Informational biopolymers of genes and gene expression:
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1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Sansalito, CA
University Science Books
2005
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references and index |
Beschreibung: | XXII, 778 S. Ill., graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 1891389289 |
Internformat
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100 | 1 | |a Blake, Richard D. |e Verfasser |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a Informational biopolymers of genes and gene expression |c R.D. Blake |
264 | 1 | |a Sansalito, CA |b University Science Books |c 2005 | |
300 | |a XXII, 778 S. |b Ill., graph. Darst. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
500 | |a Includes bibliographical references and index | ||
650 | 4 | |a aGenes | |
650 | 4 | |a aGene expression | |
650 | 4 | |a aInformation theory in biology | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804133310958403584 |
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adam_text | Informational
Biopolymers of
Genes and Gene
Expression
Properties and Evolution
R D BLAKE
UNIVERSITY SCIENCE BOOKS
SAUSALITO, CALIFORNIA
Contents
Preface xix
Chapter 1 Introduction to the Informational Biopolymers 1
1 1 Proteins 4
1 2 Nucleic Acids 8
121 The Special Fitness of the DNA Molecule 10
1 3 The Roles of the Informational Biopolymers in the Dissemination of Genetic
Information 14
131 Central Dogma 14
132 Transcription 15
133 Translation 18
134 Replication 19
135 Genetic Variants and Mutants 22
1 4 The Cellular Imperative 23
141 Cell Types 23
1411 Prokaryotic Cells 23
1412 Eukaryotic Cells 25
Problems 27
References 28
Chapter 2 Forces Within and Between Biopolymers 31
2 1 Conformational Potential Energy 33
211 Bond-Length Stretching Potential 34
212 Bond Bending Potential 35
213 Bond Rotational Angle Potential 35
214 Nonbonding Potential 36
2 2 Dispersion and Exclusion Effects 38
2 3 Ionic Interactions 42
2 4 Dipole Interactions 45
2 5 van der Waals Forces 50
2 6 Hydrogen Bonds 50
2 7 Hydrophobic Bonds 54
2 8 Stacking Interactions 56
2 9 Modeling Structures by Computational Molecular Mechanics 57
Problems 58
References 59
V
vi Contents
Chapter 3 Proteins 63
3 1 Amino Acids 65
3 2 The Polypeptide Backbone 68
321 Conformation of the Polypeptide Backbone 68
3211 The Peptide Bond 68
3212 Pauling-Corey Rules 71
322 The Ramachandran Plot of Allowed Backbone Conformations 72
3 3 Secondary Structures 73
331 Thea-Helix 74
3311 Molecular Details 74
3312 Residue Chirality and Steric Conflicts 76
3313 Sequence Biases Determine Helix Orientations in Proteins 76
3314 Helix Propensities of Residues and Short Helices 78
332 The /3-Pleated Sheets 79
3 4 Thermodynamics of the a-Helix 81
341 Hydrogen Bonds 82
342 Backbone Dispersion Forces 83
343 Displacement of Bound Waters 83
344 Side-Chain Interactions and Conformational Entropy 83
345 Helix Dipole 83
346 End Effects 84
347 Structural and Energetic Cooperativity 85
*348 Modeling of the Coil^Helix Transition—Multistate Model 87
*349 Two-State Model 91
3 4 10 Helix Capping 92
3 5 Tertiary and Quaternary Structures 93
351 Fibrous Proteins 93
352 Globular Proteins 96
*3 521 Single Crystal X-Ray Diffraction of Globular Proteins 96
3522 Structural Classification 103
3523 Mainly ar-Structures 104
3524 Alpha-Motifs or Coiled Coil Structures 106
3525 Mainly ^-Structures 106
352 6, a/p Structures 109
3527 FoldClassification Databases and Sequence-Structure
Relationships 112
3 6 Protein Folding 112
361 Empirical Fold-Recognition Approaches to the Prediction of Protein
Structure 116
3611 Case Study: The Relationship ofPlant and Animal Hemoglobins 117
