Here, we present a protocol to characterize nucleosome particles at the single-molecule level using static and time-lapse atomic force microscopy (AFM) imaging techniques. The surface functionalization method described allows for the capture of the structure and dynamics of nucleosomes in high-resolution at the nanoscale.
Chromatin, which is a long chain of nucleosome subunits, is a dynamic system that allows for such critical processes as DNA replication and transcription to take place in eukaryotic cells. The dynamics of nucleosomes provides access to the DNA by replication and transcription machineries, and critically contributes to the molecular mechanisms underlying chromatin functions. Single-molecule studies such as atomic force microscopy (AFM) imaging have contributed significantly to our current understanding of the role of nucleosome structure and dynamics. The current protocol describes the steps enabling high-resolution AFM imaging techniques to study the structural and dynamic properties of nucleosomes. The protocol is illustrated by AFM data obtained for the centromere nucleosomes in which H3 histone is replaced with its counterpart centromere protein A (CENP-A). The protocol starts with the assembly of mono-nucleosomes using a continuous dilution method. The preparation of the mica substrate functionalized with aminopropyl silatrane (APS-mica) that is used for the nucleosome imaging is critical for the AFM visualization of nucleosomes described and the procedure to prepare the substrate is provided. Nucleosomes deposited on the APS-mica surface are first imaged using static AFM, which captures a snapshot of the nucleosome population. From analyses of these images, such parameters as the size of DNA wrapped around the nucleosomes can be measured and this process is also detailed. The time-lapse AFM imaging procedure in the liquid is described for the high-speed time-lapse AFM that can capture several frames of nucleosome dynamics per second. Finally, the analysis of nucleosome dynamics enabling the quantitative characterization of the dynamic processes is described and illustrated.
In eukaryotic cells, DNA is highly condensed and organized into chromosomes.1 The first level of DNA organization within a chromosome is the assembly of nucleosomes in which 147 bp of DNA is tightly wrapped around a histone octamer core.2,3 Nucleosome particles assemble on a long DNA molecule forming a chromatin array which is then organized until a highly compact chromosome unit is formed.4 The disassembly of chromatin provides the access to free DNA required by critical cellular processes such as gene transcription and genome replication, suggesting that chromatin is a highly dynamic system.5,6,7 Understanding the dynamic properties of DNA at various chromatin levels is critically important for elucidating genetic processes at the molecular level where mistakes can lead to cell death or the development of diseases such as cancer.8 A chromatin property of great importance is the dynamics of nucleosomes.9,10,11,12 The high stability of these particles has allowed for the structural characterization by crystallographic techniques.2 What these studies lack are the dynamic details of nucleosomes such as the mechanism of DNA unwrapping from the histone core; the dynamic pathway of which is required for transcription and replication processes.7,9,13,14,15,16 Furthermore, special proteins termed remodeling factors have been shown to facilitate the disassembly of nucleosomal particles17; however, the intrinsic dynamics of nucleosomes is the critical factor in this process that contributes to the entire disassembly process.14,16,18,19
Single-molecule techniques such as single-molecule fluorescence19,20,21, optical trapping (tweezers)13,18,22,23 and AFM10,14,15,16,24,25,26 have been instrumental in understanding the dynamics of nucleosomes. Among these methods, AFM benefits from several unique and attractive features. AFM allows one to visualize and characterize individual nucleosomes as well as the longer arrays27. From AFM images, important characteristics of nucleosome structure such as the length of DNA wrapped around the histone core can be measured 10,14,26,28; a parameter that is central to the characterization of nucleosome unwrapping dynamics. Past AFM studies have revealed nucleosomes to be highly dynamic systems and that DNA can spontaneously unwrap from the histone core14. The spontaneous unwrapping of DNA from nucleosomes was directly visualized by AFM operating in the time-lapse mode when the imaging is done in aqueous solutions 14,26,29.
