Sequence-dependent mechanochemical coupling of helicase translocation and unwinding at single-nucleotide resolution.
Andrew H LaszloJonathan M CraigMomčilo GavrilovRamreddy TippanaIan C NovaJesse R HuangHwanhee C KimSarah J AbellMallory deCampos-StairikerJonathan W MountJasmine L BowmanKatherine S BakerHugh HiginbothamDmitriy BobrovnikovTaekjip HaJens H GundlachPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
We used single-molecule picometer-resolution nanopore tweezers (SPRNT) to resolve the millisecond single-nucleotide steps of superfamily 1 helicase PcrA as it translocates on, or unwinds, several kilobase-long DNA molecules. We recorded more than two million enzyme steps under various assisting and opposing forces in diverse adenosine tri- and diphosphate conditions to comprehensively explore the mechanochemistry of PcrA motion. Forces applied in SPRNT mimic forces and physical barriers PcrA experiences in vivo , such as when the helicase encounters bound proteins or duplex DNA. We show how PcrA's kinetics change with such stimuli. SPRNT allows for direct association of the underlying DNA sequence with observed enzyme kinetics. Our data reveal that the underlying DNA sequence passing through the helicase strongly influences the kinetics during translocation and unwinding. Surprisingly, unwinding kinetics are not solely dominated by the base pairs being unwound. Instead, the sequence of the single-stranded DNA on which the PcrA walks determines much of the kinetics of unwinding.