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* Electronics Engineering Technologies Division,
Chemistry and Materials Science Division, and
Biology and Biotechnology Division, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, California 94550 USA; and
Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology and Graduate Group in Biophysics University of California at Davis, Davis, California 95616 USA
Correspondence: Address reprint requests to L. Brewer, E-mail: brewer1{at}llnl.gov.
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Abf2p is a mitochondrial (mt) protein that has been hypothesized to play a major role in packaging mtDNA into nucleoids (Caron et al., 1979
; MacAlpine et al., 2000
; Megraw and Chae, 1993
; Newman et al., 1996
) in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Abf2p also contributes to mtDNA maintenance (Contamine and Picard, 2000
), copy number (Cho et al., 2001
; Zelenaya-Troitskaya et al., 1998
), transcription (Diffley and Stillman, 1991
, 1992
), and recombination (MacAlpine et al., 1998
). It is closely related in sequence and function to the vertebrate nuclear high-mobility group (HMG) protein HMG1 (Diffley and Stillman, 1992
) and is a homolog of human mitochondrial transcription factor h-mtTFA (Fisher et al., 1992
; Parisi et al., 1993
), a protein implicated in human mitochondrial disease (Wallace, 2002
; Wredenberg et al., 2002
). Recently, h-mtTFA was identified as the protein responsible for human mtDNA packaging (Alam et al., 2003
). Both HMG1 and h-mtTFA bend DNA and introduce supercoils into circular DNA molecules.
We used two different experimental techniques to demonstrate and provide complementary information about the compaction of DNA by Abf2p. Optical trapping of single DNA molecules extended by flow and visualized by fluorescence microscopy has been used to obtain information about the kinetics of binding and force with which the Abf2p-DNA complex is packaged. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) confirmed that DNA is bent by Abf2p, and provided a high resolution view and the dimensions of the compact Abf2p-DNA complex.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Optical trapping measurements
To obtain information about the binding kinetics of Abf2p to DNA, single, linear, lambda-phage DNA molecules attached to beads were held by an optical trap and extended by flowing buffer in a two-channel flow cell (Fig. 1, a and b) as previously described (Brewer et al., 1999
). The buffer used in these experiments, 100 mM NaHCO3 (pH 8), contained no sucrose.
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Measurement of maximal tether force
A value for the tether force (Stigter and Bustamante, 1998
; Zimm, 1998
) of the compacted DNA-Abf2p complex was determined by first reducing the trapping laser power so that the maximal force, sometimes called the escape force, the optical trap could exert on a 1-µm-diameter bead was 1.4 pN. A maximal value for the "tether force" (the force with which Abf2p-compacted DNA pulls on its attached bead due to hydrodynamic friction) was determined by subtracting the Stokes force on the bead attached to the compacted DNA molecule from the calibrated trap force, as long as the DNA molecule plus bead could be held by the trap while it compacted. The trap force was determined by moving the microscope stage holding a sample cell containing buffer and 1-µm-diameter beads at successively faster velocities until a trapped bead was released from the optical trap. The Stokes force,
, was then used to calculate the force on the bead at the point of release, where
is the buffer viscosity, r is the bead diameter, and v is the stage velocity. The bead was held at a position 1015 µm beneath the surface of the coverslip, so that no corrections had to be made for the surface. The sample cell consisted of a microscope slide, a drop of buffer containing beads, and a coverslip supported by two 50 µm thick plastic shims. The four sides of the coverslip were attached to the slide by nail polish.
Data analysis
The rate equation describing the binding of Abf2p to DNA for a first order process can be written as follows:
![]() | (1) |
![]() | (2) |
Using Eqs. 1 and 2 we can solve for the rates and find for the compaction process that
![]() | (3) |
![]() | (4) |
The length versus time plots (Fig. 2) for the compaction and decompaction processes for an individual DNA molecule of length L were then fit to the following equations:
![]() | (5) |
![]() | (6) |
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AFM measurements
High resolution atomic force microscopy (AFM) was used to observe the interactions between Abf2p and linear dsDNA (pBR322 was linearized by digesting with BamH1. The DNA was then washed four times in a Centricon-100 concentrator in 10 mM Tris, 1 mM EDTA pH 8 to remove enzyme and twice in 100 mM NaHCO3 to buffer exchange). The microscope, a Nanoscope IIIa (Digital Instruments, Woodbury, NY), was used in tapping mode with Si FESP probes (NanoWorld, Neuchâtel, Switzerland). Abf2p and DNA in buffer (100 mM NaHCO3 pH 8) were mixed together for 5 min before depositing on a substrate. The substrate was prepared by applying 3 µL of 0.1% aqueous solution of poly-L-lysine (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) to a freshly cleaved mica surface for 1 min. The sample was then rinsed with distilled water and dried with nitrogen. The concentration of DNA in the mixed solution remained fixed at 1 µg/mL, and the Abf2p concentration varied from 1.5 µg/mL to 25 µg/mL. Data analysis was performed using IgorPro software (Lake Oswego, OR).