3 7 Evolutionary Relationships from Primary Sequences 118
371 Phylogenetic Trees 119
Problems 121
References 124
Chapter 4 Covalent Features of the Nucleic Acids 131
4 1 Nucleotide Sugar 131
411 /5-D-Ribofuranose 132
* Indicates an optional section
Contents vii
412 Sugar Configurations 134
4121 Sugar Chirality 134
413 Sugar Conformation 136
4131 The Reason for Sugar Pucker 136
*4132A Continuum of Sugar Conformations: Pseudorotation Angle 138
4133 Three Main Sugar Conformations 138
4 2 Nucleotide Base 140
421 Tautomeric Forms of the Bases 142
422 Polarity of the Bases 144
423 Modified Bases 145
424 Electronic Absorption Spectra of the Bases 145
4241 Lambert-Beer Law 147
4242 Radiant Energy 148
4243 Spectra 151
4244 Molecular Orbital Theory and Aromaticity 151
4245 Electron Derealization and Transition Energy 152
4246 Effects of Solvent on Spectra 153
4247 Photochemical and Mutational Effects of Ultraviolet Light 154
4 3 The N-Glycosidic Bond 154
431 Preferred Conformations of the N-Glycosidic Bond 154
4 4 Phosphoester Bond 156
441 Phosphodiester Linkages 159
442 The Unusually Long Half-Life of the Phosphodiester Linkage 162
443 Nucleotide and Phosphodiester Conformations 163
444 Nucleotide Polymerization, Base Stacking, and the Hypochromic Effect 164
4 5 Pyrimidine and Nucleotide Cofactors 166
451 NAD+and Dehydrogenases 168
Problems 170
References 170
Chapter 5 Structure, Synthesis, and Function of RNA 175
5 1 The Preponderance of Ribosomal, Transfer, and Small Nuclear RNA
in Cells 182
511 RibosomdRNA 183
5111 The Roles of Ribosomal RNA Species in the Assembly and Function
ofRibosomes 184
512 Transfer RNA 186
513 Messenger RNA 187
514 Eukaryotic Small Nuclear, Nucleolar, and Cytoplasmic RNA Types 187
5 2 Primary Structures of RNA Species 187
521 Primary Structures of Transfer RNA 187
5211 Posttranscriptional Changes in Primary Structures of tRNA
Species 189
522 Primary Structures of Ribosomal RNA Molecules 189
5221 Primary Sequences of Eukaryotic Crown Ribosomal RNA 192
523 Primary Structures of Messenger RNA Species 192
5231 Primary Sequences of Eukaryotic Messenger RNA 194
52311 Introns 195
52312 Did Introns Arise Early or Late in Evolution? 195
52313 Multigene Families 195
viii Contents
5 3 Secondary Structures of RNA Molecules 196
531 Major Sources of Stability of Secondary Structures 196
5311 Hydrogen Bonds 197
5312 Stacking Interactions 197
532 Probing Secondary Structure 199
533 RNA Secondary Structural Elements 199
5331 Some Qualitative Thermodynamic Considerations 200
5332 Contributions of Structural Elements to Conformational
Cooperativity 200
5333 Single-Stranded Stacking Interactions 202
5334 Stem-Loops 204
53341 TheTetraloop 204
534 Case Study: Secondary Structure of Transfer RNA 204
535 Case Study: Secondary Structure of 55 rRNA Particles 205
536 Case Study: Secondary Structures of Small Subunit rRNA Particles 207
537 Predictions of RNA Secondary Structure 207
5 4 Tertiary Structures of RNA Species 209
541 Crystal Structure of Transfer RNA 209
5411 Binding of Water 211
5412 Binding of Divalent Cations 213
542 Crystal Structure of the Catalytic Core of the Tetrahymena Ribozyme 214
5 5 Protein-RNA Interactions 214
5 6 The Biosynthesis of RNA: Transcription 217
561 Structures of Structural Genes 217
562 The Initiation Stage of Transcription in Prokaryotes 218
5621E coli DNA-Dependent RNA Polymerase 218
5622 Initiation of Transcription in Prokaryotes 219
5623 Location of Promoter Sequences by RNA Polymerase in
Prokaryotes 221
5624 The Structure of T7 RNA Polymerase in Complex with an Open
Promoter 223
563 Transcription in Eukaryotes 224
564 Elongation by RNA Polymerase 227
