4.8 Article

Interrogating accessibility of telomeric sequences with FRET-PAINT: evidence for length-dependent telomere compaction

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 49, Issue 6, Pages 3371-3380

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkab067

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health, USA [1R15GM109386, 1R15GM123443]
  2. NIH [1R15GM123443]

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The accessibility of telomeric DNA is influenced by its length, with longer telomeres forming more compact structures that are less accessible to binding molecules. Intermediate regions of telomeric DNA were found to be more accessible compared to the ends, suggesting a gradient of accessibility along the telomere length. These findings highlight the importance of telomere structure in regulating accessibility to critical genomic sites.
Single-stranded telomeric overhangs are similar to 200 nucleotides long and can form tandem G-quadruplex (GQ) structures, which reduce their accessibility to nucleases and proteins that activate DNA damage response. Whether these tandem GQs further stack to form compact superstructures, which may provide better protection for longer telomeres, is not known. We report single-molecule measurements where the accessibility of 24-144 nucleotide long human telomeric DNA molecules is interrogated by a short PNA molecule that is complementary to a single GGGTTA repeat, as implemented in the FRET-PAINT method. Binding of the PNA strand to available GGGTTA sequences results in discrete FRET bursts which were analyzed in terms of their dwell times, binding frequencies, and topographic distributions. The binding frequencies were greater for binding to intermediate regions of telomeric DNA compared to 3'- or 5'-ends, suggesting these regions are more accessible. Significantly, the binding frequency per telomeric repeat monotonically decreased with increasing telomere length. These results are consistent with telomeres forming more compact structures at longer lengths, reducing accessibility of these critical genomic sites.

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