Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland...

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Chapter 5 General Recombination

Transcript of Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland...

Page 1: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

Chapter 5

•General Recombination

Page 2: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

Repair of replication forks

Page 3: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

Figure 5-53 (part 2 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

Repair of replication forks

Page 4: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

General recombination transfers information from one DNA strand to another

Page 5: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

DNA crossovers create heteroduplex DNA

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General recombination

in meiosis

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General recombination

in meiosis

ds break

synapse

strand invasion

heteroduplex formation

branch migration

resolution

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Recombination is similar to DNA hybridization

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Resolution of recombination depends on where breaks occur

Patch Splice

Page 10: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

RecBCD/MRN

RecA

RuvA-RuvB

RuvC

DNA pol

Spo11

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RecBCD Helicase/Nuclease

Processes DS breaks to form ssDNA ends

Loads RecA onto the ssDNA ends

Destroys foreign DNA

Binds ends and tracks along the DNA - ATP hydrolysis

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The RecBCD complex prepares DNA ends for homologous recombination

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Chi sites increase the rate of homologous recombination

Page 14: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

The structure of the RecA/Rad51 filament

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RecA/Rad51 filaments

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RecA catalyzes synapse formation

Page 17: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

Triplex DNA formed by Triplex DNA formed by base “flipping”?base “flipping”?

Rapid Exchange of A:T Base Pairs Is Essential for Recognition of DNA Homology by Human Rad51 Recombination Protein

Molecular Cell, Vol. 4, 705–714, November, 1999,

Ravindra C. Gupta,* Ewa Folta-Stogniew,†Shawn O’Malley,* Masayuki Takahashi,‡and Charles M. Radding*†§ Rad51Rad51

How does a broken How does a broken strand find a strand find a homologous donor?homologous donor?

Page 18: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

RecA contains two DNA binding sites

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RecA catalyzes branch migration

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Figure 5-58 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

Page 21: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

The Holliday junction

Page 22: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

A EM micrograph of a Holliday junction

Page 23: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

Ruv proteins catalyze double branch migration

RuvA: Holiday junction binding protein (tetramer)

RuvB: ATP dependent helicase (hexamer)

Page 24: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

An alternate representation of RuvAB

Page 25: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

RuvC resolves Holiday structures

Page 26: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

RecBCD

RecA

RuvA-RuvB

RuvC

MRX complex Mre11, Rad50Xrs2 (Nbs1)

Rad51, Dmc1BRCA1, BRCA2

Spo11

DNA pol

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Figure 5-59 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

DS break repair

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Gene conversion

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Figure 5-63 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

Gene conversion

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Figure 5-65 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

Heteroduplex formation at sites of gene conversion and crossover

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Figure 5-66 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

Gene conversion by mismatch correction

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Resolution of recombinant intermediates in meiotic and mitotic cells

Page 33: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

Resolution of recombination depends on where breaks occur

Patch Splice

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Figure 5-67 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

Mismatch detection prevents recombination of similar sequences

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Recombination controls yeast mating types

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Chapter 5•Site-Specific Recombination

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The human genome contains many transposable elements

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Table 5-3 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

Page 39: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

Bacterial transposable elements

Page 40: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

Cut-and-paste transposition

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The structure of a transposase bound to DNA

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Replicative cut-and-paste transposition

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Figure 5-71 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

Retrovirus lifecycle

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Figure 5-72a Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

Structure of reverse transcriptase

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Figure 5-72b Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

Structure of reverse transcriptase

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Transposition of retroviral like transposable elements

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Figure 5-74 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

Transposition of non-retroviral like transposable elements

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Figure 5-74 (part 2 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

Transposition of non-retroviral like transposable elements

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Figure 5-75 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

Expansion of repetitive elements in mouse and human lineages

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Transposable elements near the -globin gene cluster

Alu - greenL1 - redBl - blueL1 - yellow

Page 51: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

The human genome contains many transposable elements

Page 52: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

Table 5-3 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

Page 53: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

Conservative site-specific recombination can rearrange DNA

Page 54: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

Insertion of lambda DNA into a bacterial chromosome

Page 55: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

Insertion of lambda DNA into a bacterial chromosome

attP

attB

Integration Host Factor (IHF)

attL attR

Page 56: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

The lambda phage life cycle

Page 57: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

Use of site-specific recombination to control gene expression

Page 58: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

Inactivation of a marker gene by recombination

Page 59: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

Figure 5-79 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

Inactivation of a marker gene by recombination

Page 60: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

Figure 5-79a Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

Inactivation of a marker gene by recombination

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Figure 5-79b Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

Page 62: Chapter 5 General Recombination. Figure 5-53 (part 1 of 2) Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Repair of replication forks.

Points to understand:The differences between site-specific and general recombination

The consequences of each type of recombination

The three types of transposable elements

How the elements move

How the TEs relate to viruses and phage

Conservative site specific recombination and how it is used by cells and experimental biologists