This is wow time. They are able
to simulate the copying process of DNA and do it many times on as many
different scenarios as possible. Chances
are we will even get it right.
How this all started in the first place beggars the imagination unless
it turns out that when the right proteins self assemble (not a big issue) then
this part of the story also self assembles.
Could life really be a natural exercise in self assembly? Could it also turn out to be pretty well
inevitable? It certainly looks that way.
The actual production of useful proteins has not been fully figured out
yet, but I suspect an active role for the zeolites in that they provide natural
protection and powerful shaping tools.
Beyond that it is quickly becoming apparent that simple proximity may
accomplish the rest.
In the Beginning ... Was
the Beaker?
by Charles Rousseaux - Office of Science BNL
Upton NY (SPX) Apr 05, 2012
The DNA replication origin
recognition complex (ORC) is a six-protein machine with a slightly twisted
half-ring structure (yellow). ORC is proposed to wrap around and bend
approximately 70 base pairs of double stranded DNA (red and blue). When a
replication initiator Cdc6 (green) joins ORC, the partial ring is now complete
and ready to load another protein onto the DNA. This last protein (not shown)
is the enzyme that unwinds the double stranded DNA so each strand can be
replicated. Image courtesy of Brookhaven National Laboratory.
In the beginning ... but how
do you begin? That question has long perplexed scientists in fields from
cosmology to anthropology. Fortunately, researchers at the Office of Science's
Brookhaven National Lab (Brookhaven Lab) are beginning to get at the answer on
a small but important scale ... in biology.
Specifically, the researchers
looked at how cells begin to duplicate their DNA, so they can then begin to
replicate themselves. DNA is the essential stuff of beginnings. Its double
strands-which consist of chemical 'letters' or basepairs-tell cells how to
remake themselves; how to build the protein machines that keep them alive and
make them distinct. So before they divide, cells have to duplicate their DNA.
This is a relatively
straightforward affair for bacteria (and other simple cells, also called
prokaryotes) since they typically only have a single loop of DNA, even though
it can be millions of base pairs long. As a consequence, they have just a
single point along the strand where the copying starts, called an origin of
replication.
However, most of biology that
can be seen with the naked eye-animals and plants and even humble yeast-is
composed of more complicated cells called eukaryotes.
Eukaryotes have much more DNA,
which is tightly wound into distinct pieces, or spindles, called chromosomes,
each of which may have many origins of replication.
'Top gun' cells, say those in
humans, have a need for speed, since they have some 3.4 billion
DNA base pairs, all of which have to be pulled apart and copied. So in order to
finish in a reasonable amount of time, those cells have to begin copying their
DNA simultaneously at tens of thousands of different points.
But how do they begin? Namely,
how do protein machines find and bind to the right spots along
the DNA strands, and then set them up for copying?
That's what the team at
Brookhaven Lab studied. They used an imaging method known as cryo-electron
microscopy to take extremely high resolution images of how the right proteins
come together at the right point on the DNA strands, forming a structure called
an "origin recognition complex" (ORC).
The lab's first-of-a-kind
images (taken using yeast cells, which are also eukaryotes), showed how the
shape of the complex changes as it sets the DNA up for duplication.
Scientists then gathered
additional details about individual parts of the structure from previously made
X-ray crystallography images, which showed the positions of many individual
portions of the complex. Then they took all of their information and ran a
detailed computer simulation, which gave scientists a good idea of how the
whole process works.
That's important since
beginnings can go bad, and uncontrolled cell division is the hallmark of many
cancers. The new insights from Brookhaven Lab might lead to new ways to attack
cancers at a basic level, one reason that the research was also
supported by the National Institutes of Health.
But there's also a deeper
reason to do basic research. Beginnings are one of the most precious
opportunities of all, the chance to create, to discover.
That's what happens with each
new experiment run at National Laboratories supported by the Office of Science:
Each day it's a new chance to begin again ... in the beginning.
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