565 Transcription of Ribosomal RNA 229
5651 Transcription-ofrRNA in E coli 229
5652 Posttranscriptional Processing of Primary rRNA Transcripts in E
coli 230
5653 Transcription of rRNA in Eukaryotes 231
5654 Posttranscriptional Processing of Pre-rRNA in Eukaryotes 232
5655 Posttranscriptional Modification of Pre-mRNA in Eukaryotes 232
5656 Group I Introns and the Ribozyme-Catalyzed Self-Splicing of rRNA
Transcripts 236
566 Transfer RNA Genes 236
5661 Processing of Pre-tRNA 236
5662 RNaseP 237
5 7 The Participation of RNAs in Protein Synthesis 237
571 Activation 238
5711 Aminoacyl-tRNA Synthetases and Their Complexes with Cognate
tRNA 240
572 Initiation 243
Contents ix
5721E coli Methionyl-tRNA-^ Transformylase 243
5722 Formation of the 705 Initiation Complex 244
5723 Structure of the Bacterial Ribosome 246
573 Elongation 247
5731E coli Elongation Factor Tu (EF-Tu) 247
5732 Peptidyltransferase 250
574 Termination 251
575 Translation in Eukaryotic Cells 251
Problems 252
References 253
Chapter 6 Secondary Structure of Duplex DNA 263
6 1 Contributions of Fiber Diffraction to Our Knowledge of DNA Structure 263
611 Semicrystalline Fibers of DNA 264
*612 Theory of Diffraction by Helical Fibers 264
613 Overcoming the Limitations of Fiber Diffraction 268
6 2 Prelude to the Watson-Crick Double Helix 268
621 The Watson-Crick Double-Helical DNA 271
6 3 Refined and Archetypal Structures 274
631 Terms Used in the Definition of Conformational States 275
632 B-DNA, the Structure at High Relative Humidity 277
633 A-DNA, the Structure at Low Relative Humidity 277
634 DNA • RNA Hybrids 283
635 Polymorphism of DNA Double Helices 284
6 4 Structural Features Common to All Nucleic Acid Helices 285
641 Base Pairs and Hydrogen Bonds 285
642 Stacking Interactions 287
643 Grooves 289
6 5 Structures from Single-Crystal Diffraction Analysis 290
651 Z-DNA Structure from a Single Crystal of an Oligonucleotide 290
652 B-DNA in Single Crystals 294
6521 Local Base-Pair and Base-Pair-Neighbor Parameters 298
6522 Drew-Dickerson B-DNA: Sequence-Dependent Variations 299
6523 Drew-Dickerson B-DNA: Correlations Among Torsional Bond
Angles 299
6524 Drew-Dickerson B-DNA: Effects of Propeller on Grooves 302
6525 The Structure of Drew-Dickerson Dodecanucleotide at Very High
Resolution 303
6526 Nelson-Klug Sequence: (dA • dT)„ Tracts and Bifurcated Hydrogen
Bonds 303
6527 Nelson-Klug Sequence: Inherent Sequence-Dependent Curvature of
the Helix Axis 304
6528 Sequence-Dependent Variations and Bending 304
653 A-DNA in Single Crystals 307
654 The DNA • RNA Hybrid Helix 308
6 6 DNA Structure in Solution 308
661 Spectroscopic Methods Often Provide a Superabundance of Structural
Detail 309
662 Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy 310
*6 621 One-Dimensional NMR 310
*
x Contents
*6 622 Multidimensional NMR 314
663 UV Electronic Absorption Spectroscopy 314
6631 Light-Induced Electronic Transitions 315
6632 Hypochromism 315
664 Helical Repeat in Solution 316
6 7 Hydrogen Bonding in an Aqueous Environment 320
6 8 Molecular Dynamics of DNA 320
681A Molecular Dynamics Case Study of an Oligomeric B-DNA 321
682 Spontaneous Breathing of DNA 321
6 9 Denaturation and Thermodynamics of DNA 324
691 Cooperativity and Energetics of DNA Denaturation 325
692 DNA Stability and (G + C) Content 327
6921 Distribution of Nearest Neighbors 328
6922 DNA Length 329
6923 Conformational States of Neighboring Domains 329
693 Effects of Extrinsic Factors on DNA Stability 330
6931 Counter-Cation Type and Concentration 330
6932 Inhospitable Solvents 330
6933 pH 330
*694 Statistical Mechanical Simulation of Melting from DNA Sequences 332
6 10 Higher Organization of DNA 333
6 10 1 Supercoiling 333
