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DNA Repair Mechanisms and Transcription Processes
DNA Repair Mechanisms and Transcription Processes
Types of DNA Repair
Direct Reversal
Replacement Repair
Categories:
Base Excision Repair
Nucleotide Excision Repair
Mismatch Repair
Recombination Repair
Non-Homologous End Joining (NHEJ)
Resynthesis
Involves stretches of replacement DNA
Types of DNA Damage
Single Base Changes
Affect DNA sequence but not structure
Examples:
Mutation (e.g., cytosine to uracil, deamination of methyl-cytosine to thymine)
Errors during replication
Structural Distortion Mutations
Affect replication and transcription
Examples
:
Thymine-Thymine dimers from UV irradiation
Fixed by bacterial photolyase or by excision repair
Bulky adducts (e.g., from alkylation)
Distorts the DNA structure and stalls polymerases
Caused by:
Cigarette smoke (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons)
Heterocyclic aromatic amines (from BBQ meat)
Prokaryotic Repair Systems
Excision Repair
Fixes mismatches/distorted DNA
Repair Steps
:
Incision
: Endonuclease cuts the strand
Excision
: 5’–3’ exonuclease or helicase removes damaged segment
Synthesis
: Single-strand region serves as a template for nucleotide replacement
Ligation
: DNA ligase seals the phosphodiester backbone
Key Enzymes
:
UvrA
: Recognition
UvrB and UvrC
: Endonuclease activity
UvrD
: Helicase
Base Flipping
Removes only the damaged base rather than the entire nucleotide
Uses Glycosylases to cleave bonds and flip out bases with adducts
Lyases
: Sometimes linked to glycosylases; they open sugar rings and break the backbone
Error-Prone Repair
Last-ditch mechanism during replication stalls to avoid cell death
Allows incorporation of any base opposite the template, ignoring complementary base pairing.
Umu System
:
Induced by DNA damage; includes UmuD and UmuC genes
Forms a complex (umuD’2C) that aids in filling replication stalls and causes mutations
Mismatch Repair
Precautionary mechanism to correct mismatches on the damaged strand
General Mut System
: Includes genes such as MutT, MutM, and MutY
Detects and repairs oxidative damage (e.g., 8-oxo-Gs)
Uses proteins such as MutS, MutL, and MutH for identification and repair
Recombination Repair
Uses similar mechanisms found in genetic recombination
Repairs roadblocks during replication
Eukaryotic Repair Systems
General Characteristics
Repair mechanisms have conserved elements across species
Mammalian examples include xeroderma pigmentosum (XP)
Result from mutations affecting nucleotide excision repair.
Sensitivity to sunlight; defects in one of eight critical genes
Double-Stranded Breaks (DSB)
Repair through homologous recombination or NHEJ
Involves key proteins such as Ku70, Ku80, and DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK)
NHEJ Mechanism
:
Recognition
: Broken ends are recognized by Ku proteins
Trimming
: Artemis helps refine ends
Filling
: Remaining gaps filled by an unspecified DNA polymerase
Joining
: DNA ligase and XRCC4 complete the repair
Chromatin Remodeling Following Damage
Damaged DNA stimulates chromatin remodeling to remove nucleosomes
Post-repair, Asf1 and Caf-1 restore chromatin structure
Mobile Genetic Elements
Transposons
Sequences that can move within the genome and are a major source of mutations
Prokaryotic Transposons
:
Simple IS elements
Composite transposons carry additional genes; e.g., drug resistance.
Transposition Mechanisms
Replicative
: Copy-and-paste mechanism mediated by transposase
Non-Replicative
: Cut-and-paste such that original site loses the element
Consequences of Transposition
Can cause gene disruptions and rearrangements.
Precise excision can lead to a true reversion of sequences
Eukaryotic Transposons
Example: P-Elements in Drosophila
P-elements are not present in lab stocks but are found in wild stocks
Their presence can lead to hybrid dysgenesis when interbreeding with M-strains
Retroviruses
Infectious elements spreading between cells
Consist of ssRNA, which replicates via a dsDNA intermediate
Integration requires a transposition-like event into host genomes
Function of Viral Genes
Gag
: Nucleoprotein core components
Pol
: Reverse transcriptase and integrase
Env
: Components of the viral envelope
Oncogenes and Cancer
Retroviruses can acquire host genes that may lead to cancer
V-onc
: Mutant viral genes causing transformation of normal cells into cancer cells
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Explore Top Notes
History-Chapter 8: How Did SG Become An Independent Nation? (Secondary 2)
Note
Studied by 338 people
5.0
(3)
Chapter 29 - Wilsonian Progressivism at Home and Abroad
Note
Studied by 70 people
5.0
(1)
Chapter 5- Atomic Structure
Note
Studied by 213 people
5.0
(5)
“Defining Social Sciences as the Study of the Society”
Note
Studied by 12 people
5.0
(1)
Excretion in Humans (2.43-2.44)
Note
Studied by 18 people
5.0
(1)
personalpahayag
Note
Studied by 2 people
5.0
(1)