle. Replication is semiconservative, each<br />
strand acting as template for a new daughter<br />
strand. It is carried out in three identifiable<br />
phases: initiation, elongation, and termination.<br />
The reaction starts at the origin and usually<br />
proceeds bidirectionally.<br />
■ DNA is synthesized in the 5n3 direction by<br />
DNA polymerases. At the replication fork, the<br />
leading strand is synthesized continuously in<br />
the same direction as replication fork<br />
movement; the lagging strand is synthesized<br />
discontinuously as Okazaki fragments, which<br />
are subsequently ligated.<br />
HN<br />
N N<br />
O<br />
O<br />
OH<br />
H2N<br />
N<br />
■ The fidelity of DNA replication is maintained<br />
by (1) base selection by the polymerase, (2) a<br />
3n5 proofreading exonuclease activity that is<br />
part of most DNA polymerases, and (3) specific<br />
repair systems for mismatches left behind after<br />
replication.<br />
■ Most cells have several DNA polymerases. In<br />
E. coli, DNA polymerase III is the primary<br />
replication enzyme. DNA polymerase I is<br />
responsible for special functions during<br />
replication, recombination, and repair.<br />
■ Replication of the E. coli chromosome involves<br />
many enzymes and protein factors organized in<br />
replication factories, in which template DNA is<br />
spooled through two replisomes tethered to the<br />
bacterial plasma membrane.<br />
■ Replication is similar in eukaryotic cells, but<br />
eukaryotic chromosomes have many replication<br />
origins.</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="http://brussels-scientific.com/?p=8376">Chapitre 1 : La réplication de l&rsquo;ADN</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="http://brussels-scientific.com/?page_id=42">BORZUYA UNIVERSITY</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://brussels-scientific.com/?feed=rss2&#038;p=8376</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
	</channel>
</rss>
