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Showing papers by "Jens H. Gundlach published in 2017"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A detailed mechanism for how ATP hydrolysis coordinates the motion of Hel308 along single-stranded DNA is derived that can be applied to other structurally similar helicases and it is found that the DNA sequence within Hel308 affects the kinetics of helicase translocation.
Abstract: Enzymes that operate on DNA or RNA perform the core functions of replication and expression in all of biology. To gain high-resolution access to the detailed mechanistic behavior of these enzymes, we developed single-molecule picometer-resolution nanopore tweezers (SPRNT), a single-molecule technique in which the motion of polynucleotides through an enzyme is measured by a nanopore. SPRNT reveals two mechanical substates of the ATP hydrolysis cycle of the superfamily 2 helicase Hel308 during translocation on single-stranded DNA (ssDNA). By analyzing these substates at millisecond resolution, we derive a detailed kinetic model for Hel308 translocation along ssDNA that sheds light on how superfamily 1 and 2 helicases turn ATP hydrolysis into motion along DNA. Surprisingly, we find that the DNA sequence within Hel308 affects the kinetics of helicase translocation.

52 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors demonstrate the use of a high-precision ground rotation sensor to subtract wind-induced tilt noise in a horizontal broadband seismometer at frequencies above 10mHz.
Abstract: We demonstrate the use of a high‐precision ground‐rotation sensor to subtract wind‐induced tilt noise in a horizontal broadband seismometer at frequencies above 10 mHz. The measurement was carried out at the LIGO Hanford Observatory using a low‐frequency flexure‐beam‐balance with an autocollimator readout and a T240 seismometer, located in close proximity to each other. Along their common horizontal axis, the two instruments show significant coherence below 100 mHz, which increases as a function of wind speed due to floor tilt induced by wind pressure on the walls of the building and the ground outside. Under wind speeds of 10–15 m/s, correcting the seismometer for measured ground rotation lowered the signal by a factor of ∼10, between 10 and 100 mHz. This article describes the instruments used, shows representative data for low and high wind speeds, and discusses the tilt subtraction and possible limitations.

26 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
27 Jul 2017-PLOS ONE
TL;DR: The results demonstrate the potential of using salt-sensitive motor enzymes (helicases, polymerases, recombinases) in nanopore systems and offer a guide for selecting buffer conditions in future experiments to simultaneously optimize signal, throughput, and enzyme activity.
Abstract: Nanopore DNA sequencing is a promising single-molecule analysis technology. This technique relies on a DNA motor enzyme to control movement of DNA precisely through a nanopore. Specific experimental buffer conditions are required based on the preferred operating conditions of the DNA motor enzyme. While many DNA motor enzymes typically operate in salt concentrations under 100 mM, salt concentration simultaneously affects signal and noise magnitude as well as DNA capture rate in nanopore sequencing, limiting standard experimental conditions to salt concentrations greater than ~100 mM in order to maintain adequate resolution and experimental throughput. We evaluated the signal contribution from ions on both sides of the membrane (cis and trans) by varying cis and trans [KCl] independently during phi29 DNA Polymerase-controlled translocation of DNA through the biological porin MspA. Our studies reveal that during DNA translocation, the negatively charged DNA increases cation selectivity through MspA with the majority of current produced by the flow of K+ ions from trans to cis. Varying trans [K+] has dramatic effects on the signal magnitude, whereas changing cis [Cl-] produces only small effects. Good signal-to-noise can be maintained with cis [Cl-] as small as 20 mM, if the concentration of KCl on the trans side is kept high. These results demonstrate the potential of using salt-sensitive motor enzymes (helicases, polymerases, recombinases) in nanopore systems and offer a guide for selecting buffer conditions in future experiments to simultaneously optimize signal, throughput, and enzyme activity.

23 citations


Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: The spatiotemporal resolution of this low-cost single-molecule technique lifts the study of enzymes to a new level of precision, enabling exploration of hitherto unobservable enzyme dynamics in real time.
Abstract: Nanopores are emerging as new single-molecule tools in the study of enzymes. Based on the progress in nanopore sequencing of DNA, a tool called Single-molecule Picometer Resolution Nanopore Tweezers (SPRNT) was developed to measure the movement of enzymes along DNA in real time. In this new method, an enzyme is loaded onto a DNA (or RNA) molecule. A single-stranded DNA end of this complex is drawn into a nanopore by an electrostatic potential that is applied across the pore. The single-stranded DNA passes through the pore's constriction until the enzyme comes into contact with the pore. Further progression of the DNA through the pore is then controlled by the enzyme. An ion current that flows through the pore's constriction is modulated by the DNA in the constriction. Analysis of ion current changes reveals the advance of the DNA with high spatiotemporal precision, thereby providing a real-time record of the enzyme's activity. Using an engineered version of the protein nanopore MspA, SPRNT has spatial resolution as small as 40 pm at millisecond timescales, while simultaneously providing the DNA's sequence within the enzyme. In this chapter, SPRNT is introduced and its extraordinary potential is exemplified using the helicase Hel308. Two distinct substates are observed for each one-nucleotide advance; one of these about half-nucleotide long steps is ATP dependent and the other is ATP independent. The spatiotemporal resolution of this low-cost single-molecule technique lifts the study of enzymes to a new level of precision, enabling exploration of hitherto unobservable enzyme dynamics in real time.

17 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work derives a kinetic model of Hel308's translocation along single-stranded DNA, and finds that the model's rate constants depend on the DNA sequence within the enzyme.

1 citations