A single-molecule magnetic tweezers platform to manipulate G-quadruplexes is reported, which allows for the study of G4 stability and regulation by various proteins.
Non-canonical nucleic acid secondary structure G-quadruplexes (G4) are involved in diverse cellular processes, such as DNA replication, transcription, RNA processing, and telomere elongation. During these processes, various proteins bind and resolve G4 structures to perform their function. As the function of G4 often depends on the stability of its folded structure, it is important to investigate how G4 binding proteins regulate the stability of G4. This work presents a method to manipulate single G4 molecules using magnetic tweezers, which enables studies of the regulation of G4 binding proteins on a single G4 molecule in real time. In general, this method is suitable for a wide scope of applications in studies for proteins/ligands interactions and regulations on various DNA or RNA secondary structures.
Four-stranded DNA or RNA G4 structures play critical roles in many important biological processes1. Many proteins are involved in G4 binding and regulation, including telomere binding proteins (telomerase, POT1, RPA, TEBPs, TRF2)1,2, transcription factors (nucleolin, PARP1)3, RNA processing proteins (hnRNP A1, hnRNP A2)4, helicases (BLM, FANCJ, RHAU, WRN, Dna2, Pif1)5, and DNA replication related proteins (Rif1, REV1, PrimPolymerase)6. Protein binding can stabilize or destabilize G4 structures; thus regulating the subsequent biological functions. The stability of G4 was measured by thermal melting using ultraviolet (UV) or circular dichroism (CD) methods7. However, such conditions are not physiological relevant and are difficult to apply to studying the effects of binding proteins7.
The rapid development in single-molecule manipulation technologies has enabled studies of folding and unfolding of a biomolecule, such as a DNA or a protein, at a single-molecule level with nanometer resolution in real time8. Atomic force microscopy (AFM), optical tweezers, and magnetic tweezers are the most commonly used single-molecule manipulation methods. Compared to AFM and optical tweezers9, magnetic tweezers allow stable measurements of folding-unfolding dynamics of a single molecule over days by using an anti-drift technique10,11.
Here, a single-molecule manipulation platform using magnetic tweezers to study the regulation of G4 stability by binding proteins is reported12,13. This work outlines the basic approaches, including sample and flow channel preparation, the setup of magnetic tweezers, and the force calibration. The force control and the anti-drift protocols as described in step 3 allow for long time measurements under various force controls, such as constant force (force clamp) and constant loading rate (force-ramp), and force-jump measurement. The force calibration protocol described in step 4 enables force calibration of < 1 µm short tethers over a wide force range up to 100 pN, with a relative error within 10%. An example of regulation of the stability of the RNA Helicase associated with AU-rich element (RHAU) helicase (alias DHX36, G4R1) that plays essential roles in resolving RNA G4 is used to demonstrate the applications of this platform13.
1. Preparation of G4 DNA for Single-molecule Stretching
2. Preparation of Flow Channel
3. Magnetic Tweezers Setup and Identification of Single dsDNA Tether
4. Magnetic Tweezers Force Calibration
5. Single-molecule Manipulation of G4 in the Presence and Absence of Binding Proteins
The experiment setup for stretching a single G4 molecule is shown in Figure 4. A single-stranded G4 forming sequence spanned between two dsDNA handles was tethered between a coverslip and a paramagnetic bead. To find a single dsDNA tethered bead, an overstretching assay was performed by increasing the force at constant loading rates. Three types of measurements were often used for studying the folding and unfolding of biomolecules: (i) constant force measurement, (ii) force-ramp measurement, and (iii) force-jump measurement. Due to the extremely slow unfolding rates of this G4 structure, the equilibrium folding-unfolding transition could only occur for the time over days, so force-ramp and force-jump measurements were used for characterizing the unfolding kinetics and stability of G4 structures.
Force-ramp Measurements for G4 Unfolding in the Presence or Absence of RHAU Protein:
Figure 4B shows typical force-extension curves obtained by a force-increase scan at a loading rate of 0.2 pN/s followed by a force-decease scan at -0.2 pN/s. After each stretching cycle, the DNA molecule was held at 1 pN for 30 s to allow ssDNA to refold to G4. The extension jump in the force-increase scan indicated an unfolding transition of G4. When using a non-G4 forming sequence, the sudden extension jump cannot be observed. The unfolding force distribution could be obtained by recording the forces at which unfolding occurred. The unfolding force distribution of G4-15T obtained at 0.2 pN/s showed a single peak at ~ 52 pN. However, in the presence of 10 nM RHAU, G4-15T remained folded during the force-increase scan for up to 60 pN, indicating G4 stabilization by RHAU binding. In the presence of 10 nM RHAU and 1 mM ATP, the unfolding force distribution was shifted to a lower force, indicative of an ATP-dependent destabilization of G4 by RHAU.
