PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Rockefeller scientists first to reconstitute the DNA 'replication fork'

New model offers important tool for exploring DNA-copying process in multicellular life

2014-07-09
(Press-News.org) When a cell divides, it must first make a copy of its DNA, a fundamental step in the life cycle of cells that occurs billions of times a day in the human body. While scientists have had an idea of the molecular tools that cells use to replicate DNA—the enzymes that unzip the double-stranded DNA and create "daughter" copies—they did not have a clear picture of how the process works.

Now, researchers at Rockefeller University have built the first model system to decipher what goes on at the "replication fork"—the point where DNA is split down the middle in order to create two exact copies. The findings are specific to eukaryotic cells, the defining feature of which is that the DNA is contained within a nucleus. All multicellular life forms, including humans, are eukaryotes. The researchers' findings, which may have profound implications for the study of cell division and human disease, appeared July 6 in the journal Nature Structural and Molecular Biology.

"We were able to purify and reconstitute the central components that propel the eukaryotic replication fork, which for the first time enables us to study the process and its regulation by the cell in fine detail," says the paper's senior author Michael O'Donnell, head of the Laboratory of DNA Replication at Rockefeller University. "What is more exciting, I believe, is that this opens up replication-fork biology to biochemical study by many labs, providing a new tool to unravel some pressing questions in a number of fields of study, including epigenetics and DNA repair." O'Donnell is Anthony and Judith Evnin Professor at Rockefeller and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator.

According to O'Donnell, the team's techniques may allow researchers to reconstruct at the molecular level biochemical events that are known to occur but were difficult or impossible to study in detail. For example, scientists know that epigenetic information—inheritable information that is not encoded by the DNA sequence, but instead lies in modifications to proteins associated with the DNA—is passed along to the daughter cells after DNA replication. Yet exactly how that occurs remains a mystery. Another unknown is what happens when the replication fork encounters an area of damaged DNA as it travels down the length of DNA.

"Diseases, such as cancer, often arise from DNA damage or defects in episomal inheritance, so these findings could have direct relevance to these fields," O'Donnell says. "There are plenty of hypotheses about the mechanics of DNA replication, but until now the process could not be studied using a defined system with pure proteins."

The replication fork is assembled as a complex of numerous proteins, one of which is an 11-subunit collective called CMG that unwinds and separates the DNA into two individual strands. The emerging replication fork looks much like a zipper opening, with CMG in the role of a zipper slider and the individual strand appearing like the two rows of teeth of the open zipper.

Each of these strands then becomes the templates for daughter copies. The act of synthesizing a new complementary strand to match the templates is performed by two different polymerase enzymes, which match each complementary subunit of DNA (the nucleotide "letters" that make up the genetic code) to the chain, resulting in a new double-stranded DNA molecule. These enzymes are known as polymerase epsilon (Pol epsilon) and polymerase delta (Pol delta), and the O'Donnell laboratory sought to examine how they attach to DNA to perform their task.

One of the chief features of the replications fork is its essential asymmetry. Because the two strands of double-stranded DNA are complementary, they fit together head to tail (in biochemical terms, the 5' end to the 3' end), so that the head of one strand is attached to the tail of the other. New DNA can only be synthesized in one direction (5' to 3'). This leads to a traffic problem of sorts, where the two daughter strands of DNA are created at slightly different paces, resulting in a leading strand (the work of Pol epsilon) and a lagging strand (Pol δ) being synthesized in opposite directions.

In order to study the replication fork, O'Donnell and his laboratory needed to recreate the process in a simple model. In a test tube, they brought together the essential enzymes with a set of nucleotides (DNA building blocks) and a linear molecule of duplex DNA. Pol epsilon, they found, does not attach very well to the DNA on its own. It requires the presence of the CMG complex to attach securely. Even in an excess of Pol delta, CMG chose Pol epsilon without fail. Pol delta, however, binds very strongly to another accessory protein—the PCNA clamp—a ring shaped protein that encircles DNA. Only when the PCNA clamp is on the lagging strand does Pol delta strongly bind to PCNA. Even when the researchers added a 20 to 1 excess of Pol epsilon, PCNA only would work with Pol delta on a lagging strand model DNA.

"As a research tool, our model could allow scientists to better understand what occurs in DNA replication, and what goes wrong in disease states," O'Donnell says.

To create his replication fork model, O'Donnell used enzymes from yeast. Like human cells, yeast cells are eukaryotic, meaning a membrane encloses their nucleus. Prokaryotic cells, like bacteria, evolved a separate (although similar) method for replicating DNA. The eukaryotic machinery, from single-celled amoeba to humans, are remarkably conserved through evolution, which allows for high confidence that the replication fork model also represents what occurs in human cells.

