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1.
2.
The principal objective of this study was to explore protein conformational changes using fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) technology. Maltose binding protein (MBP) was adopted as a target model, due to its well-characterized structure and ligand specificity. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report to provide information regarding the biological distance between the two lobes of MBP upon maltose binding. For the FRET pair, ECFP and EYFP were used as the donor and the acceptor, and were linked genetically to the C-terminal and N-terminal regions of MBP (ECFP:MBP:EYFP), respectively. After the FRET reaction, maltose-treated MBP was shown to exhibit a considerable energy transfer (FRET efficiency (E) = ∼0.11, Distance (D) = ∼6.93 nm) at the ensemble level, which was regarded as reflective of the increase in donor quenching and the upshift in acceptor emission intensity, thereby suggesting that the donor and the acceptor had been brought close together as the result of structural alterations in MBP. However, upon glucose treatment, no FRET phenomenon was detected, thereby implying the specificity of interaction between MBP and maltose. The in vitro FRET results were also confirmed via the acceptor photobleaching method. Therefore, our data showed that maltose-stimulated conformational changes of MBP could be measured by FRET, thereby providing biological information, including the FRET efficiency and the intramolecular distance.  相似文献   

3.
Two types of reporters for optical sensing of NF-kappaB p50 protein-oligodeoxyribonucleotide (ODN) duplex interactions were designed and compared in vitro. The reporters were based on the effect of fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between the pair donor Cy5.5 near-infrared (NIR) fluorochrome and either 800CW emitting fluorescence dye acceptor (800CW-Cy), or a nonemitting QSY 21 dye quencher (QSY-Cy). The donor and the acceptor dyes were covalently linked to the complementary oligonucleotides, respectively: Cy dye was conjugated to 3'-thiol, whereas 800CW or QSY21 were conjugated to a hydrophilic internucleoside phosphate amino linker. The reporters were tested initially using recombinant NF-kappaB p50 protein binding assays. Both reporters were binding p50 protein, which protected oligonucleotide duplex from degradation in the presence of exonuclease.The incubation of 800CW-Cy reporter in the presence of control or IL-1beta treated human endothelial cells showed the uptake of the reporter in the cytoplasm and the nucleus. The measurement of NIR fluorescence ratio (i.e. Cy5.5/800CW) showed a partial loss of FRET and the increased Cy5.5 fluorescence in nontreated, control cells. Thus, the specific p50 binding to ODN duplex reporters affected the donor-acceptor fluorochrome pair. NF-kappaB p50 exhibited the protective effect on FRET between NIR fluorochromes linked to the complementary strands of the reporter duplex.  相似文献   

4.
We present a method of labeling and immobilizing a low-molecular-weight protein, calmodulin (CaM), by fusion to a larger protein, maltose binding protein (MBP), for single-molecule fluorescence experiments. Immobilization in an agarose gel matrix eliminates potential interactions of the protein and the fluorophore(s) with a glass surface and allows prolonged monitoring of protein dynamics. The small size of CaM hinders its immobilization in low-weight-percentage agarose gels; however, fusion of CaM to MBP via a flexible linker provides sufficient restriction of translational mobility in 1% agarose gels. Cysteine residues were engineered into MBP.CaM (MBP-T34C,T110C-CaM) and labeled with donor and acceptor fluorescent probes yielding a construct (MBP.CaM-DA) which can be used for single-molecule single-pair fluorescence resonance energy transfer (spFRET) experiments. Mass spectrometry was used to verify the mass of MBP.CaM-DA. Assays measuring the activity of CaM reveal minimal activity differences between wild-type CaM and MBP.CaM-DA. Single-molecule fluorescence images of the donor and acceptor dyes were fit to a two-dimensional Gaussian function to demonstrate colocalization of donor and acceptor dyes. FRET is demonstrated both in bulk fluorescence spectra and in fluorescence trajectories of single MBP.CaM-DA molecules. The extension of this method to other biomolecules is also proposed.  相似文献   

