Catalytic Relaxation of Kinetically Trapped Intermediates by DNA Chaperones.
Pravin PokhrelDeepak KarnaSagun JonchheHan-Bin MaoPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024)
Common in biomacromolecules, kinetically trapped misfolded intermediates are often detrimental to the structures, properties, or functions of proteins or nucleic acids. Nature employs chaperone proteins but not nucleic acids to escort intermediates to correct conformations. Herein, we constructed a Jablonski-like diagram of a mechanochemical cycle in which individual DNA hairpins were mechanically unfolded to high-energy states, misfolded into kinetically trapped states, and catalytically relaxed back to ground-state hairpins by a DNA chaperone. The capacity of catalytic relaxation was demonstrated in a 1D DNA hairpin array mimicking nanoassembled materials. At ≥1 μM, the diffusive (or self-walking) DNA chaperone converted the entire array of misfolded intermediates to correct conformation in less than 15 s, which is essential to rapidly prepare homogeneous nanoassemblies. Such an efficient self-walking amplification increases the signal-to-noise ratio, facilitating catalytic relaxation to recognize a 1 fM DNA chaperone in 10 min, a detection limit comparable to the best biosensing strategies.