The advent of the high-speed time-lapse AFM (HS-AFM) instrumentation made it possible to visualize the nucleosome unwrapping process at the millisecond time-scale 14,15,24. Recent HS-AFM 16,30 studies of centromere specific nucleosomes revealed several novel features of the nucleosomes compared with the canonical type. Centromere nucleosomes constitute of a centromere, a small part of the chromosome critically important for chromosome segregation31. Unlike canonical nucleosomes in bulk chromatin, the histone core of centromere nucleosomes contains CENP-A histone instead of histone H332,33. As a result of this histone substitution, DNA wrapping in centromere nucleosomes is ~120 bp instead of the ~147 bp for canonical nucleosomes; a difference that can lead to distinct morphologies of the centromere and canonical nucleosomes arrays34, suggesting that centromere chromatin undergoes higher dynamics compared with the bulk one. The novel dynamics displayed by centromere nucleosomes in HS-AFM16,30 studies exemplify the unique opportunity provided by this single-molecule technique to directly visualize the structural and dynamic properties of nucleosomes. Examples of these features will be briefly discussed and illustrated at the end of the paper. This progress was made due to the development of novel protocols for AFM imaging of nucleosomes as well as the modifications of existing methods. The goal of the protocol described here is to make these exciting advances in single-molecule AFM nucleosome studies accessible to anyone who would like to utilize these techniques in their chromatin investigations. Many of the techniques described are applicable to problems beyond the study of nucleosomes and can be used for investigations of other protein and DNA systems of interest. A few examples of such applications can be found in publications35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49 and prospects of AFM studies of various biomolecular systems are given in reviews29,50,51,53,54.
1. Continuous Dilution Assembly of Mono-nucleosomes
2. Functionalization of Mica Surface for Static AFM Imaging of Nucleosomes
3. Preparation of Nucleosome Samples on APS-Mica for Static AFM Imaging
4. Static AFM Imaging of Nucleosomes
5. Time-Lapse AFM Imaging of Nucleosome Dynamics
6. High-Speed Time-Lapse AFM Imaging of Nucleosome Dynamics
NOTE: The protocol below is provided for the HS-AFM instrument developed by the Ando group (Kanazawa University, Kanazawa, Japan).60
7. Analysis of Nucleosome Dynamics Captured Using Time-Lapse AFM
Mono-nucleosomes were first prepared for AFM imaging experiments using a continuous dilution assembly method (Figure 1). The prepared nucleosomes were then checked using discontinuous SDS-PAGE (Figure 2). A mica surface was next functionalized using APS, which captures nucleosomes at the surface while maintaining a smooth background for high-resolution imaging (Figure 3). Nucleosomes were deposited on APS-mica and were subsequently imaged using static AFM imaging. As a control for the assembly and deposition, H3 mono-nucleosomes were prepared and imaged using static AFM. An image of the H3 mono-nucleosomes (Figure 4A) provides a snapshot of the nucleosome population as it existed moments before deposition, confirming that nucleosomes were successfully assembled. The 2 nM nucleosome deposition provided a uniform distribution of nucleosome and DNA particles across the surface and very little to no crowding was observed.
With the H3 control assembly a success, the presented methods were next applied to the study of CENP-A nucleosomes. Static AFM imaging of this sample (Figure 4B) revealed that the assembly was a success. To demonstrate the influence of nucleosome concentration on the surface particle density, the CENP-A nucleosomes were deposited at 1 nM (Figure 4B), compared to the 2 nM used for H3 (Figure 4A). This resulted in a reduced surface particle density for the CENP-A sample to approximately half that of H3 sample. From the static AFM images, the height and turn number of mono-nucleosomes were characterized (Figure 5). Both the angle between the free DNA arms and the length of the free DNA arms was used to determine the number of DNA turns in the individual nucleosome.
Time-lapse AFM imaging of the nucleosomes in buffer was used to visualize the overall spontaneous unwrapping behavior of the nucleosomes (Figure 6). Measuring the angle between nucleosome arms and the contour length of the arms allowed for the turn number to be determined in each of the frames during this unwrapping process (Figure 6 B-C). As the turn number of the nucleosome decreases, a corresponding decrease in the nucleosome core volume is also observed (Figure 6C). High-speed time-lapse AFM was next used to probe the more intricate nucleosome dynamics that were missed using standard time-lapse imaging. The ability of this technique to capture the dynamics over a long period of time was essential to the visualization of a long-distance translocation of a CENP-A nucleosome core (Figure 7) which was captured over the course of ~1200 frames. This technique was also critical in capturing the rare transfer of a CENP-A nucleosome core from one DNA substrate to another (Figure 8). The fast image capture rate (~300 ms/frame) made visualization of this dynamic event possible, as it only took several frames to complete.
Table 1: Reagents needed for continuous salt gradient nucleosome assembly. Each of the components listed is added to the microfuge tube containing the purified DNA. This should be done in the order in which the reagents are listed in the table, with water and NaCl added first, followed by the H2A/H2B dimer and the histone tetramer added last. If pre-folded histone octamers are to be used, add at the same ratio as for the tetramer above. *Take note of the NaCl content in each of the histone stocks and adjust the 5M NaCl to add accordingly, the final [NaCl] should equal 2M. (See Table of Materials).