5.
We report on a novel technique to develop an optical immunosensor based on fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET). IgG antibodies were labeled with acceptor fluorophores while one of three carrier molecules (protein A, protein G, or F(ab')2 fragment) was labeled with donor fluorophores. The carrier molecule was incubated with the antibody to allow specific binding to the Fc portion. The labeled antibody-protein complex was then exposed to specific and nonspecific antigens, and experiments were designed to determine the 'in solution' response. The paper reports the results of three different donor-acceptor FRET pairs, fluorescein isothiocyanate/tetramethylrhodamine isothiocyanate, Texas Red/Cy5, and Alexa Fluor 546/Alexa Fluor 594. The effects of the fluorophore to protein conjugation ratio (F/P ratio) and acceptor to donor fluorophore ratios between the antibody and protein (A/D ratio) were examined. In the presence of specific antigens, the antibodies underwent a conformational change, resulting in an energy transfer from the donor to the acceptor fluorophore as measured by a change in fluorescence. The non-specific antigens elicited little or no changes. The Alexa Fluor FRET pair demonstrated the largest change in fluorescence, resulting in a 35% change. The F/P and A/D ratio will affect the efficiency of energy transfer, but there exists a suitable range of A/D and F/P ratios for the FRET pairs. The feasibility of the FRET immunosensor technique was established; however, it will be necessary to immobilize the complexes onto optical substrates so that consistent trends can be obtained that would allow calibration plots.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) detects the proximity of fluorescently labeled molecules over distances >100 A. When performed in a fluorescence microscope, FRET can be used to map protein-protein interactions in vivo. We here describe a FRET microscopy method that can be used to determine whether proteins that are colocalized at the level of light microscopy interact with one another. This method can be implemented using digital microscopy systems such as a confocal microscope or a wide-field fluorescence microscope coupled to a charge-coupled device (CCD) camera. It is readily applied to samples prepared with standard immunofluorescence techniques using antibodies labeled with fluorescent dyes that act as a donor and acceptor pair for FRET. Energy transfer efficiencies are quantified based on the release of quenching of donor fluorescence due to FRET, measured by comparing the intensity of donor fluorescence before and after complete photobleaching of the acceptor. As described, this method uses Cy3 and Cy5 as the donor and acceptor fluorophores, but can be adapted for other FRET pairs including cyan fluorescent protein and yellow fluorescent protein.  相似文献   

8.
We studied the fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) efficiency of different donor-acceptor labeled model DNA systems in aqueous solution from ensemble measurements and at the single molecule level. The donor dyes: tetramethylrhodamine (TMR); rhodamine 6G (R6G); and a carbocyanine dye (Cy3) were covalently attached to the 5'-end of a 40-mer model oligonucleotide. The acceptor dyes, a carbocyanine dye (Cy5), and a rhodamine derivative (JA133) were attached at modified thymidine bases in the complementary DNA strand with donor-acceptor distances of 5, 15, 25 and 35 DNA-bases, respectively. Anisotropy measurements demonstrate that none of the dyes can be observed as a free rotor; especially in the 5-bp constructs the dyes exhibit relatively high anisotropy values. Nevertheless, the dyes change their conformation with respect to the oligonucleotide on a slower time scale in the millisecond range. This results in a dynamic inhomogeneous distribution of donor/acceptor (D/A) distances and orientations. FRET efficiencies have been calculated from donor and acceptor fluorescence intensity as well as from time-resolved fluorescence measurements of the donor fluorescence decay. Dependent on the D/A pair and distance, additional strong fluorescence quenching of the donor is observed, which simulates lower FRET efficiencies at short distances and higher efficiencies at longer distances. On the other hand, spFRET measurements revealed subpopulations that exhibit the expected FRET efficiency, even at short D/A distances. In addition, the measured acceptor fluorescence intensities and lifetimes also partly show fluorescence quenching effects independent of the excitation wavelength, i.e. either directly excited or via FRET. These effects strongly depend on the D/A distance and the dyes used, respectively. The obtained data demonstrate that besides dimerization at short D/A distances, an electron transfer process between the acceptor Cy5 and rhodamine donors has to be taken into account. To explain deviations from FRET theory even at larger D/A distances, we suggest that the pi-stack of the DNA double helix mediates electron transfer from the donor to the acceptor, even over distances as long as 35 base pairs. Our data show that FRET experiments at the single molecule level are rather suited to resolve fluorescent subpopulations in heterogeneous mixture, information about strongly quenched subpopulations gets lost.  相似文献   