6 10 1 1 The Biological Importance of Supercoiled DNA 335
6 10 2 Energetics of Supercoiling 337
*6 10 3 The Consequences of Supercoiling from Theoretical Studies 337
6 10 4 Unusual DNA Structures, Some Induced by Supercoiling 339
6 10 4 1 Cruciform Structures 339
6 10 4 2 Triple Helices and the H-Structure 340
6 11 Macromolecular Structure 343
Problems 346
References 347
Chapter 7 Primary Sequences of DNA 357
7 1 Base Compositions ofcProkaryotic DNA 357
711 Directional MutationPressures 359
712 Distributions of (G + C) Contents in Prokaryotes 360
*7 1 3 Relationship to the Normal Distribution Function 360
714 Distribution of (G + C) in E coli 361
7 2 Base Compositions of Eukaryotic DNA 363
721 Distributions of (G + C) Compositions and Isochores 363
7 3 Dinucleotide (Nearest-Neighbor) Frequencies 365
731 Dinucleotide Frequencies by Direct Count 366
732 Dinucleotide Frequencies by Chemical Analysis 367
733 CG Instability 367
734 CpG Islands 368
7 4 Sequence Complexity 369
*7 4 1 Sequence Complexity and Shannon Entropy 371
*742 Sequence Complexity from Renaturation Kinetics 372
*743 Second-Order Kinetics 373
*744 Second-Order DNA Reassociation Kinetics 374
Contents xi
7 5 Primary Sequences in Prokaryotes 381
751 Codon Biases 383
7 6 Primary Sequence Elements in Eukaryotes 383
761 Genome Reorganization 386
762 Gene Sequences 387
7621 Codon Biases 389
763 Sequence Signals for Posttranscriptional Alterations 389
764 Introns 390
765 Pseudogenes 390
766 Computer Identification of Coding Sequences 391
7 7 Satellite DNA and Repetitive Sequences 391
771 Classification 391
772 Gene Duplication and the Origin of Tandem Repeats 394
773 Macrosatellites 396
774 Minisatellites 397
7741 Minisatellite DNA Fingerprinting (DNA Typing) 400
775 Microsatellites 401
7751 Trinucleotide Repeats and Genetic Disorders 403
776 Origins of Interspersed Repetitive Sequences 403
7761 Mammalian A/w SINEs 405
7762 LINEs 408
777 Specialized Repetitive Sequence Elements of the Functional Eukaryotic
Chromosome 408
7771 Centromere 409
7772 Telomere 412
7773 Yeast Artificial Chromosome 413
778 Multigene or Repetitive Structural Gene Families 414
7781 Multicopy Gene Families for Increased Dosages of Gene
Product 415
7782 Paralogous Multigene Families 417
*77821 Hemoglobin 417
7 8 Primary Sequences of Mitochondrial DNA 418
7 9 Determining Evolutionary Relationships from Primary Sequences 422
7:9 1 -Phylogenetic Trees 423
7911 Base Substitutions 425
7912 The Neutral Theory of Evolution 425
7913 Primary Sequence Repositories 426
7914 Multiple Sequence Alignments 427
7915 Tree Building 427
7916 Vagaries of the Molecular Clock 429
7917 Selected Case Studies of Intra- and Interspecific Molecular Evolution
ofHominoids 431
7918A Hominoid Tree from Stabilities of DNAA • DNAB
Heteroduplexes 434
7919 Distances Within Populations: The Use of mtDNA and the Origins of
Homo sapiens 435
791 10 Molecular Archaeology 436
Problems 439
References 440
xii Contents
Chapter 8 Interactions of Water and Cations with DNA 449
8 1 The Unusual Character of Water 450
8 2 Hydration of Electrolytes 452
8 3 Interactions of Hydrated Ions in Solution 455
*8 3 1 Electrostatic Potentials and the Debye-Hiickel Theory 456
8 4 Macroscopic Studies of DNA Hydration 459
841 Early Gravimetric and IR Studies of DNA Hydration 459
842 The Dependence of Buoyant Density on Base Composition 460
*8 421 Density Gradient Centrifugation 462
843 The Dependence of Buoyant Density on Sequence 464
844 Variations in Densities of Water Molecules Bound to DNA 465
845 Summary of Macroscopic Analyses of Hydration in Aqueous Solution 466
8 5 Microscopic Studies of DNA Hydration: Single-Crystal Diffraction 467
851 Summary Analysis of Hydration in Single Crystals 471
