Inman


Email
Department of Biochemistry
433 Babcock Drive
Madison, WI 53706-1544
USA
608/262-3040

   

Ross B Inman

           

Professor, (also Institute for Molecular Virology)
B.Sc., Ph.D., University of Adelaide, South Australia

641A Bock Labs, (608) 262-9881

      

Replication and structure of DNA

Our current research centers around the replication of DNA. We wish to learn why organisms have evolved a variety of strategies for the replication of their genes. In many bacteriophages, DNA replication initiates from a well defined origin, but in some instances the genes are replicated unidirectionally, whereas in others a bidirectional mechanism is employed. Some genomes replicate as circular structures while others are linear. In higher organisms replication initiates from a large number of positions along the genome. What advantages are conferred by these various replication strategies?

Another related area of interest concerns the control of DNA replication. How does an organism achieve balanced replication so that its genes are neither under- or over-replicated and how is this coupled with the actual physical division of the cell? We have recently discovered how to interfere with the control process that is concerned with the primary initiation of DNA replication in bacteriophage lambda, and in this way hope to gain insights into the control process itself. Phage lambda DNA initiates bidirectional replication from a unique position on its genome, and once replication has started, two daughter origin sequences are formed. Normally these daughter origins are inactive while a round of replication is in progress. Apparently a control process prevents daughter origins from initiating a new wave of replication until the current round terminates. Under a number of abnormal conditions we can disturb this control process. For instance, if replication takes place in the presence of caffeine or the antitumor drug cis-Pt, daughter origins can reinitiate while a round of replication is in progress, leading to multiple waves of replication and complex replicative structures. We are presently investigating these aberrant replicators in order to determine how the control process operates.

During the first round of replication the bidirectional lambda replicator has a theta configuration; the parental section is negatively supertwisted while the two daughter segments are relaxed. The control process, just discussed, may simply arise from supertwisting. A supertwisted origin sequence might be active, whereas if it is relaxed (as in the daughter section of the replicative intermediate) it might be inert. To more fully explore this possibility we have developed a novel electron microscopic method that allows us to unambiguously determine the supertwisted state of DNA in complex replicative structures. The method is based on the fact that the efficiency of intercalation of the drug psoralen is much higher for negatively supertwisted than for relaxed DNA.

Our research relies heavily on physical and electron microscopic methods; our world wide web page shows a variety of electron micrographs.



    

 

 

Copyright 2008 – This page last modified 2/21/2008

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