Figure 1: Schematic of the syringe pump used for microscale nucleosome assembly. The assembly mixture is positioned to be in contact with the end of the syringe needle. As the dilution buffer is delivered by the syringe pump to the assembly mixture the concentration of NaCl is decreased, promoting nucleosome assembly. This figure is adapted from Stumme-Diers et al.30 Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: SDS-PAGE of assembled nucleosomes. Lanes 1 and 2 contain the H3 octamer and the CENP-A assembly of histones, respectively. Lanes 3 and 4 contain the assembled H3 nucleosomes and the assembled CENP-A nucleosomes, respectively. Comparison of the assembled nucleosomes to the histone only controls in lanes, confirm that nucleosomes were properly assembled. The cartoon schematic above each lane indicates which histone components are present. This figure is adapted from Stumme-Diers et al.30 Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3: Schematic of the process to prepare APS functionalized mica for AFM imaging of nucleosomes. (A) a piece of mica ~0.1 mm in thickness has both sides freshly cleaved. (B) The cleaved mica piece is promptly placed diagonally in a cuvette containing the APS solution and is set to incubate for 30 min. (C) Following the APS functionalization step, the APS-mica piece is transferred to a cuvette filled with dd H2O for a 30 s rinse. (D) The APS-mica piece is stored in a cuvette until use. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4: Example AFM images of H3 and CNEP-A nucleosomes. (A) Sample image of H3 mono-nucleosomes deposited on APS-mica, captured using static AFM. Each bright blob is a nucleosome core particle with the flanking DNA regions appearing as noodle-like arms. The long noodle-like features are free DNA particles that are not associated with a histone core. For this image, a 2 nM nucleosome concentration was used, providing a uniform distribution across the surface, with little to no crowding. (B) This nucleosome sample was deposited at 1 nM and is much less populated than the 2 nM used in (A). This demonstrates the direct effect that nucleosome dilution has on the surface density of nucleosomes. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 5: Visual depiction of the analysis used to characterize the wrapping and height of the nucleosome particles. (A) A representative nucleosome particle from images like those shown in Figure 3. The contour length of each nucleosome arm is measured from the end of the arm to the center of the core (dotted green lines). Plotting cross section profiles (red and blue lines) of a nucleosome produce the curves shown in (B) From these curves, height and width detail of particle can be determined. (C) Schematic of the various wrapped states of the nucleosomes. (D) Each wrapped state is characterized using the angle between the DNA arms, the number of DNA turns and the bp of wrapped DNA. Scale Bar = 20 nm. This figure is adapted from Lyubchenko et al. 24 Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 6. Example of time-lapse AFM images capturing the spontaneous unwrapping of nucleosomes. (A) A series of consecutive AFM images of the spontaneous unwrapping process of nucleosomes captured by continuous scanning in the buffer. The size of each frame is 200 nm and images were captured at a rate of ~170 s per frame. (B) As the unwrapping process progresses in each frame, the arm lengths of the nucleosome increase, (C) resulting in a decrease in DNA turns around the nucleosome. This turn number can be determined from either the measured arm lengths (black) or the angle between the nucleosome arms (red). As the turn number decreases, a reduction in nucleosome volume is also observed (blue curve, right axis). Each frame is 200 x 200 nm in size. This figure is adapted from Lyubchenko et al. 24 Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 7. Demonstration of the high capacity of high-speed time-lapse AFM for long image acquisition times (A) A gallery of images selected from more than 1200 frames demonstrating the translocation behavior of a CENP-A nucleosomes core. Each image was captured at a rate of ~300 ms/frame. (B) Contour length measurements from one end of the DNA substrate to the CENP-A core are used to characterize this long translocation process. Scale Bar = 25 nm. This figure is adapted from Stumme-Diers et al. 16 Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 8. Example of a dynamic nucleosome core transfer captured using high-speed time-lapse AFM (figure adapted from Stumme-Diers et al.16 (A) Selected frames demonstrating the spontaneous transfer of a CENP-A nucleosome core from one DNA substrate to another. This process took place within several frames which were captured at a rate of ~300 ms/frame. (B) A schematic of the transfer process shown in (A). Scale Bar = 25 nm. This figure is adapted from Stumme-Diers et al. 16 Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
The protocol described above is rather straightforward and provide highly reproducible results, although a few important issues can be emphasized. Functionalized APS-mica is a key substrate for getting reliable and reproducible results. A high stability of APS-mica is one of the important features of this substrate that allows one to prepare the imaging substrate in advance for use that can be used at least two weeks after being prepared.59,61 However, the surface can be damaged by vapors of glue if it is used for mica mounting on the metal puck. Therefore, it is recommended to use double stick tape for the mica mounting as described in the protocol (section 2). In cases when the use of glue is necessary, for example, some users use glues for mounting of mica on metal disks for imaging in liquid, the following procedure modified from the one described in section 6.1.3 for the sample preparation for HS-AFM imaging is recommended. Mica is glued to the metal disk or other solid material and cleaved after the glue is solidified. Blow the mica with argon to remove potential vapors of the glue. Then the mica can be cleaved with a scotch tape and the APS mica working solution placed to cover the freshly cleaved mica strip. The amount of the solution depends on the mica strip size. Allow APS to react for 30 min. To minimize evaporation, run the reaction in a wet Petri dish. Use the following procedure: Soak lab wipe paper and place is at the bottom of the Petri dish. Place a 5 mm thick plastic disk on the wet wipes and put the metal disk with glued mica on it avoiding contact with water at the bottom of the Petri dish. After 30 min, remove the mica/disk assembly and thoroughly rinse the mica surface with dd water and pipette as described in section 6.1.3. The surface is ready for the sample deposition. The APS concentration needs to be adjusted in experiments with DNA, although working APS solution (1:300) described in section 2.2 should be a good starting point. In the protocol described in section 6.1.3 in which the procedure for imaging of nucleosomes with HS-AFM is described, the three-fold higher concentration of APS (1:100) was used.
