Cell Biology. Stephen R. Bolsover

Cell Biology - Stephen R. Bolsover


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4.4. Spontaneous reactions corrupt the DNA database.

      Repair Processes

      If there were no way to correct altered DNA, the rate of mutation would be intolerable. DNA excision and DNA repair enzymes have evolved to detect and to repair altered DNA. The role of the repair enzymes is to cut out (excise) the damaged portion of DNA and then to repair the base sequence. Much of our knowledge of DNA repair has been derived from studies on E. coli, but the general principles apply to other organisms such as ourselves. Repair is possible because DNA comprises two complementary strands. If the repair mechanisms can identify which of the two strands is the damaged one, it can be repaired to be as good as new by rebuilding it so that is again complementary to the undamaged strand.

Schematic illustration of formation of a thymine dimer in DNA. Schematic illustration of base excision repair.

      The repair process for reinserting a purine or a pyrimidine into DNA is now the same (Figure 4.6). DNA polymerase I replaces the appropriate deoxyribonucleotide into position. DNA ligase then seals the strand by catalyzing the reformation of a phosphodiester bond.

      Nucleotide excision repair is required to correct a thymine dimer. The thymine dimer, together with some 30 surrounding nucleotides, is excised from the DNA. Repairing damage of this bulky type requires several proteins because the exposed, undamaged, DNA strand must be protected from nuclease attack while the damaged strand is repaired by the actions of DNA polymerase I and DNA ligase.

      Even with all these protection systems in place, the cell divisions that create and repair our bodies generate errors, so that the adult human contains many cells with somatic mutations. Most are irrelevant to the specialized operation of that cell, or merely reduce its ability to function. Some, however, can cause cancer (page 241).

GENE STRUCTURE AND ORGANIZATION IN EUKARYOTES

      Introns and Exons – Additional Complexity in Eukaryotic Genes

      Medical Relevance 4.2 Bloom's Syndrome and Xeroderma Pigmentosum

      DNA helicases are essential proteins required to open up the DNA helix during replication. In Bloom's syndrome, mutations give rise to a defective helicase. The result is excessive chromosome breakage, and affected people are predisposed to many different types of cancers when they are young.

      People who suffer from the genetic disorder xeroderma pigmentosum are deficient in one of the enzymes for excision repair. As a result, they are very sensitive to ultraviolet light. They contract skin cancer even when they have been exposed to sunlight for very short periods because thymine dimers produced by ultraviolet light are not excised from their genomes.

Image described by caption.

      In fact, there is an evolutionary rationale to this apparently perverse arrangement. As we will see (page 114), a single protein is often composed of a series of domains, with each domain performing a different role. The breaks between exons often correspond to domain boundaries. During evolution, reordering of exons has created new genes that have some of the exons of one gene, and some of the exons of another, and hence generates novel proteins composed of new arrangements of domains, each of which still does its job.

      The Major Classes of Eukaryotic DNA

      We do not yet fully understand the construction of our nuclear genome. Only about 1.1% of the human genome codes for exonic sequences (i.e. makes protein) with about 24% coding for introns. Most protein‐coding genes occur only once in the genome and are called single‐copy genes.

      Many genes have been duplicated at some time during their evolution. Mutation over the succeeding generations causes the initially identical copies to diverge in sequence and produce what is known as a gene family. Members of a gene family usually have a related function, for example the products of the globin family transport oxygen from our lungs to our tissues. These genes generate related proteins or isoforms, which are often distinguished by placing


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