Wednesday, July 15, 2026

DNA REPLICATION, TRANSCRIPTION AND TRANSLATION Part-IV

 


DNA REPLICATION, TRANSCRIPTION AND TRANSLATION Part-IV

Introduction

DNA replication is an extraordinarily accurate process. The human genome contains approximately 3.2 billion base pairs, yet almost every daughter cell receives an almost identical copy of DNA after each cell division.

This remarkable accuracy is achieved because cells possess:

  • High-fidelity DNA polymerases
  • Proofreading mechanisms
  • DNA repair systems
  • Cell-cycle checkpoints

Without these protective mechanisms, mutations would accumulate rapidly, causing genetic diseases, developmental abnormalities, ageing, and cancer.

How Accurate Is DNA Replication?

·       DNA polymerase alone makes approximately: 1 error in 10⁵ nucleotides

·       After proofreading: 1 error in 10⁷ nucleotides

·       After DNA repair: Approximately 1 error in 10⁹–10¹⁰ nucleotides

This makes DNA replication one of the most accurate biological processes.

Why Is High Fidelity Necessary?

Accurate DNA replication ensures:

  • Genetic stability
  • Correct protein synthesis
  • Normal growth
  • Proper embryonic development
  • Prevention of inherited disorders
  • Prevention of cancer

Sources of DNA Damage

DNA is continuously damaged by both internal and external factors.

Endogenous (Internal)

  • Reactive oxygen species (ROS)
  • Replication errors
  • Spontaneous base loss (depurination)
  • Spontaneous deamination

Exogenous (External)

  • Ultraviolet (UV) radiation
  • X-rays
  • Gamma rays
  • Chemical mutagens
  • Environmental toxins
  • Tobacco smoke
  • Certain viruses

Proofreading

Definition

Proofreading is the immediate correction of wrongly inserted nucleotides during DNA replication.

Enzyme Responsible- DNA polymerase

Many replicative DNA polymerases possess: 3' → 5' exonuclease activity

Mechanism

Step 1

Wrong nucleotide inserted.

Step 2

DNA polymerase detects mismatch.

Step 3

Incorrect nucleotide removed.

Step 4

Correct nucleotide inserted.

Replication continues.

Importance of Proofreading

  • Prevents mutations
  • Maintains genome stability
  • Increases replication fidelity
  • Ensures correct inheritance

DNA repair

Even after proofreading, some mistakes remain. Therefore, cells possess specialized repair systems.

Types of DNA Repair

Major DNA repair mechanisms include:

  1. Mismatch Repair (MMR)
  2. Base Excision Repair (BER)
  3. Nucleotide Excision Repair (NER)
  4. Double-Strand Break Repair (DSBR)

1. Mismatch Repair (MMR)

Function

Corrects mismatched bases that escape proofreading.

Example- A paired with C, instead of- A paired with T

Steps

Mismatch detected

Incorrect nucleotide removed

Gap filled by DNA polymerase

DNA ligase seals strand

Importance

Prevents permanent mutations after replication.

2. Base Excision Repair (BER)

Repairs

Small damaged bases such as:

  • Oxidized bases
  • Deaminated bases
  • Alkylated bases

Steps

Damaged base recognized

DNA glycosylase removes damaged base

AP endonuclease cuts DNA backbone

DNA polymerase inserts correct nucleotide

DNA ligase seals nick

3. Nucleotide Excision Repair (NER)

Repairs- Large DNA lesions. Especially: UV-induced thymine dimers.

Mechanism

Damaged DNA segment removed

DNA polymerase synthesizes replacement DNA

DNA ligase joins strand

Clinical Importance

Defect causes: Xeroderma pigmentosum

Patients show:

  • Extreme UV sensitivity
  • Early skin cancers
  • Defective nucleotide excision repair

4. Double-Strand Break Repair

Double-strand DNA breaks are among the most dangerous forms of DNA damage. Cells repair them mainly by:

Homologous Recombination (HR)

  • Uses the sister chromatid as a template.
  • Highly accurate.
  • Predominant in S and G₂ phases.

Non-Homologous End Joining (NHEJ)

  • Directly joins broken DNA ends.
  • Faster but more error-prone.

Cell-Cycle Checkpoints

Cells do not divide until DNA replication is complete and DNA damage is repaired. Important checkpoints include:

G₁/S Checkpoint

  • Verifies DNA integrity before replication.

Intra-S Checkpoint

  • Monitors ongoing DNA replication.
  • Slows replication if damage is detected.

G₂/M Checkpoint

  • Ensures DNA replication is complete.
  • Prevents entry into mitosis if DNA remains damaged.