9.
Single molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy were used to investigate DNA looping by NgoMIV restriction endonuclease. Using a linear double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) molecule labeled with a fluorescence donor molecule, Cy3, and fluorescence acceptor molecule, Cy5, and by varying the concentration of NgoMIV endonuclease from 0 to 3 x 10(-6) M, it was possible to detect and determine diffusion properties of looped DNA/protein complexes. FRET efficiency distributions revealed a subpopulation of complexes with an energy transfer efficiency of 30%, which appeared upon addition of enzyme in the picomolar to nanomolar concentration range (using 10(-11) M dsDNA). The concentration dependence, fluorescence burst size analysis, and fluorescence correlation analysis were all consistent with this subpopulation arising from a sequence specific interaction between an individual enzyme and a DNA molecule. A 30% FRET efficiency corresponds to a distance of approximately 65 A, which correlates well with the distance between the ends of the dsDNA molecule when bound to NgoMIV according to the crystal structure of this complex. Formation of the looped complexes was also evident in measurements of the diffusion times of freely diffusing DNA molecules with and without NgoMIV. At very high protein concentrations compared to the DNA concentration, FRET and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy results revealed the formation of larger DNA/protein complexes.  相似文献   

10.
We report here an approach for simultaneous fluorescence imaging and electrical recording of single ion channels in planar bilayer membranes. As a test case, fluorescently labeled (Cy3 and Cy5) gramicidin derivatives were imaged at the single-molecule level using far-field illumination and cooled CCD camera detection. Gramicidin monomers were observed to diffuse in the plane of the membrane with a diffusion coefficient of 3.3 x 10(-8) cm(2)s(-1). Simultaneous electrical recording detected gramicidin homodimer (Cy3/Cy3, Cy5/Cy5) and heterodimer (Cy3/Cy5) channels. Heterodimer formation was observed optically by the appearance of a fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) signal (irradiation of Cy3, detection of Cy5). The number of FRET signals was significantly smaller than the number of Cy3 signals (Cy3 monomers plus Cy3 homodimers) as expected. The number of FRET signals increased with increasing channel activity. In numerous cases the appearance of a FRET signal was observed to correlate with a channel opening event detected electrically. The heterodimers also diffused in the plane of the membrane with a diffusion coefficient of 3.0 x 10(-8) cm(2)s(-1). These experiments demonstrate the feasibility of simultaneous optical and electrical detection of structural changes in single ion channels as well as suggesting strategies for improving the reliability of such measurements.  相似文献   

11.
Intramolecular fluorescence quenching of cyanine dyes was investigated using a model hairpin oligonucleotide decoy encoding a NF-kappaB p50 subunit binding site. Two types of hairpin oligonucleotides were synthesized: (1) 5'-(6-aminohexyl)- and 3'-(3-aminopropyl)-linked (I); (2) 5'-(6-aminohexyl)- and 3'-[3-(3-hydroxypropyldithio)propyl]-linked (II). Oligonucleotide I was covalently modified using monofunctional either Cy3- or Cy5.5-N-hydroxysuccinimide esters. Using reverse-phase HPLC, mono-and dicyanineamide derivatives of I were isolated. Mono-Cy3-modified derivatives of I, but not the mono-Cy5.5-modified derivatives, showed a 2-fold higher Cy3 fluorescence intensity compared to the free dye. There was no detectable difference in fluorescence between the di-Cy3 derivative of I and the free dye at the same concentration. However, there was a 4-fold quenching of fluorescence in the case of the di-Cy5.5 derivative of the same hairpin oligonucleotide. The quenching of Cy5.5 fluorescence could not be explained by the interaction of Cy5.5 with nucleotide bases as demonstrated by incubating free Cy5.5 dye with oligonuclotides. The quenching effect was further investigated using an oligonucleotide bearing a cleavable 3'-amino-terminated linker bearing an S-S bond (III). After modification of the 5'- and 3'-end of oligonucleotide III with a Cy5.5 monofunctional hydroxysuccinimide ester, a 70-75% quenching of fluorescence was observed. Fluorescence was 100% dequenched after the reduction of S-S bond. The obtained result unequivocally demonstrates that the formation of intramolecular Cy5.5 dimers is the dominant mechanism of fluorescence quenching in symmetric dye-dye hairpin decoy beacons.  相似文献   