"For much of my career, I studied the replication fork in prokaryotes, thinking that perhaps what I learned could be applied to create new types of antibiotics that would stop the replication process in its tracks," O'Donnell says. "Now I study the replication fork in eukaryotes in the hopes that what we find could be applied to fix the process and help it along in the case of human disease."

INFORMATION: Funding for this research is provided by a grant to O'Donnell from the National Institutes of Health (GM38839).

About Rockefeller University

Founded by John D. Rockefeller in 1901, The Rockefeller University was this nation's first biomedical research institution. Hallmarks of the university include a research environment that provides scientists with the support they need to do imaginative science and a truly international graduate program that is unmatched for the freedom and resources it provides students to develop their capacities for innovative research. The Rockefeller University Hospital, founded in 1910 as the first center for clinical research in the United States, remains a place where researchers combine laboratory investigations with bedside observations to provide a scientific basis for disease detection, prevention, and treatment. Since the institution's founding, Rockefeller University has been the site of many important scientific breakthroughs. Rockefeller scientists, for example, established that DNA is the chemical basis of heredity, identified the weight-regulating hormone leptin, discovered blood groups, showed that viruses can cause cancer, founded the modern field of cell biology, worked out the structure of antibodies, devised the AIDS "cocktail" drug therapy, and developed methadone maintenance for people addicted to heroin. Throughout Rockefeller's history, 24 scientists associated with the university have received the Nobel Prize in physiology/medicine and chemistry, and 21 scientists associated with the university have been honored with the Albert Lasker Medical Research Award. Five Rockefeller University scientists have been named MacArthur Foundation Fellows, and 20 have garnered the National Medal of Science. Currently, the university's award-winning faculty includes five Nobel laureates, seven Lasker Award winners and three recipients of the National Medal of Science. Thirty-four of the faculty members are elected members of the National Academy of Sciences. For more information, go to http://www.rockefeller.edu.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Discovery of a new means to erase pain

2014-07-09
Québec City, July 9, 2014 – A study published in the scientific journal Nature Neuroscience by Yves De Koninck and Robert Bonin, two researchers at Université Laval, reveals that it is possible to relieve pain hypersensitivity using a new method that involves rekindling pain so that it can subsequently be erased. This discovery could lead to novel means to alleviate chronic pain. The researchers from the Faculty of Medicine at Université Laval and Institut universitaire en santé mentale de Québec (IUSMQ) were inspired by previous work on memory conducted some fifteen ...

Nearly 50 percent of grade 12 students in Ontario report texting while driving

2014-07-09
EMBARGOED - July 9, 2014, 3:01 a.m. ET (Toronto) – An ongoing survey of Ontario students in grades 7 to 12 conducted for Canada's Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) reveals a number of significant behavioural trends, including an alarming number of young people who are texting while driving. According to the 2013 Ontario Student Drug Use and Health Survey (OSDUHS) Mental Health and Well-Being Report, over one-third of licensed Ontario students in grades 10 to12 – an estimated 108,000 adolescent drivers – report texting while driving at least once in the past ...

Study finds kidney donation safe for healthy older adults

2014-07-09
Older kidney donors enjoy similar longevity and cardiovascular health as other healthy mature individuals, according to a new study published in the American Journal of Transplantation. The findings may provide some reassurance to older individuals considering donation and the transplant professionals caring for them. Over the past two decades, live kidney donation by individuals aged 55 years and older has become more common. Given the links between older age, kidney disease, and heart disease, the removal of a kidney could make older donors vulnerable to premature death ...

For corals adapting to climate change, it's survival of the fattest -- and most flexible

For corals adapting to climate change, its survival of the fattest -- and most flexible
2014-07-09
COLUMBUS, Ohio—The future health of the world's coral reefs and the animals that depend on them relies in part on the ability of one tiny symbiotic sea creature to get fat—and to be flexible about the type of algae it cooperates with. In the first study of its kind, scientists at The Ohio State University discovered that corals—tiny reef-forming animals that live symbiotically with algae—are better able to recover from yearly bouts of heat stress, called "bleaching," when they keep large energy reserves—mostly as fat—socked away in their cells. "We found that some coral ...

Mode of delivery following a perineal tear and recurrence rate in subsequent pregnancies

2014-07-09
There is an increased risk of severe perineal tearing during childbirth in women who had such a tear in a previous delivery, suggests a new study published today (9 July) in BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology (BJOG). This study, investigates among women who have had a third or fourth degree perineal tear, the mode of delivery in subsequent pregnancies and the recurrence of severe perineal tears. Most women tear to some extent during childbirth and in some women the tear may be more extensive. A third degree tear extends downwards from the ...

Fun or exercise?

