4.5 Article

Combining optical tweezers and scanning probe microscopy to study DNA-protein interactions

Journal

MICROSCOPY RESEARCH AND TECHNIQUE
Volume 70, Issue 1, Pages 26-33

Publisher

WILEY-LISS
DOI: 10.1002/jemt.20382

Keywords

optical tweezers; scanning probe microscopy; DNA-protein interactions; digoxygenin; single molecule force spectroscopy

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We present the first results obtained with a new instrument designed and built to study DNA-protein interactions at the single molecule level. This microscope combines optical tweezers with scanning probe microscopy and allows us to locate DNA-binding proteins on a single suspended DNA molecule. A single DNA molecule is stretched taut using the optical tweezers, while a probe is scanned along the molecule. Interaction forces between the probe and the sample are measured with the optical tweezers. The instrument thus enables us to correlate mechanical and functional properties of bound proteins with the tension within the DNA molecule. The typical friction force between a micropipette used as probe and a naked DNA molecule was found to be <1 pN. A 16 mu m DNA molecule with similar to 10-15 digoxygenin (DIG) molecules located over a 90 nm range in the middle of the DNA was used as a model system. By scanning with an antidigoxygenin (alpha-DIG) antibody-coated pipette we were able to localize these sites by exploiting the high binding affinity between this antibody-antigen pair. The estimated experimental resolution assuming an infinitesimally thin and rigid probe and a single alpha-DIG/DIG bond was 15 nm.

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