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DNA Molecular Handles for Single-Molecule Protein-Folding Studies by Optical Tweezers

Authors :
Carlos Bustamante
Ciro Cecconi
Elizabeth A. Shank
Susan Marqusee
Source :
DNA Nanotechnology ISBN: 9781617791413
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Humana Press, 2011.

Abstract

In this chapter, we describe a method that extends the use of optical tweezers to the study of the folding mechanism of single protein molecules. This method entails the use of DNA molecules as molecular handles to manipulate individual proteins between two polystyrene beads. The DNA molecules function as spacers between the protein and the beads, and keep the interactions between the tethering surfaces to a minimum. The handles can have different lengths, be attached to any pair of exposed cysteine residues, and be used to manipulate both monomeric and polymeric proteins. By changing the position of the cysteine residues on the protein surface, it is possible to apply the force to different portions of the protein and along different molecular axes. Circular dichroism and enzymatic activity studies have revealed that for many proteins, the handles do not significantly affect the folding behavior and the structure of the tethered protein. This method makes it possible to study protein folding in the physiologically relevant low-force regime of optical tweezers and enables us to monitor processes - such as refolding events and fluctuations between different molecular conformations - that could not be detected in previous force spectroscopy experiments.

Details

ISBN :
978-1-61779-141-3
ISBNs :
9781617791413
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
DNA Nanotechnology ISBN: 9781617791413
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....00ad1f0ba80af5183a73504d3e629dbe
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-61779-142-0_18