The protocol described is based on mica functionalization with APS. This is the most robust, highly reproducible and simple procedure. The only disadvantage is that APS, aminopropyl silatrane is not commercially available. However, the procedure of the APS synthesis is straightforward and the protocol for its synthesis is described in detail. 59 If the synthesis procedure is problematic, commercially available reagent, aminopropyltriethoxy silane (APTES) can be used for mica functionalization (AP-mica). The same paper provides the protocol for the preparation of AP-mica using vapors of APTES. The procedure was tested and used for imaging of topologically different types of DNA 35,36,50,62,63 and various protein-DNA complexes including nucleosomes. 27,50,64 Similarly to APS-mica, AP-mica is stable over weeks and can be prepared in batches in advance; the AP-mica surface is as smooth as APS-mica and rather insensitive to the buffer composition, so the samples can be prepared in the buffer solutions with pH values up to pH10 and ionic strengths between 1 mM and 200 mM of NaCl. 59,65 The only drawback with the use of AP-mica is the possibility of aminopropyl silane to hydrolyze and assemble in aggregates on the surface during time-lapse imaging in water, although this process is rather slow with the aggregates that can be distinguished on the surface, so high-resolution images of DNA can be obtained.35 The hydrolysis of silatrane moiety is very slow, so no visible aggregates are seen during long-term imaging;26,35,56,66 , therefore, APS-mica is the preferable substrate when compared with AP-mica if imaging in water is employed. For reproducibility using APTES, the distillation of the reagent is highly recommended in the preparation of AP-mica. The protocol for the APTES distillation is described in paper 59.
AFM, as a single molecule technique, operates with nucleosome concentrations at the nanomolar range and that nucleosomes can spontaneously dissociate at such low concentrations. According to our data 25, the dissociation process occurs in dozens of minutes suggesting that the sample for AFM studies should be prepared just prior to the deposition. Some detergents such as 3-[(3-Cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate (CHAPS) increase the nucleosome stability, so the nucleosomes increase their lifetime by several orders of magnitude 25, but the use of detergents should be done with caution. We showed in 25 that stabilization of nucleosomes is accompanied by the change of the sequence specificity, so the nucleosome even with the use of such sequence specific motif as Widom 601 template, assemble without a specificity of binding to the 601 sequence.
There are a number of important issues with the proposed method relative to other AFM sample preparation methods. First, APS-mica and AP-mica substrates are stable over weeks and can be prepared in batches in advance; the surfaces are smooth and rather insensitive to the buffer composition so the samples can be prepared in buffer solutions with pH values up to pH10 and ionic strengths between 1 mM and 200 mM of NaCl. 59,65 None of the existing methods match these properties. Second, AFM is a single molecule technique and requires a very little sample. The described protocol operates with nanoscale amounts of the preparation. Third, in time-lapse AFM studies, and the HS-AFM data acquisition, there is a significant amount of time required to generate and characterize the large data sets acquired. The methodology described here is well suited for analyzing hundreds of AFM images.