12.
We have developed and optimized a stopped-flow fluorescence assay for use in studying DNA unwinding catalyzed by Escherichia coli RecBCD helicase. This assay monitors changes in fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between a pair of fluorescent probes (Cy3 donor and Cy5 acceptor) placed on opposite sides of a nick in duplex DNA. As such, this is an "all-or-none" DNA unwinding assay. Single turnover DNA unwinding experiments were performed using a series of eight fluorescent DNA substrates containing duplex DNA regions ranging from 24 bp to 60 bp. The time-courses obtained by monitoring Cy3 fluorescence display a distinct lag phase that increases with increasing duplex DNA length, reflecting the transient formation of partially unwound DNA intermediates. These Cy3 FRET time-courses are identical with those obtained using a chemical quenched-flow kinetic assay developed previously. The signal from the Cy5 fluorescence probe shows additional effects that appear to specifically monitor the RecD helicase subunit. The continuous nature of this fluorescence assay enabled us to acquire more precise time-courses for many more duplex DNA lengths in a significantly reduced amount of time, compared to quenched-flow methods. Global analysis of the Cy3 and Cy5 FRET time-courses, using an n-step sequential DNA unwinding model, indicates that RecBCD unwinds duplex DNA with an average unwinding rate constant of kU = 200(+/-40) steps s(-1) (mkU = 680(+/-12)bp s(-1)) and an average kinetic step size, m = 3.4 (+/-0.6) bp step(-1) (5 mM ATP, 10 mM MgCl(2), 30 mM NaCl, pH 7.0, 5% (v/v) glycerol, 25.0 degrees C), in excellent agreement with the kinetic parameters determined using quenched-flow techniques. Under these same conditions, the RecBC enzyme unwinds DNA with a very similar rate. These methods will facilitate detailed studies of the mechanisms of DNA unwinding and translocation of the RecBCD and RecBC helicases.  相似文献   

13.
The maltose transport complex of Escherichia coli, a member of the ATP-binding cassette superfamily, mediates the high affinity uptake of maltose at the expense of ATP. The membrane-associated transporter consists of two transmembrane subunits, MalF and MalG, and two copies of the cytoplasmic ATP-binding cassette subunit, MalK. Maltose-binding protein (MBP), a soluble periplasmic protein, delivers maltose to the MalFGK(2) transporter and stimulates hydrolysis by the transporter. Site-directed spin labeling electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy is used to monitor binding of MBP to MalFGK(2) and conformational changes in MBP as it interacts with MalFGK(2). Cysteine residues and spin labels have been introduced into the two lobes of MBP so that spin-spin interaction will report on ligand-induced closure of the protein (Hall, J. A., Thorgeirsson, T. E., Liu, J., Shin, Y. K., and Nikaido, H. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 17610-17614). At least two different modes of interaction between MBP and MalFGK(2) were detected. Binding of MBP to MalFGK(2) in the absence of ATP resulted in a decrease in motion of spin label at position 41 in the C-terminal domain of MBP. In a vanadate-trapped transition state intermediate, all free MBP became tightly bound to MalFGK(2), spin label in both lobes became completely immobilized, and spin-spin interactions were lost, suggesting that MBP was in an open conformation. Binding of non-hydrolyzable MgATP analogs or ATP in the absence of Mg is sufficient to stabilize a complex of open MBP and MalFGK(2). Taken together, these data suggest that closure of the MalK dimer interface coincides with opening of MBP and maltose release to the transporter.  相似文献   

