RESUMO
Efficient bacterial chromosome segregation typically requires the coordinated action of a three-component machinery, fueled by adenosine triphosphate, called the partition complex. We present a phenomenological model accounting for the dynamic activity of this system that is also relevant for the physics of catalytic particles in active environments. The model is obtained by coupling simple linear reaction-diffusion equations with a proteophoresis, or "volumetric" chemophoresis, force field that arises from protein-protein interactions and provides a physically viable mechanism for complex translocation. This minimal description captures most known experimental observations: dynamic oscillations of complex components, complex separation, and subsequent symmetrical positioning. The predictions of our model are in phenomenological agreement with and provide substantial insight into recent experiments. From a nonlinear physics view point, this system explores the active separation of matter at micrometric scales with a dynamical instability between static positioning and traveling wave regimes triggered by the dynamical spontaneous breaking of rotational symmetry.
Assuntos
Trifosfato de Adenosina/metabolismo , Genoma Bacteriano , Fenômenos Biofísicos , Catálise , Difusão , Modelos Biológicos , Domínios e Motivos de Interação entre ProteínasRESUMO
We develop a theoretical description of the critical zipping dynamics of a self-folding polymer. We use tension propagation theory and the formalism of the generalized Langevin equation applied to a polymer that contains two complementary parts which can bind to each other. At the critical temperature, the (un)zipping is unbiased and the two strands open and close as a zipper. The number of broken base pairs n(t) displays a subdiffusive motion characterized by a variance growing as ãΔn2(t)ã â¼ tα with α < 1 at long times. Our theory provides an estimate of both the asymptotic anomalous exponent α and of the subleading correction term, which are both in excellent agreement with numerical simulations. The results indicate that the tension propagation theory captures the relevant features of the dynamics and shed some new insights on related polymer problems characterized by anomalous dynamical behavior.
RESUMO
In this article, it is shown how optimized and dedicated microarray experiments can be used to study the thermodynamics of DNA hybridization for a large number of different conformations in a highly parallel fashion. In particular, free energy penalties for mismatches are obtained in two independent ways and are shown to be correlated with values from melting experiments in solution reported in the literature. The additivity principle, which is at the basis of the nearest-neighbor model, and according to which the penalty for two isolated mismatches is equal to the sum of the independent penalties, is thoroughly tested. Additivity is shown to break down for a mismatch distance below 5 nt. The behavior of mismatches in the vicinity of the helix edges, and the behavior of tandem mismatches are also investigated. Finally, some thermodynamic outlying sequences are observed and highlighted. These sequences contain combinations of GA mismatches. The analysis of the microarray data reported in this article provides new insights on the DNA hybridization parameters and can help to increase the accuracy of hybridization-based technologies.
Assuntos
Análise de Sequência com Séries de Oligonucleotídeos/métodos , Pareamento Incorreto de Bases , DNA/química , Modelos Lineares , TermodinâmicaRESUMO
The relaxation dynamics of a polymer wound around a fixed obstacle constitutes a fundamental instance of polymer with twist and torque, and it is also of relevance for DNA denaturation dynamics. We investigate it by simulations and Langevin equation analysis. The latter predicts a relaxation time scaling as a power of the polymer length times a logarithmic correction related to the equilibrium fluctuations of the winding angle. The numerical data support this result and show that at short times the winding angle decreases as a power law. This is also in agreement with the Langevin equation provided a winding-dependent friction is used, suggesting that such reduced description of the system captures the basic features of the problem.
RESUMO
In all eukaryotic organisms, inappropriate firing of replication origins during the G2 phase of the cell cycle is suppressed by cyclin-dependent kinases. Multicellular eukaryotes contain a second putative inhibitor of re-replication called geminin. Geminin is believed to block binding of the mini-chromosome maintenance (MCM) complex to origins of replication, but the mechanism of this inhibition is unclear. Here we show that geminin interacts tightly with Cdt1, a recently identified replication initiation factor necessary for MCM loading. The inhibition of DNA replication by geminin that is observed in cell-free DNA replication extracts is reversed by the addition of excess Cdt1. In the normal cell cycle, Cdt1 is present only in G1 and S, whereas geminin is present in S and G2 phases of the cell cycle. Together, these results suggest that geminin inhibits inappropriate origin firing by targeting Cdt1.