Fun or exercise?
2014-07-09
Think of your next exercise workout as a "fun run" or as a well-deserved break, and you'll eat less afterward. Think of it as exercise or as a workout and you'll later eat more dessert and snacks to reward yourself. These new findings from the Cornell Food and Brand Lab study involved two studies where adults were led on a 2 km walk around a small lake and were either told it was going to be an exercise walk or a scenic walk. In the first study, 56 adults completed their walk and were then given lunch. Those who believed they had been on an exercise walk served and ...

New plant species from the heart of Texas

New plant species from the heart of Texas
2014-07-09
SALT LAKE CITY, July 9, 2014 – Collectors found the first two specimens of the prickly plant in 1974 and 1990 in west Texas. Then, for two decades, the 14-inch-tall plant was identified wrongly as one species, then another and then a third. Now – after a long search turned up a "pathetic, wilted" third specimen – a University of Utah botanist and her colleagues identified the spiny plant as a new, possibly endangered species and named it "from the heart" in Latin because it was found in Valentine, Texas, population 134 in 2010. Most new plant species are found in the ...

Minimally invasive surgery underused at many US hospitals

2014-07-09
Hospitals across the country vary substantially in their use of minimally invasive surgery, even when evidence shows that for most patients, minimally invasive surgery is superior to open surgery, a new study shows. The finding represents a major disparity in the surgical care delivered at various hospitals, the study's authors say, and identifies an area of medicine ripe for improvement. "Some surgeons specialize in complex open operations, and we should endorse that expertise," says Marty Makary, M.D., M.P.H., a professor of surgery at the Johns Hopkins University School ...

Carbon monoxide predicts 'red and dead' future of gas guzzler galaxy

Carbon monoxide predicts red and dead future of gas guzzler galaxy
2014-07-09
Astronomers have studied the carbon monoxide in a galaxy over 12 billion light years from Earth and discovered that it's running out of gas, quite literally, and headed for a 'red and dead' future. The galaxy, known as ALESS65, was observed by the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) in 2011 and is one of less than 20 known distant galaxies to contain carbon monoxide. Dr Minh Huynh from The University of Western Australia node of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR) led the team on their search for galactic carbon monoxide in work published ...

Health-care worker hand hygiene rates increase three-fold when auditors visible

2014-07-08
Hand hygiene rates were found to be three times higher when auditors were visible to healthcare workers than when there were no auditors present, according to a study in a major Canadian acute care hospital. The study, titled, "Quantification of the Hawthorne effect in hand hygiene compliance monitoring using an electronic monitoring system: a retrospective cohort study," published today on-line in the BMJ Quality & Safety Journal, by first author Dr. Jocelyn Srigley, who did the study as part of her Master's thesis while a Clinical Fellow in Infection Prevention and ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Inflammation may explain stomach problems in psoriasis sufferers

Guidance on animal-borne infections in the Canadian Arctic

Fatty muscles raise the risk of serious heart disease regardless of overall body weight

HKU ecologists uncover significant ecological impact of hybrid grouper release through religious practices

New register opens to crown Champion Trees across the U.S.

A unified approach to health data exchange

New superconductor with hallmark of unconventional superconductivity discovered

Global HIV study finds that cardiovascular risk models underestimate for key populations

New study offers insights into how populations conform or go against the crowd

Development of a high-performance AI device utilizing ion-controlled spin wave interference in magnetic materials

WashU researchers map individual brain dynamics

Technology for oxidizing atmospheric methane won’t help the climate

US Department of Energy announces Early Career Research Program for FY 2025

PECASE winners: 3 UVA engineering professors receive presidential early career awards

‘Turn on the lights’: DAVD display helps navy divers navigate undersea conditions

MSU researcher’s breakthrough model sheds light on solar storms and space weather

Nebraska psychology professor recognized with Presidential Early Career Award

New data shows how ‘rage giving’ boosted immigrant-serving nonprofits during the first Trump Administration

Unique characteristics of a rare liver cancer identified as clinical trial of new treatment begins

From lab to field: CABBI pipeline delivers oil-rich sorghum

Stem cell therapy jumpstarts brain recovery after stroke

Polymer editing can upcycle waste into higher-performance plastics

Research on past hurricanes aims to reduce future risk

UT Health San Antonio, UTSA researchers receive prestigious 2025 Hill Prizes for medicine and technology

Panorama of our nearest galactic neighbor unveils hundreds of millions of stars

A chain reaction: HIV vaccines can lead to antibodies against antibodies

Bacteria in polymers form cables that grow into living gels

Rotavirus protein NSP4 manipulates gastrointestinal disease severity

‘Ding-dong:’ A study finds specific neurons with an immune doorbell

A major advance in biology combines DNA and RNA and could revolutionize cancer treatments

[Press-News.org] Rockefeller scientists first to reconstitute the DNA 'replication fork'
New model offers important tool for exploring DNA-copying process in multicellular life