8 6 Interactions of Cations with DNA 474
861 The Physiologically Important Microcations 476
862 Interactions of Inorganic Cations with DNA 476
8621 Nonspecific Counterion Condensation of Microcations by
DNA 476
8622 The Dependence of DNA Stability on Cation Concentration 477
*86221 Effects of Condensed Microcations on Helix-Coil
Equilibria: A Case Study 480
8623 The Fractional Occupancy of Microcations at Sites in Grooves 482
8624 Specific Site Binding by Metal Ions 483
863 Interactions of Biochemical Cations with DNA 485
8631 Protamines in Eukaryotic Sperm 485
8632 Basic Histones of Eukaryotic Chromosomes 486
8633 Histonelike Proteins of Prokaryotes 486
8634 Polyamines 486
Problems 488
References 489
Chapter 9 Interactions of Proteins with DNA 493
9 1 Modes of Interaction 493
911 Noncovalent Interactions Involved in Binding 496
912 Conformational Transitions Associated with Binding 497
9 2 Methods of Analysis 497
*921A Popular Thermodynamic Binding Isotherm for the Binding of Proteins
to DNA 498
9 3 Principles of Sequence-Specific DNA-Binding Proteins 500
931 Target-Site Specificity 500
932 Target-Site Recognition in the Major Groove 501
933 Energetics of Site-Specific Association 502
934 The Principal DNA-Binding Motifs 503
935 The or-Helix, a Common Structural Element of DNA-Binding Motifs 504
9 4 DNA-Binding Proteins of the Structural Class 506
941 Nonspecific Binding of Proteins That Reduce the Lineal Dimensions of
DNA 506
9411 Prokaryotic HU Protein 506
9412 Eukaryotic Nucleosome 509
Contents xiii
9 5 DNA-Binding Proteins of the Enzymatic Class 510
951 Topoisomerases 513
9511 The Structure of Human DNA Topoisomerase I 513
952 Enzymes of Nucleic Acid Digestion 516
9521 Bovine Pancreatic DNase I 516
9 6 DNA-Binding Proteins of the Regulatory Class 516
961 Group 1 Helix-Turn-Helix Proteins 516
9611 Variations in the Relationship Between DNA and Recognition
Helix 2 Are Small 521
9612k cl and Cro Proteins, Well-Characterized Case Studies of DNA
Binding Through the HTH Motif 521
*96121 Developmental Control of k Depends on Sequence-Specific
Repressor Protein-DNA Interactions 525
962 Group 2 Zinc-Coordinating Proteins 528
9621 The Role of Zinc 528
9622 Four Classes of Zinc-Coordinating Proteins 530
963 Class I Zinc-Finger DNA-Binding Proteins 531
9631 The Example of TFIIA 531
9632 TFIIA Regulates the Transcription of 55 Ribosomal RNA 532
9633 Structure of a TFIIA-DNA Complex 532
964 Class II Zinc-Finger DNA-Binding Proteins 533
9641 Nuclear Receptor Proteins: Ligand-Inducible Transcription
Factors 533
9642 Structures of Glucocorticoid- and Estrogen Receptor-DNA
Complexes 534
96421 The Class II Zinc-Finger DNA-Binding Domain 536
96422 The Class II (Hormone) Ligand-Binding Domain 537
9643 Origins and Evolution of Nuclear Receptor Proteins 540
965 Class III Zinc-Finger DNA-Binding Proteins 541
966 Class IV Zinc-Finger DNA-Binding Proteins 542
967 Group 3 Zipper Coiled Coil Proteins 545
9671 Transcription Regulatory Proteins of the Zipper Group 3 545
9672 Many Zipper Proteins Are the Expression Products of
Proto-Oncogenes 545
9673 Specific Binding to DNA of NFAT-Fos-Jun Proteins, Members of the
Zipper Family 548
9674 Specific Binding to DNA of the Max Protein, Member of the
Helix-Loop-Helix Family 549
968 Group 5 ^-Sheet Proteins 549
969 Group 6 -Hairpin Proteins 549
Problems 553
References 554
Chapter 10 Cellular Replication of DNA 561
10 1 Stages of Replication 561
10 1 1 Enzymes and Proteins of DNA Replication 562
10 2 Origin Locus of Replication 563
10 2 1 DNAHelicase 565
10 211 The Structure of a Helicase Bound to a Single-Stranded DNA 565
xiv Contents
10 2 2 Primase 566
10 221 X-ray Structure of E coli Primase 567
