Matthew A. Schaich , Tyler M. Weaver , Vera Roginskaya , Bret D. Freudenthal , Bennett Van Houten
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
By observing one molecule at a time, single-molecule studies can offer detailed insights about biomolecular processes including on rates, off rates, and diffusivity of molecules on strands of DNA. A recent technological advance (Single-molecule Analysis of DNA-binding proteins from Nuclear Extracts, SMADNE) has lowered the barrier to entry for single-molecule studies, and single-molecule dynamics can now be determined directly out of nuclear extracts, providing information in an intermediate environment between purified proteins in isolation and the heterogeneity of a nucleus. To compare and contrast the single-molecule DNA binding dynamics in nuclear extracts versus purified proteins, combined optical tweezers and fluorescence microscopy experiments were performed with purified GFP-tagged 8-oxoguanine glycosylase 1 (OGG1), purified GFP-OGG1 spiked into nuclear extracts, and nuclear extracts from human cells overexpressing GFP-OGG1. We observed differences in undamaged DNA binding during DNA damage search in each of the three conditions. Purified GFP-OGG1 engaged undamaged DNA for a weighted average lifetime of 5.7 s and 21% of these events underwent DNA diffusion after binding. However, unlike other glycosylases studied by SMADNE, OGG1 does not bind non-damaged DNA efficiently in nuclear extracts. In contrast, GFP-OGG1 binding dynamics on DNA substrates containing oxidative damage were relatively similar in all three conditions, with the weighted average binding lifetimes varying from 2.2 s in nuclear extracts to 7.8 s with purified GFP-OGG1 in isolation. Finally, we compared the purified protein and nuclear extract approaches for a catalytically dead OGG1 variant (GFP-OGG1-K249Q). This variant greatly increased the binding lifetime for oxidative DNA damage, with the weighted average lifetime for GFP-OGG1–249Q in nuclear extracts at 15.4 s vs 10.7 s for the purified protein. SMADNE will provide a new window of observation into the behavior of nucleic acid binding proteins only accessible by biophysicists trained in protein purification and protein labeling.
期刊介绍:
DNA Repair provides a forum for the comprehensive coverage of DNA repair and cellular responses to DNA damage. The journal publishes original observations on genetic, cellular, biochemical, structural and molecular aspects of DNA repair, mutagenesis, cell cycle regulation, apoptosis and other biological responses in cells exposed to genomic insult, as well as their relationship to human disease.
DNA Repair publishes full-length research articles, brief reports on research, and reviews. The journal welcomes articles describing databases, methods and new technologies supporting research on DNA repair and responses to DNA damage. Letters to the Editor, hot topics and classics in DNA repair, historical reflections, book reviews and meeting reports also will be considered for publication.