Components of DNA
DNA is a polymer. The monomer units of DNA are nucleotides, and the
polymer is known as a "polynucleotide." Each nucleotide consists
of a 5-carbon sugar (deoxyribose), a nitrogen containing base attached
to the sugar, and
a phosphate group. There are four different types of nucleotides found
in DNA, differing
only in the nitrogenous base. The four nucleotides are given one letter
abbreviations as
shorthand for the four bases.
-
A is for adenine
-
G is for guanine
-
C is for cytosine
-
T is for thymine
Purine Bases
Adenine and guanine are purines. Purines are the larger of the two types of bases
found in DNA. Structures are shown below:
Structure of A and G
The 9 atoms that make up the fused rings (5 carbon, 4 nitrogen) are numbered 1-9.
All ring atoms lie in the same plane.
Pyrimidine Bases
Cytosine and thymine are pyrimidines. The 6 stoms (4 carbon, 2 nitrogen) are
numbered 1-6. Like purines, all pyrimidine ring atoms lie in the same plane.
Structure of C and T
Deoxyribose Sugar
The deoxyribose sugar of the DNA backbone has 5 carbons and 3
oxygens. The carbon
atoms are numbered 1', 2', 3', 4', and 5' to distinguish from the
numbering of the
atoms of the purine and pyrmidine rings. The hydroxyl groups on the 5'-
and 3'- carbons link to the
phosphate groups to form the DNA backbone. Deoxyribose lacks an hydroxyl
group at the 2'-position when compared to ribose, the sugar component
of RNA.
Structure of deoxyribose
Nucleosides
A nucleoside is one of the four DNA bases covalently attached to the
C1' position of a sugar. The sugar in deoxynucleosides is
2'-deoxyribose. The sugar in ribonucleosides is ribose. Nucleosides
differ from nucleotides in that they lack phosphate groups. The four
different nucleosides of DNA are deoxyadenosine (dA), deoxyguanosine
(dG), deoxycytosine (dC), and (deoxy)thymidine (dT, or T).
Structure of dA
In dA and dG, there is an "N-glycoside" bond between the sugar C1' and N9 of the purine.
Nucleotides
A nucleotide is a nucleoside with one or more phosphate groups covalently attached to the 3'- and/or 5'-hydroxyl group(s).
DNA Backbone
The DNA backbone is a polymer with an alternating sugar-phosphate
sequence. The deoxyribose sugars are joined at both the 3'-hydroxyl and
5'-hydroxyl groups to phosphate groups in ester links, also known as
"phosphodiester" bonds.
Example of DNA Backbone: 5'-d(CGAAT):
Features of the 5'-d(CGAAT) structure:
- Alternating backbone of deoxyribose and phosphodiester groups
- Chain has a direction (known as polarity), 5'- to 3'- from top to bottom
- Oxygens (red atoms) of phosphates are polar and negatively charged
- A, G, C, and T bases can extend away from chain, and stack atop each other
- Bases are hydrophobic
DNA Double Helix
DNA is a normally double stranded macromolecule. Two polynucleotide
chains, held together by weak thermodynamic forces, form a DNA
molecule.
Structure of DNA Double Helix
Features of the DNA Double Helix
- Two DNA strands form a helical spiral, winding around a helix axis in a right-handed spiral
- The two polynucleotide chains run in opposite directions
- The sugar-phosphate backbones of the two DNA strands wind around the helix axis like the railing of a sprial staircase
- The bases of the individual nucleotides are on the inside of
the helix, stacked on top of each other like the steps of a spiral
staircase.
Base Pairs
Within the DNA double helix, A forms 2 hydrogen bonds with T on the
opposite strand, and G forms 3 hyrdorgen bonds with C on the opposite
strand.
Example of dA-dT base pair as found within DNA double helix
Example of dG-dC base pair as found within DNA double helix
- dA-dT and dG-dC base pairs are the same length, and occupy the same
space within a DNA double helix. Therefore the DNA molecule has a
uniform diameter.
- dA-dT and dG-dC base pairs can occur in any order within DNA molecules
DNA Helix Axis
The helix axis is most apparent from a view directly down the axis.
The sugar-phosphate backbone is on the outside of the helix where the
polar phosphate groups (red and yellow atoms) can interact with the
polar environment. The nitrogen (blue atoms) containing bases are
inside, stacking perpendicular to the helix axis.
View down the helix axis
No comments:
Post a Comment