10 2 3 Stabilization of Single-Stranded Regions at the Replication Fork 568
10 231 Crystal Structure of T4 SSB Protein 569
10 3 Condensation of dNTP and Elongation of DNA 570
10 3 1 Thermodynamics of Phosphate Esters 571
10 3 2 dNTP Pools and Isochores 573
10 3 3 Rates of Replication 573
10 3 4 Mechanism of DNA Replication by DNA Polymerase 574
10 3 5 Proofreading 576
10 3 6 Error Frequencies 577
10 3 7 Replicative Accuracy 577
10 3 8 Replicative Accuracy and Genome Size 578
10 3 9 Atomic Structures of DNA Polymerases 579
10 391E coli DNA Polymerase HI Holoenzyme 579
10 392 Structure of the p Subunit of E coli Pol III 580
10 393E coli Pol I 580
10 394 Crystal Structure and Mechanism of Action of E coli Pol I 582
10 395 Crystal Structures of Other Polymerases 584
10 396 Eukaryotic DNA Polymerases 584
10 4 Auxiliary Replicative Processes 585
10 4 1 Removal of Primer 585
10 411 Crystal Structure of M janeschii RNase HII 585
10 412 DNA • RNA Hybrid and Chimeric Structures 587
10 4 2 Joining of Okazaki Pieces 588
10 421 Crystal Structure of the ATP-Dependent T7 DNA Ligase 589
10 4 3 The Role of Topoisomerases During Elongation 589
10 5 Replication of the Ends of Linear Eukaryotic DNA by Telomerase 591
10 5 1 Evolution of Telomerase 593
10 5 2 The Quadruplex Secondary Structure of Telomeric DNA 595
Problems 596
References 596
Mutations, Unscheduled Decay, Reactivity, and Interactions of DNA 603
Mutations 604 ~——
11 1 1 Mutation Background 605
11 1 2 Causes of Mutations 605
11 1 3 Germinal Mutations and Inborn Errors of Metabolism 607
11 1 4 Somatic Mutations and Cancer 608
11 1 5 Specificities of Different Mutagens on the p53 Tumor-Suppressor Gene 611
* 11 1 6 Mutagenicity Assays 611
11 2 Point Mutations 611
11 2 1 Types of Point Mutations 612
11 211 Transitions 613
11 212 Transversions 613
11 213 Insertions and Deletions 614
11 2 2 Effects of Point Mutations on Coding Sequences 614
11 3 Relative Rates of Point Mutation 615
11 3 1 Steady-State Differences of Mutation Rates in Humans 619
11 311 Neighbor-Dependent Mutation Rates 620
Chapter 11
Contents xv
11 312 Neighbor-Pair-Dependent Mutation Rates Contribute to the
Formation of Nonrandom Sequences in DNA 622
11 313 Computer Simulation of Replication with Mutations 623
11 4 Molecular Basis of Mutagenesis 623
11 4 1 Keto^EnoI and Amino^Imino Tautomerization of the Bases 623
11 4 2 Wobble Mispairs 626
11 421 The Structure of the (G • Twobb/e) Mispair 628
11 422 The Structure of the (A • CwobbIe) Mispair 631
11 423 The Structure of the (G • A) Mispair 632
11 4 3 Spontaneous Lesions 634
11 431 Depurination and Depyrimidination 634
11 432 Deamination 634
11 433 Lability of the Phosphodiester Bond at AP Sites 636
11 5 Reactions with Endogenous Agents 636
11 5 1 Endogenous Sources of Reactive Oxygen 636
11 5 2 Reactions of Endogenous Electrophiles with DNA 639
11 6 Reactions of Exogenous Agents with DNA 640
11 6 1 Reactive Oxygen Generated by Solar Radiation 640
11 6 2 PyroPyr and Hydrate Photoproducts Caused by UV Radiation 641
11 621 Xeroderma Pigmentosum 643
11 6 3 Psoralen, a Photosensitizing Agent That Reacts Both Noncovalently and
Covalently with DNA 643
11 6 4 Direct and Indirect Production of DNA Adducts by Alkylating Agents 645
11 641 Specificities of Alkylating Agents 645
11 642 Specificities of the Reactive Sites on the DNA 645
11 643 Alkylation of Guanine N7 Often Leads to Depurination 647
11 644 Bifunctional Alkylating Agents: The Sulfur and Nitrogen
Mustards 648
11 6 5 Indirect-Acting Alkylating Agents 649
11 651 Benzo[a]pyrene, a Case Study 649
11 652 Aflatoxin Blf another Case Study 650
11 653 N-Nitroso Compounds 650
11 6 6 Nonalkylating Agents 653
