Single-molecule imaging reveals molecular coupling between transcription and DNA repair machinery in live cells.
Han Ngoc HoAntoine M van OijenHarshad GhodkePublished in: Nature communications (2020)
The Escherichia coli transcription-repair coupling factor Mfd displaces stalled RNA polymerase and delivers the stall site to the nucleotide excision repair factors UvrAB for damage detection. Whether this handoff from RNA polymerase to UvrA occurs via the Mfd-UvrA2-UvrB complex or alternate reaction intermediates in cells remains unclear. Here, we visualise Mfd in actively growing cells and determine the catalytic requirements for faithful recruitment of nucleotide excision repair proteins. We find that ATP hydrolysis by UvrA governs formation and disassembly of the Mfd-UvrA2 complex. Further, Mfd-UvrA2-UvrB complexes formed by UvrB mutants deficient in DNA loading and damage recognition are impaired in successful handoff. Our single-molecule dissection of interactions of Mfd with its partner proteins inside live cells shows that the dissociation of Mfd is tightly coupled to successful loading of UvrB, providing a mechanism via which loading of UvrB occurs in a strand-specific manner.
Keyphrases
- single molecule
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- escherichia coli
- dna repair
- oxidative stress
- living cells
- atomic force microscopy
- high resolution
- transcription factor
- mass spectrometry
- cystic fibrosis
- room temperature
- staphylococcus aureus
- hepatitis c virus
- photodynamic therapy
- antiretroviral therapy
- dna damage response
- fluorescent probe
- candida albicans