Force-jump Measurements of G4 Unfolding in the Presence or Absence of RHAU Protein:
Figure 5 shows a representative trace of the bead height during four force-jump cycles (Figure 5, left panel); the force applied to the molecule was cycled between 54 pN for 30 s under which a folded G4 could be unfolded, and 1 pN for 60 s under which a folded G4-15T could refold. The average lifetime of folded G4-15T at 54 pN was ~ 6.4 s, estimated by fitting the lifetime histogram with an exponential decay function13. After flowing in a solution of 10 nM RHAU helicase without ATP, the extension of tethered DNA remained at a folded level throughout the 30 s holding time at 54 pN, indicating that the RHAU strongly stabilizes the G4-15T structure against mechanical unfolding in the absence of ATP. After flowing in 10 nM RHAU and 1 mM ATP, the extension of the same molecule right after jumping from 1 pN to 54 pN was at the level of unfolded ssDNA, indicating that the RHAU destabilizes the G4 structure in the presence of ATP.
Figure 1: Preparation of G4 DNA for single-molecule stretching experiments.
The dsDNA handles were prepared by PCR using 5'-thiol and 5'-biotin primers. PCR products were purified and digested with the BstXI restriction enzyme and were purified by gel extraction. G4 forming ssDNA, two flank ssDNA and dsDNA handle were ligated using T4 DNA ligase. The ligated product was purified by gel extraction. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: Sketches of basic magnetic tweezers apparatus.
(A) Sketch of a flow channel with a pair of magnets placed above and a microscopy objective placed below. (B) Sketch of an assembled flow channel where the blue colored rectangles represent the top and bottom coverslips, and gray elliptical lines represent the entry and exit of the flow channel. (C) Sketch of the force generation and calibration of the magnetic tweezers setup. (D) Examples of images of both the reference bead and moving bead at different de-focus positions stored in the bead image libraries. The red sign denotes the reference bead image obtained at a particular de-focus plane used for the focal plane locking. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3: Force calibration of magnetic tweezers.
(A) Calibration of force using the fluctuations of bead along a rotation-free y-direction. X-axis is along the same direction as the magnetic field. Force is along the z-axis and is controlled by adjusting the distance, d, between the permanent magnet pair and the coverslip. (B) Calibration of using a long 48,502 bp -DNA. Heterogeneous magnetic bead property can be described by a single-parameter C. This figure has been modified from10. (C) Calibration of parameter C of a magnetic bead attached on a 2 kb-DNA using B to S overstretching transition. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4: Single-molecule manipulation of a G4.
(A) Sketch of a stretching single G4 structure and measuring the unfolding events. (B) Typical example of force-increase (cyan) and force-decrease curve of a tethered G4. This figure has been modified from12. (C) Force-extension curve of G4 in the absence (grey) or presence (pink) of RHAU protein. (D) Unfolding force distribution of G4 in the absence (grey) (n = 140) or presence (red) of RHAU and ATP (n = 117). This figure has been modified from13. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 5: Force-jump measurements of G4 unfolding.
(A) Representative time trace of the bead height change during force jump cycles between 1 pN and 54 pN measured without DmRHAU, with 10 nM DmRHAU but without ATP, and with both 10 nM DmRHAU and 1 mM ATP, as indicated in the figure panel. (B) Representative time trace of extension change of a G4 molecule (grey data) after jumping to 54 pN in several force-jump cycles taken from data in (A). The extensions corresponding to folded (F) and unfolded (U) G4 are also indicated; G4 unfolding events are indicated by arrows. This figure has been modified from13. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
As described above, a platform for studying the mechanical stability of G4 DNA and the interactions of protein to G4 using single-molecule magnetic tweezers is reported. Accompanying the platform, highly efficient protocols of finding G4 DNA tether, and measurement of the folding-unfolding dynamics and stability of the G4 structure with nanometers special resolution are developed. The focal plane locking enables highly stable anti-drift control, which is important for detecting a small structure transition such as G4 (step size ~ 7 nm) and the interactions with proteins in buffer exchange experiments. This platform has recently been employed to studies of the folding and unfolding dynamics of telomeric G414 and c-Myc promoter G412, as well as studies of G4 binding protein RHAU helicase13.
