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 <title>all Antoin Van Oijen stories</title>
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 <title>DNA copier component found to be real drag</title>
 <link>http://harvardscience.harvard.edu/medicine-health/articles/dna-copier-component-found-be-real-drag</link>
 <description>&lt;!--paging_filter--&gt;&lt;p&gt;A study in the Feb. 2, 2006 Nature by Antoine van Oijen&#039;s lab  sheds light on a longstanding puzzle in DNA replication: how do  the enzymes that copy the two strands of DNA manage to  coordinate their separate movements?
&lt;p&gt;Replicating the genome is complicated by a quirk of DNA  chemistry: DNA has polarity, and the two strands run like a two- lane highway in opposite directions. But DNA polymerase can  only copy DNA in one direction. The two DNA polymerases chug  along the two strands of DNA as a single complex. The  polymerase on the leading strand can move without stopping,  but the polymerase on the lagging strand must copy the DNA  backwards in fragments. Each fragment requires the  construction of a short RNA primer before replication can start  again. Given these frequent delays, what keeps the lagging  strand from getting hopelessly behind the leading strand? By taking advantage of the mechanical properties of DNA, van  Oijen, Harvard Medical School assistant professor of biological  chemistry and molecular pharmacology, was able to track the  pace of these reactions in real time on the level of single  molecules.
&lt;p&gt;His team, including first author and research fellow Jong-Bong  Lee, anchored one end of a piece of DNA to the inner surface of  a glass flow cell; on the other end, they affixed a latex bead.  When they allowed fluid to flow across the DNA at a constant  speed, the bead would drag the DNA in the direction of the  current, stretching it out to a fixed length. When DNA becomes  single stranded, it coils up, making the length of the entire  strand shorter. The researchers were able to use the position of  the beads as an indicator of how much DNA was single- versus  double-stranded, and thereby piece together the events taking  place on both strands.
&lt;p&gt;Using the pared-down replication machinery of a bacteriophage,  the researchers found that during replication, the polymerase on  the leading strand does not simply chug along at a constant  pace. Instead, it pauses to wait whenever a primer is formed on  the lagging strand. &quot;It stops to allow the slow process of making  this primer to take place,&quot; said van Oijen. Further studies  showed that the primase, the enzyme that constructs primers on  the lagging strand, also acts as the brake keeping the  polymerase on the leading strand from zooming ahead.&lt;/p&gt;
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 <pubDate>Mon, 26 Mar 2007 06:24:58 -0400</pubDate>
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