Assuntos
Proteínas de Ciclo Celular/metabolismo , Replicação do DNA , Proteínas de Ligação a DNA/metabolismo , Interfase , Fase S , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Animais , Proteínas de Ciclo Celular/química , Proteínas de Ciclo Celular/farmacologia , Núcleo Celular/metabolismo , Sistema Livre de Células , Cromatina/metabolismo , Proteínas de Ligação a DNA/química , Proteínas de Ligação a DNA/farmacologia , Evolução Molecular , Fase G1 , Fase G2 , Geminina , Células HeLa , Humanos , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Peso Molecular , Testes de Precipitina , Proteínas Recombinantes de Fusão/metabolismo , Origem de Replicação , Xenopus , Proteínas de XenopusRESUMO
We consider two complementary polymer strands of length L attached by a common-end monomer. The two strands bind through complementary monomers and at low temperatures form a double-stranded conformation (zipping), while at high temperature they dissociate (unzipping). This is a simple model of DNA (or RNA) hairpin formation. Here we investigate the dynamics of the strands at the equilibrium critical temperature T=T(c) using Monte Carlo Rouse dynamics. We find that the dynamics is anomalous, with a characteristic time scaling as τâ¼L(2.26(2)), exceeding the Rouse time â¼L(2.18). We investigate the probability distribution function, velocity autocorrelation function, survival probability, and boundary behavior of the underlying stochastic process. These quantities scale as expected from a fractional Brownian motion with a Hurst exponent H=0.44(1). We discuss similarities to and differences from unbiased polymer translocation.
Assuntos
Modelos Químicos , Modelos Moleculares , Polímeros/química , Simulação por Computador , Conformação Molecular , Movimento (Física)RESUMO
It has recently been shown that in some DNA microarrays the time needed to reach thermal equilibrium may largely exceed the typical experimental time, which is about 15 h in standard protocols (Hooyberghs et al. Phys. Rev. E2010, 81, 012901). In this paper we discuss how this breakdown of thermodynamic equilibrium could be detected in microarray experiments without resorting to real time hybridization data, which are difficult to implement in standard experimental conditions. The method is based on the analysis of the distribution of fluorescence intensities I from different spots for probes carrying base mismatches. In thermal equilibrium and at sufficiently low concentrations, log I is expected to be linearly related to the hybridization free energy ΔG with a slope equal to 1/RT(exp), where T(exp) is the experimental temperature and R is the gas constant. The breakdown of equilibrium results in the deviation from this law. A model for hybridization kinetics explaining the observed experimental behavior is discussed, the so-called 3-state model. It predicts that deviations from equilibrium yield a proportionality of log I to ΔG/RT(eff). Here, T(eff) is an "effective" temperature, higher than the experimental one. This behavior is indeed observed in some experiments on Agilent arrays [Hooyberghs et al. Phys. Rev. E2010, 81, 012901 and Hooyberghs et al. Nucleic Acids Res. 2009, 37, e53]. We analyze experimental data from two other microarray platforms and discuss, on the basis of the results, the attainment of equilibrium in these cases. Interestingly, the same 3-state model predicts a (dynamical) saturation of the signal at values below the expected one at equilibrium.
Assuntos
DNA/química , Análise de Sequência com Séries de Oligonucleotídeos/métodos , Modelos Químicos , TermodinâmicaRESUMO
To investigate how the protein kinase cdc7 stimulates DNA replication in metazoans, a soluble cell-free replication system derived from Xenopus eggs was used. DNA was incubated in egg cytosol to form prereplication complexes and then in nucleoplasmic extract to initiate DNA synthesis. We find that cdc7 is greatly enriched in nucleoplasmic extract and that this high concentration is essential for efficient DNA replication, supporting previous models that the nucleus activates replication indirectly by sequestering essential components. cdc7 binds to chromatin at the G(1)/S transition before initiation occurs, and it dissociates from chromatin as S phase progresses. The chromatin association of cdc7 requires chromatin-bound MCM. In turn, cdc7 is required to load the initiation factor cdc45 onto the DNA. Finally, efficient replication is observed when chromatin is exposed first to cdc7 and then to cdk2 but not when it is exposed to cdk2 before cdc7. Therefore, the cdc7- and cdk2-dependent initiation steps can be separated, indicating the existence of a novel, stable initiation intermediate. Moreover, the data suggest that cdk2 can only act after cdc7 has executed its function.