11 6 7 Interactions with Dyes and Drugs 654
11 671 Structural and Energetic Consequences of Intercalation 655
11 672 Actinomycin D Binds DNA by Intercalation 657
11 673 Bleomycin and Pepleomycin Bind DNA by Intercalation 659
11 674 Netropsin Binds to (A * T) Tracts in the Narrow Minor Groove 660
11 675 Cisplatin Forms Guanine Adducts That Crosslink DNA 661
11 6 8 Metal Ion Binding 661
Problems 664
References 666
Chapter 12 Repair and Recombination of DNA 677
12 1 Multifunctional Repair Enzymes 678
12 2 Multiple Pathways for the Repair of Damage Caused by UV Radiation 679
12 3 Mismatch Repair 681
12 3 1 Summary of Biochemical Events During Mismatch Repair 683
12 3 2 Methyl-Directed Discrimination Between Standard but Noncomplementary
Base Mispairs 684
xvi Contents
12 3 3 Long-Patch Mismatch Repair 685
12 331 Crystal Structures of MutS-DNA 687
12 3 4 Excision of the Section (Patch) Containing the Mismatch 688
12 3 5 Very Short Patch Repair 689
12 4 Excision Repair 689
12 4 1 Base Excision Repair 690
12 411 DNA Glycosylases 694
12 412 Crystal Structure of Human Uracil-DNA Glycosylase 695
12 4 2 Apurinic/Apyrimidinic Sites 697
12 4 3 Apurinic/Apyrimidinic Endonuclease 699
12 4 4 Apurinic/Apyrimidinic Endonuclease IV 700
12 441 Crystal Structure of E coli AP Endonuclease IV 700
12 4 5 Nucleotide Excision Repair 702
12 451 NER in E coli 702
12 4511 Structure of UvrB 703
12 452 NER in Eukaryotes 704
12 5 Direct Reversal of Certain Lesions 705
12 6 The SOS Repair System 706
12 7 Recombination and Recombination Repair 706
12 7 1 Homologous Recombination 708
12 7 2 Proposed Mechanism of Homologous Recombination 708
12 721 Molecular Structure of the Holliday Junction 714
12 7 3 Double-Strand Breaks and Recombination Repair 715
12 7 4 Gene Duplication 715
12 7 5 Tandemly Repetitive Sequences 717
12 7 6 Site-Specific Recombination 717
12 761 Transposable Genetic Elements 717
12 7 7 Nonspecific Recombination 718
Problems 718
References 719
Prebiotic Origins
The Physical Age of the Universe 729
13 1 1 Origin of theJJniverse and Bioelements 729
Formation of Earth 730
13 2 1 Conditions on Primitive Earth 730
The Age of Chemistry 731
13 3 1 Favorable Attributes of the Primary Bioelements 732
* 13 311 Carbon in the Central Role of Biogenesis 732
* 13 312 Oxygen, Nitrogen, and the Importance of Polarity 732
* 13 313 Phosphorous 733
* 13 314 Water as Both Solvent and Reactant 738
Thermodynamic Precepts for Origins and Order: Dissipative Processes 739
13 4 1 Laws of Thermodynamics and Time-Independent Equilibrium States
13 4 2 Irreversible Time-Dependent Processes 742
13 4 3 Origins of Order Under Far-from-Equilibrium Conditions 743
13 4 4 Conditions Favorable for Dissipative Processes and Biogenesis 745
Hypercycles 746
13 5 1 Defining Characteristics of Hypercycles 748
Chapter 13
*
Contents xvii
13 6 Age of Abiotic Chemistry: Synthesis of Pi and Alpha Molecules 748
13 6 1 Abiotic Amino Acid Synthesis 750
13 6 2 Abiotic Synthesis of Purines and Pyrimidines 751
13 6 3 Abiotic Synthesis of Sugars and Sugar Phosphates 752
13 7 Abiotic Synthesis of Beta Monomelic Units of D-Ribose 754
13 7 1 How Important Is Sugar Chirality? 755
13 7 2 Diastereoselective Synthesis of Sugars 755
13 7 3 Abiotic Synthesis of Sugar and Nucleoside Phosphate Esters 756
13 8 Alpha Monomelic Units of Ribose Analogs 756
13 8 1 Flexible Prochiral Analogs of D-Ribose 756
13 8 2 Hexose Nucleotide Analogs 757
13 8 3 The Age of Prebiotic Chemistry 757
13 9 The RNA World 760
* 13 9 1 The Life Cycle of Q/3 760
13 9 2 In vivo Replication and Quasi Species of Q^vRNA and Q/JmvRNA 761
13 9 3 In vitro Darwinian Experiments with Q/8 RNA Replicase 762
Problems 763
References 764
Index 769
