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Real-time observation of bacteriophage T4 gp41 helicase reveals an unwinding mechanism

Lionnet, Timothee; Spiering, Michelle M; Benkovic, Stephen J; Bensimon, David; Croquette, Vincent
Helicases are enzymes that couple ATP hydrolysis to the unwinding of double-stranded (ds) nucleic acids. The bacteriophage T4 helicase (gp41) is a hexameric helicase that promotes DNA replication within a highly coordinated protein complex termed the replisome. Despite recent progress, the gp41 unwinding mechanism and regulatory interactions within the replisome remain unclear. Here we use a single tethered DNA hairpin as a real-time reporter of gp41-mediated dsDNA unwinding and single-stranded (ss) DNA translocation with 3-base pair (bp) resolution. Although gp41 translocates on ssDNA as fast as the in vivo replication fork ( approximately 400 bp/s), its unwinding rate extrapolated to zero force is much slower ( approximately 30 bp/s). Together, our results have two implications: first, gp41 unwinds DNA through a passive mechanism; second, this weak helicase cannot efficiently unwind the T4 genome alone. Our results suggest that important regulations occur within the replisome to achieve rapid and processive replication.
PMCID:2148377
PMID: 18077411
ISSN: 1091-6490
CID: 2385352

Sequence-dependent twist-stretch coupling in DNA

Lionnet, Timothee; Lankas, Filip
Recent single-molecule micromanipulation experiments on DNA subject to small distortion revealed positive coupling between DNA stretching and twisting--for instance, DNA elongates when overtwisted. Here we propose a method to calculate the twist-stretch coupling constant specific to a DNA fragment of a given sequence. The method employs a sequence-dependent dinucleotide force field and is based on constrained minimization of the fragment's deformation energy. Using a force field inferred from atomistic molecular dynamics simulations, we obtain the twist-stretch coupling for random sequence to be 0.30 nm/turn, close to experimental values. An exhaustive calculation for all oligomers of nine basepairs yields values between 0.14 and 0.45 nm/turn, positively correlated with the contents of pyrimidine-purine steps in the sequence. Our method is simple to use and allows one to explore the hypothesis that some sequences may be optimized for twist-stretch coupling.
PMCID:1783891
PMID: 17142263
ISSN: 0006-3495
CID: 2385362

Single-molecule micromanipulation techniques

Chapter by: Neuman, KC; Lionnet, T; Allemand, J.-F
in: ANNUAL REVIEW OF MATERIALS RESEARCH by
PALO ALTO : ANNUAL REVIEWS, 2007
pp. 33-67
ISBN:
CID: 2385432

Studies of DNA-protein interactions at the single molecule level with magnetic tweezers [Meeting Abstract]

Allemand, J.-F; Bensimon, D; Charvin, G; Croquette, V; Lia, G; Lionnet, T; Neuman, KC; Saleh, OA; Yokota, H
The development of tools to manipulate and study single biomolecules (DNA, RNA, proteins) has opened a new vista on the study of their mechanical properties and their joint interactions. In this short review we will focus on (single and double stranded) DNA and its interactions with various classes of proteins: structural DNA binding proteins such as gene repressors (e.g., the Galactose Repressor, GalR) and mechano-chemical enzymes that alter the DNA's topology (topoisomerases), unwind it (helicases) or translocate it (FtsK). We will show how the new tools at our disposal can be used to gain an unprecedented description of the binding properties (on and off-times) and the enzymes' kinetic constants that are often out of reach of more classical, bulk techniques.
ISI:000245665200006
ISSN: 0075-8450
CID: 2385422

