DNA Replication
- Before a (parent) cell divides, it needs to copy the DNA contained within it
- Doubling the DNA ensures that the two new (daughter) cells produced will both receive full copies of the parental DNA
- The DNA is copied via a process known as semi-conservative replication (semi = half)
- The process is called this because in each new DNA molecule produced, one of the polynucleotide DNA strands (half of the new DNA molecule) is from the original DNA molecule being copied
- The other polynucleotide DNA strand (the other half of the new DNA molecule) has to be newly created by the cell
- Therefore, the new DNA molecule has conserved half of the original DNA and then used this to create a new strand
The importance of retaining one original DNA strand
- It ensures there is genetic continuity between generations of cells
- In other words, it ensures that the new cells produced during cell division inherit all their genes from their parent cells
- This is important because cells in our body are replaced regularly and therefore we need the new cells to be able to do the same role as the old ones
- Replication of DNA and cell division also occurs during growth
Semi conservative replication of DNA
Semi-conservative replication
- DNA replication occurs in preparation for mitosis, the number of DNA molecules in the parent cell must be doubled before mitosis takes place
- DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle (which occurs during interphase, when a cell is not dividing)
- The enzyme helicase unwinds the DNA double helix by breaking the hydrogen bonds between the base pairs on the two antiparallel polynucleotide DNA strands to form two single polynucleotide DNA strands
- Each of these single polynucleotide DNA strands acts as a template for the formation of a new strand made from free nucleotides that are attracted to the exposed DNA bases by base pairing
- The new nucleotides are then joined together by the enzyme DNA polymerase
- The original strand and the new strand join together through hydrogen bonding between base pairs to form the new DNA molecule
- This method of replicating DNA is known as semi-conservative replication because half of the original DNA molecule is kept (conserved) in each of the two new DNA molecules
DNA Polymerase
- In the nucleus, there are free nucleotides which contain three phosphate groups
- These nucleotides are known as nucleoside triphosphates or ‘activated nucleotides’
- The extra phosphates activate the nucleotides, enabling them to take part in DNA replication
- The bases of the free nucleoside triphosphates align with their complementary bases on each of the template DNA strands
- The enzyme DNA polymerase synthesises new DNA strands from the two template strands
- It does this by catalysing condensation reactions between the deoxyribose sugar and phosphate groups of adjacent nucleotides within the new strands, creating the sugar-phosphate backbone of the new DNA strands
- DNA polymerase cleaves (breaks off) the two extra phosphates and uses the energy released to create the phosphodiester bonds (between adjacent nucleotides)
- Hydrogen bonds then form between the complementary base pairs of the template and new DNA strands
Nucleotides are bonded together by DNA polymerase to create the new complementary DNA strands
Leading & lagging strands
- DNA polymerase can only build the new strand in one direction (5’ to 3’ direction)
- As DNA is ‘unzipped’ from the 3’ towards the 5’ end, DNA polymerase will attach to the 3’ end of the original strand and move towards the replication fork (the point at which the DNA molecule is splitting into two template strands)
- This means the DNA polymerase enzyme can synthesise the leading strand continuously
- This template strand that the DNA polymerase attaches to is known as the leading strand
- The other template strand created during DNA replication is known as the lagging strand
- On this strand, DNA polymerase moves away from the replication fork (from the 5’ end to the 3’ end)
- This means the DNA polymerase enzyme can only synthesise the lagging DNA strand in short segments (called Okazaki fragments)
- A second enzyme known as DNA ligase is needed to join these lagging strand segments together to form a continuous complementary DNA strand
- DNA ligase does this by catalysing the formation of phosphodiester bonds between the segments to create a continuous sugar-phosphate backbone
The synthesis of the complimentary strand occurs differently on the leading and lagging strands of DNA