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Blake, Richard D. |
author_facet | Blake, Richard D. |
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building | Verbundindex |
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callnumber-first | Q - Science |
callnumber-label | QH447 |
callnumber-raw | QH447 |
callnumber-search | QH447 |
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callnumber-subject | QH - Natural History and Biology |
classification_rvk | WG 1700 |
classification_tum | BIO 180f BIO 220f CHE 820f |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)56964223 (DE-599)BVBBV019812221 |
dewey-full | 572.86 |
dewey-hundreds | 500 - Natural sciences and mathematics |
dewey-ones | 572 - Biochemistry |
dewey-raw | 572.86 |
dewey-search | 572.86 |
dewey-sort | 3572.86 |
dewey-tens | 570 - Biology |
discipline | Biologie Chemie |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV019812221 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T20:06:41Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 1891389289 |
language | English |
lccn | 2004043051 |
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owner_facet | DE-M49 DE-BY-TUM DE-11 |
physical | XXII, 778 S. Ill., graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2005 |
publishDateSearch | 2005 |
publishDateSort | 2005 |
publisher | University Science Books |
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spelling | Blake, Richard D. Verfasser aut Informational biopolymers of genes and gene expression R.D. Blake Sansalito, CA University Science Books 2005 XXII, 778 S. Ill., graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Includes bibliographical references and index aGenes aGene expression aInformation theory in biology Molekulargenetik (DE-588)4039987-4 gnd rswk-swf Nucleinsäuren (DE-588)4172117-2 gnd rswk-swf Genexpression (DE-588)4020136-3 gnd rswk-swf Proteine (DE-588)4076388-2 gnd rswk-swf Nucleinsäuren (DE-588)4172117-2 s Molekulargenetik (DE-588)4039987-4 s DE-604 Proteine (DE-588)4076388-2 s Genexpression (DE-588)4020136-3 s HEBIS Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=013137617&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Blake, Richard D. Informational biopolymers of genes and gene expression aGenes aGene expression aInformation theory in biology Molekulargenetik (DE-588)4039987-4 gnd Nucleinsäuren (DE-588)4172117-2 gnd Genexpression (DE-588)4020136-3 gnd Proteine (DE-588)4076388-2 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4039987-4 (DE-588)4172117-2 (DE-588)4020136-3 (DE-588)4076388-2 |
title | Informational biopolymers of genes and gene expression |
title_auth | Informational biopolymers of genes and gene expression |
title_exact_search | Informational biopolymers of genes and gene expression |
title_full | Informational biopolymers of genes and gene expression R.D. Blake |
title_fullStr | Informational biopolymers of genes and gene expression R.D. Blake |
title_full_unstemmed | Informational biopolymers of genes and gene expression R.D. Blake |
title_short | Informational biopolymers of genes and gene expression |
title_sort | informational biopolymers of genes and gene expression |
topic | aGenes aGene expression aInformation theory in biology Molekulargenetik (DE-588)4039987-4 gnd Nucleinsäuren (DE-588)4172117-2 gnd Genexpression (DE-588)4020136-3 gnd Proteine (DE-588)4076388-2 gnd |
topic_facet | aGenes aGene expression aInformation theory in biology Molekulargenetik Nucleinsäuren Genexpression Proteine |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=013137617&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT blakerichardd informationalbiopolymersofgenesandgeneexpression |