Wringing out DNA

Lionnet, Timothee; Joubaud, Sylvain; Lavery, Richard; Bensimon, David; Croquette, Vincent
The chiral nature of DNA plays a crucial role in cellular processes. Here we use magnetic tweezers to explore one of the signatures of this chirality, the coupling between stretch and twist deformations. We show that the extension of a stretched DNA molecule increases linearly by 0.42 nm per excess turn applied to the double helix. This result contradicts the intuition that DNA should lengthen as it is unwound and get shorter with overwinding. We then present numerical results of energy minimizations of torsionally restrained DNA that display a behavior similar to the experimental data and shed light on the molecular details of this surprising effect.
PMID: 16712339
ISSN: 0031-9007
CID: 2385382

DNA mechanics as a tool to probe helicase and translocase activity

Lionnet, Timothee; Dawid, Alexandre; Bigot, Sarah; Barre, Francois-Xavier; Saleh, Omar A; Heslot, Francois; Allemand, Jean-Francois; Bensimon, David; Croquette, Vincent
Helicases and translocases are proteins that use the energy derived from ATP hydrolysis to move along or pump nucleic acid substrates. Single molecule manipulation has proved to be a powerful tool to investigate the mechanochemistry of these motors. Here we first describe the basic mechanical properties of DNA unraveled by single molecule manipulation techniques. Then we demonstrate how the knowledge of these properties has been used to design single molecule assays to address the enzymatic mechanisms of different translocases. We report on four single molecule manipulation systems addressing the mechanism of different helicases using specifically designed DNA substrates: UvrD enzyme activity detection on a stretched nicked DNA molecule, HCV NS3 helicase unwinding of a RNA hairpin under tension, the observation of RecBCD helicase/nuclease forward and backward motion, and T7 gp4 helicase mediated opening of a synthetic DNA replication fork. We then discuss experiments on two dsDNA translocases: the RuvAB motor studied on its natural substrate, the Holliday junction, and the chromosome-segregation motor FtsK, showing its unusual coupling to DNA supercoiling.
PMCID:1616950
PMID: 16935884
ISSN: 1362-4962
CID: 2385372

Statistical determination of the step size of molecular motors

Neuman, K C; Saleh, O A; Lionnet, T; Lia, G; Allemand, J-F; Bensimon, D; Croquette, V
Molecular motors are enzymatic proteins that couple the consumption of chemical energy to mechanical displacement. In order to elucidate the translocation mechanisms of these enzymes, it is of fundamental importance to measure the physical step size. The step size can, in certain instances, be directly measured with single-molecule techniques; however, in the majority of cases individual steps are masked by noise. The step size can nevertheless be obtained from noisy single-molecule records through statistical methods. This analysis is analogous to determining the charge of the electron from current shot noise. We review methods for obtaining the step size based on analysing, in both the time and frequency domains, the variance in position from noisy single-molecule records of motor displacement. Additionally, we demonstrate how similar methods may be applied to measure the step size in bulk kinetic experiments.
PMID: 21690726
ISSN: 0953-8984
CID: 2385392

Single-molecule assay reveals strand switching and enhanced processivity of UvrD

Dessinges, Marie-Noelle; Lionnet, Timothee; Xi, Xu Guang; Bensimon, David; Croquette, Vincent
DNA helicases are enzymes capable of unwinding double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) to provide the single-stranded DNA template required in many biological processes. Among these, UvrD, an essential DNA repair enzyme, has been shown to unwind dsDNA while moving 3'-5' on one strand. Here, we use a single-molecule manipulation technique to monitor real-time changes in extension of a single, stretched, nicked dsDNA substrate as it is unwound by a single enzyme. This technique offers a means for measuring the rate, lifetime, and processivity of the enzymatic complex as a function of ATP, and for estimating the helicase step size. Strikingly, we observe a feature not seen in bulk assays: unwinding is preferentially followed by a slow, enzyme-translocation-limited rezipping of the separated strands rather than by dissociation of the enzymatic complex followed by quick rehybridization of the DNA strands. We address the mechanism underlying this phenomenon and propose a fully characterized model in which UvrD switches strands and translocates backwards on the other strand, allowing the DNA to reanneal in its wake.
PMCID:404063
PMID: 15079074
ISSN: 0027-8424
CID: 2385402