Category: Nucleic acids

  • Types of RNA

    Messenger RNA (mRNA) Messenger RNA (mRNA) delivers the information encoded in one or more genes from the DNA to the ribosome, a specialized structure, or organelle, where that information is decoded into a protein. In prokaryotes, mRNAs contain an exact transcribed copy of the original DNA sequence with a terminal 5′-triphosphate group and a 3′-hydroxyl residue. In…

  • Chemical structure

    Whereas DNA provides the genetic information for the cell and is inherently quite stable, RNA has many roles and is much more reactive chemically. RNA is sensitive to oxidizing agents such as periodate that lead to opening of the 3′-terminal ribose ring. The 2′-hydroxyl group on the ribose ring is a major cause of instability…

  • Ribonucleic acid (RNA)

    RNA is a single-stranded nucleic acid polymer of the four nucleotides A, C, G, and U joined through a backbone of alternating phosphate and ribose sugar residues. It is the first intermediate in converting the information from DNA into proteins essential for the working of a cell. Some RNAs also serve direct roles in cellular metabolism. RNA is made by copying the base sequence…

  • Sequence Determination

    Methods to determine the sequences of bases in DNA were pioneered in the 1970s by Frederick Sanger and Walter Gilbert, whose efforts won them a Nobel Prize in 1980. The Gilbert-Maxam method relies on the different chemical reactivities of the bases, while the Sanger method is based on enzymatic synthesis of DNA in vitro. Both methods measure the distance from…

  • Supercoiling

    Circular DNA molecules such as those found in plasmids or bacterial chromosomes can adopt many different topologies. One is active supercoiling, which involves the cleavage of one DNA strand, its winding one or more turns around the complementary strand, and then the resealing of the molecule. Each complete rotation leads to the introduction of one supercoiled turn…

  • Mutation

    Chemical modification of DNA can lead to mutations in the genetic material. Anions such as bisulfite can deaminate cytosine to form uracil, changing the genetic message by causing C-to-T transitions. Exposure to acid causes the loss of purine residues, though specific enzymes exist in cells to repair these lesions. Exposure to UV light can cause adjacent pyrimidines to dimerize, while oxidative damage…

  • Nucleases

    Nucleases are enzymes that hydrolytically cleave the phosphodiester backbone of DNA. Endonucleases cleave in the middle of chains, while exonucleases operate selectively by degrading from the end of the chain. Nucleases that act on both single- and double-stranded DNA are known. Restriction endonucleases are a special class that recognize and cleave specific sequences in DNA. Type II restriction endonucleases always…

  • Methylation

    Three types of natural methylation have been reported in DNA. Cytosine can be modified either on the ring to form 5-methylcytosine or on the exocyclic amino group to form N4-methylcytosine. Adenine may be modified to form N6-methyladenine. N4-methylcytosine and N6-methyladenine are found only in bacteria and archaea, whereas 5-methylcytosine is widely distributed. Special enzymes called DNA methyltransferases are responsible…

  • Chemical modification

    After a DNA molecule has been assembled, it may be chemically modified—sometimes deliberately by special enzymes called DNA methyltransferases and sometimes accidentally by oxidation, ionizing radiation, or the action of chemical carcinogens. DNA can also be cleaved and degraded by enzymes called nucleases.

  • Ultraviolet absorption

    DNA melting and reassociation can be monitored by measuring the absorption of ultraviolet (UV) light at a wavelength of 260 nanometres (billionths of a metre). When DNA is in a double-stranded conformation, absorption is fairly weak, but when DNA is single-stranded, the unstacking of the bases leads to an enhancement of absorption called hyperchromicity. Therefore, the…