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{"id":36375,"date":"2023-07-01T21:47:46","date_gmt":"2023-07-01T21:47:46","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/scienceandnerds.com\/2023\/07\/01\/clever-dna-tricks\/"},"modified":"2023-07-01T21:47:50","modified_gmt":"2023-07-01T21:47:50","slug":"clever-dna-tricks","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/scienceandnerds.com\/2023\/07\/01\/clever-dna-tricks\/","title":{"rendered":"Clever DNA tricks"},"content":{"rendered":"

Source:https:\/\/arstechnica.com\/science\/2023\/07\/clever-dna-tricks\/<\/a><\/br>
\nClever DNA tricks<\/br>
\n2023-07-01 21:47:46<\/br><\/p>\n

\n

Every person starts as just one fertilized egg. By adulthood, that single cell has turned into roughly 37 trillion cells, many of which keep dividing to create the same amount of fresh human cells every few months.<\/p>\n

But those cells have a formidable challenge. The average dividing cell must copy\u2014perfectly\u20143.2 billion<\/em> base pairs of DNA, about once every 24 hours. The cell\u2019s replication machinery does an amazing job of this, copying genetic material at a lickety-split pace of some 50 base pairs per second.<\/p>\n

Still, that\u2019s much too slow to duplicate the entirety of the human genome<\/a>. If the cell\u2019s copying machinery started at the tip of each of the 46 chromosomes at the same time, it would finish the longest chromosome\u2014No. 1, at 249 million base pairs\u2014in about two months.<\/p>\n

\u201cThe way cells get around this, of course, is that they start replication in multiple spots,\u201d says James Berger, a structural biologist at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, who co-authored an article on DNA replication in eukaryotes<\/a> in the 2021 Annual Review of Biochemistry. Yeast cells have hundreds of potential replication origins, as they\u2019re called, and animals like mice and people have tens of thousands of them, sprinkled throughout their genomes.<\/p>\n

\u201cBut that poses its own challenge,\u201d says Berger, \u201cwhich is, how do you know where to start, and how do you time everything?\u201d Without precision control, some DNA might get copied twice, causing cellular pandemonium.<\/p>\n

Keeping tight reins on the kickoff of DNA replication is particularly important to avoid that pandemonium. Today, researchers are making steps toward a full understanding of the molecular checks and balances that have evolved in order to ensure that each origin initiates DNA copying once and only once, to produce precisely one complete new genome.<\/p>\n

Do it right, do it fast<\/h2>\n

Bad things can happen if replication doesn\u2019t start correctly. For DNA to be copied, the DNA double helix must open up, and the resulting single strands\u2014each of which serves as a template for building a new, second strand\u2014are vulnerable to breakage. Or the process can get stuck. \u201cYou really want to resolve replication quickly,\u201d says John Diffley, a biochemist at the Francis Crick Institute in London. Problems during DNA replication can cause the genome to become disorganized, which is often a key step on the route to cancer.<\/p>\n

Some genetic diseases, too, result from problems with DNA replication<\/a>. For example, Meier-Gorlin syndrome, which involves short stature, small ears, and small or no kneecaps, is caused by mutations in several genes that help to kick off the DNA replication process.<\/p>\n

It takes a tightly coordinated dance involving dozens of proteins for the DNA-copying machinery to start replication at the right point in the cell\u2019s life cycle. Researchers have a pretty good idea of which proteins do what, because they\u2019ve managed to make DNA replication happen in cell-free biological mixtures in the lab. They\u2019ve mimicked the first crucial steps in initiation of replication using proteins from yeast<\/a>\u2014the same kind used to make bread and beer\u2014and they\u2019ve mimicked much of the entire replication process using human versions of replication proteins<\/a>, too.<\/p>\n

The cell controls the start of DNA replication in a two-step process. The whole goal of the process is to control the actions of a crucial enzyme\u2014called a helicase\u2014that unwinds the DNA double helix in preparation for copying it. In the first step, inactive helicases are loaded onto the DNA at the origins, where replication starts. During the second step, the helicases are activated, to unwind the DNA.<\/p>\n

Ready (load the helicase) \u2026<\/h2>\n

Kicking off the process is a cluster of six proteins that sit down at the origins. Called ORC, this cluster is shaped like a double-layer ring<\/a> with a handy notch that allows it to slide onto the DNA strands, Berger\u2019s team has found.<\/p>\n

In baker\u2019s yeast, which is a favorite for scientists studying DNA replication, these start sites are easy to spot: They have a specific, 11- to 17-letter core DNA sequence, rich in adenine and thymine chemical bases. Scientists have watched as ORC grabs onto the DNA and then slides along, scanning for the origin sequence<\/a> until it finds the right spot.<\/p>\n

But in humans and other complex life forms, the start sites aren\u2019t so clearly demarcated, and it\u2019s not quite clear what makes the ORC settle down and grab on, says Alessandro Costa, a structural biologist at the Crick Institute who, with Diffley, wrote about DNA replication initiation<\/a> in the 2022 Annual Review of Biochemistry. Replication seems more likely to start in places where the genome\u2014normally tightly spooled around proteins called histones\u2014has loosened up.<\/p>\n

\"The
\n

The initiation of DNA replication starts at the tail end of the previous cell division and continues through the cell cycle phase known as G1. DNA synthesis happens during the S phase. Levels of a protein called CDK are critical to ensuring that DNA is replicated once and only once. When CDK levels are low, helicases can jump onto the DNA and start to unwind it. But repeat binding does not happen because CDK levels rise, and this blocks the helicase from binding again.<\/p>\n<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

Once ORC has settled onto the DNA, it attracts a second protein complex: one that includes the helicase that will eventually unwind the DNA. Costa and colleagues used electron microscopy to work out how ORC lures in first one helicase, and then another<\/a>. The helicases are also ring-shaped, and each one opens up to wrap around the double-stranded DNA. Then the two helicases close up again, facing toward each other on the DNA strands, like two beads on a string.<\/p>\n

At first, they just sit there, like cars with no gas in the tank. They haven\u2019t been activated yet, and for now the cell goes about its usual business.<\/p>\n<\/p><\/div>\n

<\/br><\/br><\/br><\/p>\n

Food, Health, Science, Space, Space Craft, SpaceX<\/br>
\n<\/br>
\nSource:
https:\/\/arstechnica.com\/science\/2023\/07\/clever-dna-tricks\/<\/a><\/br><\/br><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

Source:https:\/\/arstechnica.com\/science\/2023\/07\/clever-dna-tricks\/ Clever DNA tricks 2023-07-01 21:47:46 Every person starts as just one fertilized egg. By adulthood, that single cell has turned into roughly 37 trillion cells, many of which keep dividing to create the same amount of fresh human cells every few months. But those cells have a formidable challenge. 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