A typical experiment error is the non-specific binding of DNA and beads on the coverslip or multiple DNAs bind to magnetic beads. To reduce the non-specific binding, first, the storage of chemicals such as APTES and SMCC need to be routinely checked. Second, it is important to select a proper type of magnetic bead and block the non-specific binding. Using 10 mg/mL BSA buffer or small DNA oligo, such as poly T, to block the hydrophobic surface of the beads can significantly reduce the non-specific binding. Finally, a single DNA tether can be easily distinguished from multiple DNA tethers by the characteristic DNA overstretching transition17,18,19.
Currently, the position determination of the platform is based on the bead imaging analysis, which has a limited spatial resolution of ~ 2 nm. In addition, it has a limited sampling rate of ~ 100 Hz, mainly due to limited acquisition rate of typical CCD cameras and correlation analysis of the images. These limitations can be overcome by using total internal reflection microscopy (TIRF) illumination. It produces a thin layer of evanescent light that exponentially decays with the height from the surface, which can be used to determine the extension change of short molecules at a high signal-to-noise ratio, while avoiding bead image acquisition and analysis26. Another limitation is that it is challenging to directly visualize the tethered molecule or ligand bound to the tethered molecule using fluorescence imaging in the vertical stretching design, which can be overcome by stretching molecules in the focal plane using transverse magnetic tweezers27. Finally, the current design of the reaction channel does not allow rapid solution exchange due to the flow perturbation to the molecule. Furthermore, a large drag force generated at high speed flow may even break the tethers. This limitation can be overcome by manipulating tethers inside the microwells placed on the bottom surface of the channel28.
G4 stabilizing compounds are currently considered as potential therapeutic targets for diseases, including cancer, virus related diseases, and neurodegeneration diseases29,30,31. The protocol can be applied to a wide range of G4 binding proteins2 and small ligands32. In addition to applications in G4 studies, this platform as well as the protocols, in principle, can be used for studies of other nucleic acids secondary structures, including DNA and RNA hairpins, triplex, and i-motif33.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
The authors thank Meng Pan for proofreading the manuscript. This work is supported by Singapore Ministry of Education Academic Research Fund Tier 3 (MOE2012-T3-1-001) to J.Y.; the National Research Foundation through the Mechanobiology Institute Singapore to J.Y.; the National Research Foundation, Prime Minister's Office, Singapore, under its NRF Investigatorship Programme (NRF Investigatorship Award No. NRF-NRFI2016-03 to J.Y.; the Fundamental Research Fund for the Central Universities (2017KFYXJJ153) to H. Y.
DNA PCR primers | IDT | DNA preparations | |
DNA PCR chemicals | NEB | DNA preparations | |
restriction enzyme BstXI | NEB | R0113S | DNA preparations |
coverslips (#1.5, 22*32 mm, and 20*20 mm) | BMH.BIOMEDIA | 72204 | flow channel preparation |
Decon90 | Decon Laboratories Limited | flow channel preparation | |
APTES | Sigma | 440140-500ML | flow channel preparation |
Sulfo-SMCC | ThermoFisher Scientific | 22322 | flow channel preparation |
M-280, paramganetic beads,streptavidin | ThermoFisher Scientific | 11205D | flow channel preparation |
Polybead Amino Microspheres 3.00 μm | Polysciences, Inc | 17145-5 | flow channel preparation |
2-Mercaptoethanol | Sigma | M6250-250ML | flow channel preparation |
Olympus Microscopes IX71 | Olympus | IX71 | Magnetic tweezers setup |
Piezo-Z Stages P-721 | Physik Instrumente | P-721 | Magnetic tweezers setup |
Olympus Objective lense MPLAPON-Oil 100X | Olympus | MPLAPON-Oil 100X | Magnetic tweezers setup |
CCD/CMOS camera | AVT | Pike F-032B | Magnetic tweezers setup |
Translation linear stage | Physik Instrumente | MoCo DC | Magnetic tweezers setup |
LED | Thorlabs | MCWHL | Magnetic tweezers setup |
Cubic Magnets | Supermagnete | Magnetic tweezers setup | |
Labview | National Instruments | Magnetic tweezers setup | |
OriginPro/Matlab | OriginLab/MathWorks | Data analysis |