Regulation Of DNA Replication

Replication occurs:

  • Only once during each cell cycle.
  • Only during the S phase.

This prevents over-replication or incomplete replication.

DNA Replication Inhibitors

Certain drugs inhibit DNA replication and are widely used in medicine.

Drug/Class

Mechanism

Clinical Use

Quinolones (e.g., ciprofloxacin)

Inhibit bacterial DNA gyrase (Topoisomerase II)

Bacterial infections

Etoposide

Inhibits Topoisomerase II

Cancer chemotherapy

Doxorubicin

Interferes with topoisomerase and DNA

Cancer chemotherapy

Acyclovir

Inhibits viral DNA polymerase

Herpes virus infections

Zidovudine (AZT)

Inhibits reverse transcriptase

HIV infection

 

Replication Errors and Mutations

If DNA damage is not repaired:

Mutation occurs

Altered protein

Disease or altered phenotype

Some mutations are neutral, some harmful, and a few beneficial.

DNA Replication And Cancer

Cancer develops due to the accumulation of mutations in genes controlling:

  • Cell division
  • DNA repair
  • Apoptosis

Failure of proofreading and DNA repair greatly increases cancer risk.

Complete Flow Chart Of Dna Replication

Origin of Replication

Helicase Unwinds DNA

Topoisomerase Removes Supercoils

SSB Proteins Stabilize DNA

Primase Synthesizes RNA Primer

DNA Polymerase Synthesizes New DNA

Leading Strand ───────────────► Continuous

Lagging Strand ───────────────► Okazaki Fragments

Primer Removal

Gap Filling

DNA Ligase Seals Nicks

Proofreading

DNA Repair (if required)

Two Identical DNA Molecules

Complete Summary of DNA Replication

Feature

Description

Nature

Semiconservative

Direction

5′ → 3′ synthesis

Template read

3′ → 5′

Occurs during

S phase

Replication type

Bidirectional

Leading strand

Continuous

Lagging strand

Discontinuous

Okazaki fragments

Present only on lagging strand

Main bacterial replicative enzyme

DNA Polymerase III

Primer removal (bacteria)

DNA Polymerase I

Primer removal (eukaryotes)

RNase H and FEN1

Joining enzyme

DNA Ligase

Unwinding enzyme

Helicase

Supercoil removal

Topoisomerase

Primer synthesis

Primase

Fidelity

~1 error per 10⁹–10¹⁰ nucleotides after repair

 

Important Scientists

Scientist

Contribution

James Watson

Double-helix model

Francis Crick

Double-helix model and Central Dogma

Matthew Meselson & Franklin Stahl

Proved semiconservative replication

Arthur Kornberg

Discovered DNA Polymerase I

Reiji Okazaki

Discovered Okazaki fragments

J. Herbert Taylor

Demonstrated semiconservative replication in eukaryotes

 


Memory Tricks for Exam

H-P-P-L Sequence

H → Helicase (opens DNA)

P → Primase (makes primer)

P → Polymerase (extends DNA)

L → Ligase (joins fragments)

Leading vs Lagging

Leading = Long continuous

Lagging = Little pieces (Okazaki fragments)

Direction Rule

DNA Polymerase Always Adds to the 3′ End

Therefore,

DNA synthesis is always 5′ → 3′.

COMPLETE CHAPTER QUICK REVISION

  • DNA replication is semiconservative.
  • Occurs during the S phase.
  • Begins at the origin of replication.
  • Helicase unwinds DNA.
  • Topoisomerase relieves supercoiling.
  • SSB proteins stabilize single strands.
  • Primase synthesizes RNA primers.
  • DNA Polymerase III synthesizes bacterial DNA.
  • DNA is synthesized only in the 5′ → 3′ direction.
  • Leading strand is continuous.
  • Lagging strand forms Okazaki fragments.
  • DNA Polymerase I (bacteria) removes RNA primers.
  • RNase H/FEN1 remove primers in eukaryotes.
  • DNA Ligase seals nicks.
  • Telomerase maintains chromosome ends.
  • Proofreading and DNA repair maintain high replication fidelity.

Summary

  • DNA replication is semiconservative, bidirectional, and template-directed.
  • DNA polymerases require a primer and synthesize DNA only in the 5′ → 3′ direction.
  • Leading and lagging strands arise because the two DNA strands are antiparallel.
  • Okazaki fragments are synthesized on the lagging strand and joined by DNA ligase.
  • High fidelity of DNA replication is achieved through complementary base pairing, proofreading, and DNA repair mechanisms.