14.
Members of the ATP-binding cassette superfamily couple the energy from ATP hydrolysis to the active transport of substrates across the membrane. The maltose transporter, a well characterized model system, consists of a periplasmic maltose-binding protein (MBP) and a multisubunit membrane transporter, MalFGK(2). On the basis of the structure of the MBP-MalFGK(2) complex in an outward-facing conformation (Oldham, M. L., Khare, D., Quiocho, F. A., Davidson, A. L., and Chen, J. (2007) Nature 450, 515-521), we identified two mutants in transmembrane domains MalF and MalG that generated futile cycling; although interaction with MBP stimulated the ATPase activity of the transporter, maltose was not transported. Both mutants appeared to disrupt the normal transfer of maltose from MBP to MalFGK(2). In the first case, substitution of aspartate for glycine in the maltose-binding site of MalF likely generated a futile cycle by preventing maltose from binding to MalFGK(2) during the catalytic cycle. In the second case, a four-residue deletion of a periplasmic loop of MalG limited its reach into the maltose-binding pocket of MBP, allowing maltose to remain associated with MBP during the catalytic cycle. Retention of maltose in the MBP binding site in the deletion mutant, as well as insertion of this loop into the binding site in the wild type, was detected by EPR as a change in mobility of a nitroxide spin label positioned near the maltose-binding pocket of MBP.  相似文献   

15.
Hohng S  Joo C  Ha T 《Biophysical journal》2004,87(2):1328-1337
Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) measured at the single-molecule level can reveal conformational changes of biomolecules and intermolecular interactions in physiologically relevant conditions. Thus far single-molecule FRET has been measured only between two fluorophores. However, for many complex systems, the ability to observe changes in more than one distance is desired and FRET measured between three spectrally distinct fluorophores can provide a more complete picture. We have extended the single-molecule FRET technique to three colors, using the DNA four-way (Holliday) junction as a model system that undergoes two-state conformational fluctuations. By labeling three arms of the junction with Cy3 (donor), Cy5 (acceptor 1), and Cy5.5 (acceptor 2), distance changes between the donor and acceptor 1, and between the donor and acceptor 2, can be measured simultaneously. Thus we are able to show that the acceptor 1 arm moves away from the donor arm at the same time as the acceptor 2 arm approaches the donor arm, and vice versa, marking the first example of observing correlated movements of two different segments of a single molecule. Our data further suggest that Holliday junction does not spend measurable time with any of the helices unstacked, and that the parallel conformations are not populated to a detectable degree.  相似文献   

16.
We study the effect of dye-dye interactions in labeled double-stranded DNA molecules on the Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) efficiency at the single-molecule level. An extensive analysis of internally labeled double-stranded DNA molecules in bulk and at the single-molecule level reveals that donor-acceptor absolute distances can be reliably extracted down to ∼3-nm separation, provided that dye-dye quenching is accounted for. At these short separations, we find significant long-lived fluorescence fluctuations among discrete levels originating from the simultaneous and synchronous quenching of both dyes. By comparing four different donor-acceptor dye pairs (TMR-ATTO647N, Cy3-ATTO647N, TMR-Cy5, and Cy3-Cy5), we find that this phenomenon depends on the nature of the dye pair used, with the cyanine pair Cy3-Cy5 showing the least amount of fluctuations. The significance of these results is twofold: First, they illustrate that when dye-dye quenching is accounted for, single-molecule FRET can be used to accurately measure inter-dye distances, even at short separations. Second, these results are useful when deciding which dye pairs to use for nucleic acids analyses using FRET.  相似文献   

17.
The subcellular localization and corresponding quaternary state of fluorescent labelled cholera toxin were determined at different time points after exposure to living cells by a novel form of fluorescence confocal microscopy. The compartmentalization and locus of separation of the pentameric B subunits (CTB) from the A subunit (CTA) of the toxin were evaluated on a pixel-by-pixel (voxel-by-voxel) basis by measuring the fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between CTB labelled with the sulfoindocyanine dye Cy3 and an antibody against CTA labelled with Cy5. The FRET efficiency was determined by a new technique based on the release of quenching of the Cy3 donor after photodestruction of the Cy5 acceptor in a region of interest within the cell. The results demonstrate vesicular transport of the holotoxin from the plasma membrane to the Golgi compartment with subsequent separation of the CTA and CTB subunits. The CTA subunit is redirected to the plasma membrane by retrograde transport via the endoplasmic reticulum whereas the CTB subunit persists in the Golgi compartment.  相似文献   

