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Ultrafast spectroscopy on DNA-cleavage by endonuclease in molecular crowding

Authors :
Shreyasi Dutta
Aniruddha Adhikari
Siddhartha Sankar Bhattacharya
Samir Kumar Pal
Priya Singh
Susobhan Choudhury
Debasish Pal
Source :
International journal of biological macromolecules. 103
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

The jam-packed intracellular environments differ the activity of a biological macromolecule from that in laboratory environments (in vitro) through a number of mechanisms called molecular crowding related to structure, function and dynamics of the macromolecule. Here, we have explored the structure, function and dynamics of a model enzyme protein DNase I in molecular crowing of polyethylene glycol (PEG; MW 3350). We have used steady state and picosecond resolved dynamics of a well-known intercalator ethidium bromide (EB) in a 20-mer double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) to monitor the DNA-cleavage by the enzyme in absence and presence PEG. We have also labelled the enzyme by a well-known fluorescent probe 8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonic acid ammonium salt (ANS) to study the molecular mechanism of the protein-DNA association through exited state relaxation of the probe in absence (dictated by polarity) and presence of EB in the DNA (dictated by Forster resonance energy transfer (FRET)). The overall and local structures of the protein in presence of PEG have been followed by circular dichroism and time resolved polarization gated spectroscopy respectively. The enhanced dynamical flexibility of protein in presence of PEG as revealed from excited state lifetime and polarization gated anisotropy of ANS has been correlated with the stronger DNA-binding for the higher nuclease activity. We have also used conventional experimental strategy of agarose gel electrophoresis to monitor DNA-cleavage and found consistent results of enhanced nuclease activities both on synthetic 20-mer oligonucleotide and long genomic DNA from calf thymus.

Details

ISSN :
18790003
Volume :
103
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International journal of biological macromolecules
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b7a4019ae4a9edf982def344f2b053b2