The sample preparation methodology is not limited to nucleosome type samples. Rather it is insensitive to the type of the protein-DNA complexes and has already been applied to a number proteins recognizing specific sequences on DNA, e.g. restrictions enzymes 67,68,69, single-stranded DNA binding proteins 44,45,56,70,71 along with complex protein systems involved in DNA replication 47,72 and recombination68,73. Importantly, HS-AFM has been applied to these systems to follow the dynamics of these systems. These studies make it possible to apply the developed methodology to the characterization of nucleosome arrays as proposed in and elucidate the role of such centromere specific proteins as centromere protein B (CENP-B) or C (CENP-C) in the centromere assembly and understanding their role in the development of many cancers33,34.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
Author contributions: YLL and MSD designed the project; MSD assembled nucleosomes. MSD and ZS performed AFM experiments and data analyses. All authors wrote and edited the manuscript.
Plasmid pGEM3Z-601 | Addgene, Cambridge, MA | 26656 | |
PCR Primers | IDT, Coralville, IA | Custom Order | (FP) 5'- CAGTGAATTGTAATACGACTC-3' (RP) 5'-ACAGCTATGACCATGATTAC-3' |
DreamTaq polymerase | ThermoFischer Scientific, Waltham, MA | EP0701 | Catalog number for 200 units |
PCR purification kit | Qiagen, Hilden, Germany | 28104 | Catalog number for 50 units |
Tris base | Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO | 10708976001 | Catalog number for 250 g |
EDTA | ThermoFischer Scientific, Waltham, MA | 15576028 | Catalog number for 500 g |
(CENP-A/H4)2, recombinant human | EpiCypher, Durham, NC | 16-0010 | Catalog number for 50 ug |
H2A/H2B, recombinant human | EpiCypher, Durham, NC | 15-0311 | Catalog number for 50 ug |
H3 Octamer, recombinant human | EpiCypher, Durham, NC | 16-0001 | Catalog number for 50 ug |
Slide-A-Lyzer MINI Dialysis Device Kit, 10K MWCO, 0.1 mL | ThermoFischer Scientific, Waltham, MA | 69574 | Catalog number for 10 devices |
Sodium Chloride | Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO | S9888-500G | Catalog number for 500 mg |
Amicon Ultra-0.5 mL Centrifugal Filters | Millipore-sigma, Burlington, MO | UFC501008 | Catalog number for 8 devices |
HCl | Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO | 258148-25ML | Catalog number for 25 mL |
Tricine | Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO | T0377-25G | Catalog number for 25 g |
SDS | Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO | 11667289001 | Catalog number for 1 kg |
Ammonium Persulfate (AmmPS) | Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA | 1610700 | Catalog number for 10 g |
30% Acrylamide/Bis Solution, 37.5:1 | Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA | 1610158 | Catalog number for 500 mL |
TEMED | Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA | 1610800 | Catalog number for 5 mL |
4x Laemmli protein sample buffer for SDS-PAGE | Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA | 1610747 | Catalog number for 10 mL |
2-ME | Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO | M6250-10ML | Catalog number for 10 mL |
ageRuler Prestained Protein Ladder | ThermoFischer Scientific, Waltham, MA | 26616 | Catalog number for 500 uL |
Bio-Safe™ Coomassie Stain | Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA | 1610786 | Catalog number for 1 L |
Nonwoven cleanroom wipes: TX604 TechniCloth | TexWipe, Kernersvile, NC | TX604 | |
Muscovite Block Mica | AshevilleMica, Newport News, VA | Grade-1 | |
Aminopropyl silatrane (APS) | Synthesized as described in 22 | ||
HEPES | Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO | H4034-25G | Catalog number for 25 g |
Scotch Tape | Scotch-3M, St. Paul, MN | ||
TESPA-V2 afm probe (for static imaging) | Bruker AFM Probes, Camarillo, CA | ||
MSNL-10 afm probe (for standard time-lapse imaing) | Bruker AFM Probes, Camarillo, CA | ||
Aron Alpha Industrial Krazy Glue | Toagosei America, West Jefferson, OH | AA480 | Catalog number for 2 g tube |
MgCl2 | Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO | M8266-100G | Catalog number for 100 g |
Millex-GP Filter, 0.22 µm | Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO | SLGP05010 | Catalog number for 10 devices |
BL-AC10DS-A2 afm probe (for HS-AFM) | Olympus, Japan | ||
Compound FG-3020C-20 | FluoroTechnology Co., Ltd., Kagiya, Kasugai, Aichi, Japan | ||
Compound FS-1010S135-0.5 | FluoroTechnology Co., Ltd., Kagiya, Kasugai, Aichi, Japan | ||
MultiMode Atomic Force Microscope | Bruker-Nano/Veeco, Santa Barbara, CA | ||
High-Speed Time-Lapse Atomic Force Microsocopy | Toshio Ando, Nano-Life Science Institute, Kanazawa University, Kakuma-machi, Kanazawa, Japan |