Publication | Closed Access
Direct Correlation of DNA Binding and Single Protein Domain Motion via Dual Illumination Fluorescence Microscopy
38
Citations
52
References
2014
Year
EngineeringMicroscopyMolecular BiologyDirect CorrelationDna NanotechnologySingle Molecule BiophysicsProtein FoldingSingle MoleculeDna ComputingMulti-protein AssemblyMolecular ImagingBiophysicsDual IlluminationDna Repair ProteinSingle-molecule DetectionFluorescence MicroscopyDna BindingBiomedical ImagingSpecific ConformationMedicine
We report a dual illumination, single-molecule imaging strategy to dissect directly and in real-time the correlation between nanometer-scale domain motion of a DNA repair protein and its interaction with individual DNA substrates. The strategy was applied to XPD, an FeS cluster-containing DNA repair helicase. Conformational dynamics was assessed via FeS-mediated quenching of a fluorophore site-specifically incorporated into XPD. Simultaneously, binding of DNA molecules labeled with a spectrally distinct fluorophore was detected by colocalization of the DNA- and protein-derived signals. We show that XPD undergoes thermally driven conformational transitions that manifest in spatial separation of its two auxiliary domains. DNA binding does not strictly enforce a specific conformation. Interaction with a cognate DNA damage, however, stabilizes the compact conformation of XPD by increasing the weighted average lifetime of this state by 140% relative to an undamaged DNA. Our imaging strategy will be a valuable tool to study other FeS-containing nucleic acid processing enzymes.
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