4.5 Article

Step length measurement - Theory and simulation for tethered bead constant-force single molecule assay

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BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
卷 93, 期 3, 页码 795-805

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CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1529/biophysj.106.097915

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Linear molecular motors translocate along polymeric tracks using discrete steps. The step length is usually measured using constant-force single molecule experiments in which the polymer is tethered to a force-clamped microsphere. During the enzymatic cycle the motor shortens the tether contour length. Experimental conditions influence the achievable step length resolution, and ideally experiments should be conducted with high clamp-force using slow motors linked to small beads via stiff short tethers. We focus on the limitations that the polymer-track. exibility, the thermal motion of the microsphere, and the motor kinetics pose for step-length measurement in a typical optical tweezers experiment. An expression for the signal/noise ratio in a constant-force, worm-like chain tethered particle, single-molecule experiment is developed. The signal/noise ratio is related to the Fourier transform of the pairwise distance distribution, commonly used to determine step length from a timeseries. Monte Carlo simulations verify the proposed theory for experimental parameter values typically encountered with molecular motors (polymerases and helicases) translocating along single- or double- stranded nucleic acids. The predictions are consistent with recent experimental results for double-stranded DNA tethers. Our results map favorable experimental conditions for observing single motor steps on various substrates but indicate that principal resolution limits are set by thermal fluctuations.

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