Single molecule iSCAT imaging reveals a fast, energy efficient search mode for the DNA repair protein UvrA.
Robert J CharmanNeil M KadPublished in: Nanoscale (2022)
Exposure to UV radiation results in numerous DNA lesions, which threaten genome integrity. The nucleotide excision DNA repair pathway detects and repairs a range of such UV-induced DNA lesions. In bacteria, initial damage detection and verification is carried out by two proteins: UvrA and UvrB. Despite decades of study, the process of how these proteins locate damage remains unclear. Here we use high-speed interferometric scattering (iSCAT) microscopy, in combination with a surface-bound-DNA assay, to investigate early damage detection by UvrA. We have discovered that UvrA interacts with DNA in two phases; a slow phase (∼1.3 s -1 ) that correlates with an ATP-consuming state previously identified, and a second, much faster search mode. These faster interactions persist for ∼130 ms and using ATP analogues we determine this phase does not require ATP consumption. Including this new fast-search state in a model of the DNA search process reveals that only with this state is it possible for basal levels of UvrA to explore 99% of the E. coli genome within a single division cycle. Altogether, this work uncovers the presence of a rapid, energy efficient search mechanism, which allows UvrA alone to search the entirety of the E. coli genome within a single division cycle.
Keyphrases
- single molecule
- dna repair
- atomic force microscopy
- circulating tumor
- high speed
- dna damage
- living cells
- cell free
- escherichia coli
- oxidative stress
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- genome wide
- high resolution
- dna damage response
- label free
- high throughput
- circulating tumor cells
- dna methylation
- photodynamic therapy
- binding protein
- nucleic acid
- ms ms
- radiation induced
- radiation therapy
- sensitive detection
- high glucose
- mass spectrometry
- diabetic rats
- protein protein
- molecular dynamics simulations