| Literature DB >> 26039984 |
Ajay P Manuel1, John Lambert1, Michael T Woodside2.
Abstract
Structural self-assembly in biopolymers, such as proteins and nucleic acids, involves a diffusive search for the minimum-energy state in a conformational free-energy landscape. The likelihood of folding proceeding to completion, as a function of the reaction coordinate used to monitor the transition, can be described by the splitting probability, p(fold)(x). P(fold) encodes information about the underlying energy landscape, and it is often used to judge the quality of the reaction coordinate. Here, we show how p(fold) can be used to reconstruct energy landscapes from single-molecule folding trajectories, using force spectroscopy measurements of single DNA hairpins. Calculating p(fold)(x) directly from trajectories of the molecular extension measured for hairpins fluctuating in equilibrium between folded and unfolded states, we inverted the result expected from diffusion over a 1D energy landscape to obtain the implied landscape profile. The results agreed well with the landscapes reconstructed by established methods, but, remarkably, without the need to deconvolve instrumental effects on the landscape, such as tether compliance. The same approach was also applied to hairpins with multistate folding pathways. The relative insensitivity of the method to the instrumental compliance was confirmed by simulations of folding measured with different tether stiffnesses. This work confirms that the molecular extension is a good reaction coordinate for these measurements, and validates a powerful yet simple method for reconstructing landscapes from single-molecule trajectories.Keywords: force spectroscopy; nucleic acid folding; optical tweezers; protein folding; single-molecule biophysics
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26039984 PMCID: PMC4466695 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1419490112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205