Sensors (Mar 2014)

A New Direct Single-Molecule Observation Method for DNA Synthesis Reaction Using Fluorescent Replication Protein A

  • Shunsuke Takahashi,
  • Shohei Kawasaki,
  • Hidefumi Miyata,
  • Hirofumi Kurita,
  • Takeshi Mizuno,
  • Shun-ichi Matsuura,
  • Akira Mizuno,
  • Masahiko Oshige,
  • Shinji Katsura

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s140305174
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 3
pp. 5174 – 5182

Abstract

Read online

Using a single-stranded region tracing system, single-molecule DNA synthesis reactions were directly observed in microflow channels. The direct single-molecule observations of DNA synthesis were labeled with a fusion protein consisting of the ssDNA-binding domain of a 70-kDa subunit of replication protein A and enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (RPA-YFP). Our method was suitable for measurement of DNA synthesis reaction rates with control of the ssλDNA form as stretched ssλDNA (+flow) and random coiled ssλDNA (−flow) via buffer flow. Sequentially captured photographs demonstrated that the synthesized region of an ssλDNA molecule monotonously increased with the reaction time. The DNA synthesis reaction rate of random coiled ssλDNA (−flow) was nearly the same as that measured in a previous ensemble molecule experiment (52 vs. 50 bases/s). This suggested that the random coiled form of DNA (−flow) reflected the DNA form in the bulk experiment in the case of DNA synthesis reactions. In addition, the DNA synthesis reaction rate of stretched ssλDNA (+flow) was approximately 75% higher than that of random coiled ssλDNA (−flow) (91 vs. 52 bases/s). The DNA synthesis reaction rate of the Klenow fragment (3’-5’exo–) was promoted by DNA stretching with buffer flow.

Keywords