Rapid single-molecule characterisation of enzymes involved in nucleic-acid metabolism.

Nucleic Acids Res

Molecular Horizons and School of Chemistry and Molecular Bioscience, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, New South Wales 2522, Australia.

Published: January 2023

The activity of enzymes is traditionally characterised through bulk-phase biochemical methods that only report on population averages. Single-molecule methods are advantageous in elucidating kinetic and population heterogeneity but are often complicated, time consuming, and lack statistical power. We present a highly-generalisable and high-throughput single-molecule assay to rapidly characterise proteins involved in DNA metabolism. The assay exclusively relies on changes in total fluorescence intensity of surface-immobilised DNA templates as a result of DNA synthesis, unwinding or digestion. Combined with an automated data-analysis pipeline, our method provides enzymatic activity data of thousands of molecules in less than an hour. We demonstrate our method by characterising three fundamentally different enzyme activities: digestion by the phage λ exonuclease, synthesis by the phage Phi29 polymerase, and unwinding by the E. coli UvrD helicase. We observe the previously unknown activity of the UvrD helicase to remove neutravidin bound to 5'-, but not 3'-ends of biotinylated DNA.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9841422PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkac949DOI Listing

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