Confocal single-molecule fluorescence is a powerful tool for monitoring conformational dynamics, and has provided new insight into the enzymatic activities of complex biological molecules such as DNA and RNA polymerases. Though useful, such studies are typically qualitative in nature, and performed almost exclusively in highly purified, in vitro settings. In this work, I focus on improving the methodology of confocal single-molecule fluorescence in two broad ways: (i) by enabling the quantitative identification of molecular dynamics in proteins and nucleic acids in vitro, and (ii) developing the tools needed to perform these analyses in vivo. Toward the first goal, and together with several colleagues, I have developed three novel methods for the quantitative identification of dynamics in biomolecules: (i) Burst Variance Analysis (BVA), which unambiguously identifies dynamics in single-molecule FRET experiments; (ii) Dynamic Probability Density Analysis (PDA), which hypothesis-tests specific kinetic models against smFRET data and extracts rate information; and (iii) a novel molecular counting method useful for studying single-molecule thermodynamics. We validated these methods against Monte Carlo simulations and experimental DNA controls, and demonstrated their practical application in vitro by analyzing the “fingers-closing” conformational change in E.coli DNA Polymerase I; these studies identified unexpected conformational flexibility which may be important to the fidelity of DNA synthesis. To enable similar studies in the context of a living cell, we generated a nuclease-resistant DNA analogue of the Green Fluorescent Protein, or “Green Fluorescent DNA,” and developed an electroporation method to efficiently transfer it into the cytoplasm of E.coli. We demonstrate in vivo confocal detection of smFRET from this construct, which is both bright and photostable in the cellular milieu. In combination with PDA, BVA and our novel molecular counting method, this Green Fluorescent DNA should enable the characterization of DNA and protein-DNA dynamics in living cells, at the single-molecule level. I conclude by discussing the ways in which these methods may be useful in investigating the dynamics of processes such as transcription, translation and recombination, both in vitro and in vivo.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:559842 |
Date | January 2011 |
Creators | Torella, Joseph Peter |
Contributors | Kapanidis, Achilles N. |
Publisher | University of Oxford |
Source Sets | Ethos UK |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Electronic Thesis or Dissertation |
Source | http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:f57d1984-8db9-4d79-b333-f1be507ca3bf |
Page generated in 0.0022 seconds