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Telomerase Facilitates Replication at the Ends of Eukaryotic Chromosomes

Telomerase Facilitates Replication at the Ends of Eukaryotic Chromosomes [Pg.673]

Circular bacterial chromosomes are initiated by RNA primers. At some stage the RNA primers must be eliminated and replaced by DNA. Due to the circular nature of the chromosome an upstream DNA molecule can always serve as a primer for regions from which RNA primers are eventually removed. This guarantees that the primer requirement does not interfere with complete replication of the chromosome. [Pg.673]

Since eukaryotic chromosomes are linear, the ends of these chromosomes require a special solution to ensure complete replication. This can be seen in figure 26.26. At the very end of a linear duplex a primer is necessary to initiate DNA replication. After RNA primer removal there is bound to be a gap at the 5 end of the newly synthesized DNA chains. Since DNA synthesis always requires a primer the usual way of filling this gap is not going to solve the problem. This dilemma is overcome by a special structure at the ends (telomeres) of eukaryotic chromosomes and a special type of reverse transcriptase (telomerase) that synthesizes telomeric DNA. In many eukaryotes the telomeres contain short sequences (frequently hexamers) that are tan-demly repeated many times. Telomerase contains an RNA that binds to the 3 ends and also serves as a template for the extension of these ends. Prior to replication, the 3 ends of the chromosome are extended with additional tandemly repeated hexamers. The 3 ends are extended sufficiently so that there is room to accommodate an RNA primer. In this way there is no net loss of DNA from the 5 ends as a result of replication. After replication the 3 end is somewhat [Pg.673]

Synthesis at the ends of a eukaryotic chromosome. One end of the linear DNA of a eukaryotic chromosome is diagrammed. A flush-ended DNA duplex presents a problem for completing synthesis at the 5 end (a). This is because of the RNA primer requirement for DNA synthesis. When the primer at the 5 end is removed there is no conventional way to fill the gap. A solution to this problem is shown in (b). The ends of eukaryotic chromosomal DNAs consist of highly repetitious tandem repeats (telomeres). These repeats on the 3 end serve as both primer and template for extending the 3 end. The extended 3 end can accommodate a primer RNA, so after chromosomal DNA replication no loss occurs from the 5 end of the DNA. Another process is needed to remove the extension from the 3 end. New synthesis is indicated in red. The zigzag represents primer. [Pg.673]


Bacterial Reverse Transcriptase Catalyzes Synthesis of a DNA-RNA Molecule Telomerase Facilitates Replication at the Ends of Eukaryotic Chromosomes Other Enzymes That Act on DNA... [Pg.650]




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Chromosome replication

Chromosome replication ends

Chromosomes, eukaryotic

Chromosomes, eukaryotic replication

Eukaryotes chromosome replication

Eukaryotes chromosomes

Facilitators

Facilitization

Replication at the ends

Telomerase

The Chromosomes

The Facilitator

The eukaryotes

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