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Ioulia Rouzina
Studying DNA duplex stability by pulling on single DNA molecules
Date: December 2
Time: Noon to 1
Place: BSBE 4-101
Recently advancement of technology made possible mechanical manipulation
of the individual molecules. Pulling on single
macro molecules became a powerful technique for studying their
structure, stability and kinetics. This method was
successfully used to study flexibility of the polymers, stability of the
secondary and tertiary structures of proteins, motion of
the molecular motors, etc.
I will discuss stretching of the single long double stranded DNA
molecule by its opposite ends. First, DNA molecule stretches
to its contour length, yielding information on its flexibility. Upon
further extension the molecule becomes about twice longer
without any increase in the applied force. Such a peculiar behavior
signifies the cooperative phase transition of the molecular
structure, that we interpreted as a separation between the two strands
comprising the DNA double helix, i.e. DNA melting.
Based on the "melting" idea we predicted the behavior of the transition
force on various solution conditions such as
temperature, pH, solution ionic strength. Experiments performed in our
lab verified all of these predictions. Thus measuring of
the mechanical energy needed for the strand separation became the first
direct method for studying the duplex stability. The
advantage of this method over the traditionally used thermal melting, is
that the duplex stability can be measured at the
arbitrary temperature, including the physiological one. This opens the
possibility to study the effect of DNA binding proteins
on duplex stability.
This novel technique was already used to explore
the action of the proteins that are known to promote the
double to single stranded DNA inter conversion, and chaperone the
restructuring the DNA and RNA helices. I will discuss
several very resent results on the HIV-1 nucleocapsid protein and gp32
single stranded DNA binding protein. I will also
describe the new challenges for both theory and experiment in analysis
of stretching data for the very slow DNA binding
proteins.
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