18.
We previously showed that a specific kind of mRNA (c-fos) was detected in a living cell under a microscope by introducing two fluorescently labeled oligodeoxynucleotides, each labeled with donor or acceptor, into the cytoplasm, making them hybridize to adjacent locations on c-fos mRNA, and taking images of fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) (A. Tsuji, H. Koshimoto, Y. Sato, M. Hirano. Y. Sei-Iida, S. Kondo, and K. Ishibashi, 2000, Biophys. J. 78:3260-3274). On the formed hybrid, the distance between donor and acceptor becomes close and FRET occurs. To observe small numbers of mRNA in living cells using this method, it is required that FRET fluorescence of hybrid must be distinguished from fluorescence of excess amounts of non-hybridizing probes and from cell autofluorescence. To meet these requirements, we developed a time-resolved method using acceptor fluorescence decays. When a combination of a donor having longer fluorescence lifetime and an acceptor having shorter lifetime is used, the measured fluorescence decays of acceptors under FRET becomes slower than the acceptor fluorescence decay with direct excitation. A combination of Bodipy493/503 and Cy5 was selected as donor and acceptor. When the formed hybrid had a configuration where the target RNA has no single-strand part between the two fluorophores, the acceptor fluorescence of hybrid had a sufficiently longer delay to detect fluorescence of hybrid in the presence of excess amounts of non-hybridizing probes. Spatial separation of 10-12 bases between two fluorophores on the hybrid is also required. The decay is also much slower than cell autofluorescence, and smaller numbers of hybrid were detected with less interference of cell autofluorescence in the cytoplasm of living cells under a time-resolved fluorescence microscope with a time-gated function equipped camera. The present method will be useful when observing induced expressions of mRNA in living cells.  相似文献   

19.
The sensitivity of FRET-based sensing is usually limited by the spectral overlaps of the FRET donor and acceptor, which generate a poor signal-to-noise ratio. To overcome this limitation, a quenched donor presenting a large Stokes shift can be combined with a bright acceptor to perform Dark Resonance Energy Transfer (DRET). The consequent fluorogenic response from the acceptor considerably improves the signal-to-noise ratio. To date, DRET has mainly relied on a donor that is covalently bound to the acceptor. In this context, our aim was to develop the first intermolecular DRET pair for specific sensing of nucleic acid sequences. To this end, we designed DFK, a push–pull probe based on a fluorenyl π-platform that is strongly quenched in water. DFK was incorporated into a series of oligonucleotides and used as a DRET donor with Cy5-labeled complementary sequences. In line with our expectations, excitation of the dark donor in the double-labeled duplex switched on the far-red Cy5 emission and remained free of cross-excitation. The DRET mechanism was supported by time-resolved fluorescence measurements. This concept was then applied with binary probes, which confirmed the distance dependence of DRET as well as its potency in detecting sequences of interest with low background noise.  相似文献   

20.
Kozlov AG  Lohman TM 《Biochemistry》2002,41(19):6032-6044
We have examined the kinetic mechanism for binding of the homotetrameric Escherichia coliSSB protein to single-stranded oligodeoxynucleotides [(dT)(70) and (dT)(35)] under conditions that favor the formation of a fully wrapped ssDNA complex in which all four subunits interact with DNA. Under these conditions, a so-called (SSB)(65) complex is formed in which either one molecule of (dT)(70) or two molecules of (dT)(35) bind per tetramer. Stopped-flow studies monitoring quenching of the intrinsic SSB Trp fluorescence were used to examine the initial binding step. To examine the kinetics of ssDNA wrapping, we used a single-stranded oligodeoxythymidylate, (dT)(66), that was labeled on its 3'-end with a fluorescent donor (Cy3) and on its 5'-end with a fluorescent acceptor (Cy5). Formation of the fully wrapped structure was accompanied by extensive fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) from Cy3 to Cy5 since the two ends of (dT)(66) are in close proximity in the fully wrapped complex. Our results indicate that initial ssDNA binding to the tetramer is very rapid, with a bimolecular rate constant, k(1,app), of nearly 10(9) M(-1) s(-1) in the limit of low salt concentration (<0.2 M NaCl, pH 8.1, 25.0 degrees C), whereas the rate of dissociation is very low at all salt concentrations that were examined (20 mM to 2 M NaCl or NaBr). However, the rate of initial binding and the rate of formation of the fully wrapped complex are identical, indicating that the rate of wrapping of the ssDNA around the SSB tetramer is very rapid, with a lower limit rate of 700 s(-1). The implications of this rapid binding and wrapping reaction are discussed.  相似文献   

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