| RESULTS AND DISCUSSION |
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1 s, which was much faster than the timescale observed for compaction. This result shows that the rate-limiting step in the compaction of the Abf2p-DNA complex is the rate of Abf2p binding to DNA. From this experiment we also deduced that at least part of the incomplete compaction of the Abf2p-DNA complex was due to the elongation of the protein-DNA complex by the flowing buffer. The data and fit (using Eq. 5 and Eq. 6) for the compaction and decompaction of a single DNA molecule by Abf2p are shown in Fig. 2, a and c. We measured the on-rate at three different Abf2p concentrations (Fig. 2 b) and the binding rate determined from the exponential fit, kon[b] varied linearly with concentration, as expected. The on-rate constant, kon = 0.36 ± 0.1 µM-1 s-1, did not depend on either the initial DNA extension (at constant flow speed) or flow velocity. Decompaction measurements (10 molecules) allowed us to determine koff = .014 ± 0.001 s-1. The ratio of these rates, kon/koff, provided the binding constant Kb = 2.57 ± 0.74 x 107 M-1.
Limit on binding from the McGhee-von Hippel theory
The maximal fractional coverage of DNA by Abf2p, which can be calculated from the equilibrium constant, Kb, Abf2p footprint (
27 bp (Diffley and Stillman, 1991
, 1992
), and Abf2p concentration (2 µM) using the McGhee-von Hippel theory (McGhee and von Hippel, 1974
) equals 87%. The greatest observed compaction of DNA by Abf2p was 89% (Fig. 3). Measurements obtained from AFM images (Fig. 4) of individual compact Abf2p-DNA complexes showed a reduction in length of DNA from 1.5 µm to 190 nm, a compaction of 87%. These results indicate that 13% of each DNA molecule was not bound with Abf2p.
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0.60 ± 0.12 pN. This suggests it takes very little force to elongate DNA compacted by Abf2p and the forces that stabilize the compacted protein-DNA complex are quite weak.
AFM images
AFM images of Abf2p-DNA complexes (Fig. 4, af) show sharp bending of DNA by Abf2p. As the concentration of Abf2p increases, the DNA becomes increasingly compact, finally forming a round object with diameter 190 ± 90 nm. The ratio of Abf2p molecules to DNA bp (Abf2p/bp) for the complexes imaged in Fig. 4 b is 0.04, allowing Abf2p to fill all available binding sites on the DNA molecule for a 27-bp footprint. However, complete DNA compaction was not observed until the Abf2p/bp ratio reached 0.45. This is consistent with our calculations of the equilibrium fractional coverage of DNA by Abf2p, given by kon[Abf2p]/koff, where [Abf2p] denotes the concentration of Abf2p, kon = 0.36 ± 0.1 µM-1 s-1, and koff = 0.014 ± 0.001 s-1. For [Abf2p] = 0.04 µM (Fig. 4 b), the fractional coverage equals 50% and some bending is seen, whereas when [Abf2p] = 0.35 µM (Fig. 4 d), the fraction coverage equals 90%, and almost complete compaction of the individual DNA molecules is observed. However, the McGhee-von Hippel theory limits the fractional coverage to 85% for [Abf2p] = 1 µM, and this may explain why the degree of compaction in images Fig. 4, e and f look similar.
We have shown that Abf2p obeys first order binding kinetics to linear DNA. The measured on-rate constant, (kon = 0.36 ± 0.1 µM-1 s-1), together with an estimated concentration of Abf2p in the mitochondria, can be used to determine the compaction time for the mitochondrial genome. For a mitochondria with ellipsoidal dimensions of 0.5 µm (radius) by 1.0 µm, and 50 genome equivalents of mtDNA (MacAlpine et al., 2000
), the concentration of Abf2p is 540 µM (assuming complete coverage of the DNA by Abf2p). This concentration multiplied by the measured on-rate constant gives an exponential time constant of 194 s-1. Clearly, mtDNA will be rapidly packaged by Abf2p. The off-rate of Abf2p from DNA was measured to be koff = 0.014 ± 0.001 s-1. This implies that in the absence of free Abf2p, the time needed for all the bound protein to dissociate from mtDNA would be several minutes. Therefore, Abf2p is not strongly bound to DNA compared to the histones (Brower-Toland et al., 2002
) that organize nuclear DNA or protamine (Brewer et al., 1999
), which packages DNA in the sperm cell. This implies that a significant concentration of free Abf2p must be maintained in the mitochondria to keep the mtDNA in a compact state, which is consistent with the calculation above of the Abf2p concentration in the mitochondria.
The tether force measured for DNA molecules compacted by Abf2p was extremely small,
0.60 ± 0.12 pN, showing that the forces holding the Abf2p-DNA complex together are weak. AFM measurements of the spatial extent of single DNA molecules bound with Abf2p showed that the DNA is loosely packaged. Both the high off-rate of the Abf2p protein and the limited compaction of the complex should aid in allowing enzymes and proteins access to regulatory sites where Diffley and Stillman have showed that "phased" binding of Abf2p occurs (Diffley and Stillman, 1991
, 1992
). At the same time, this would leave the mtDNA more vulnerable to damage by shear forces, free radicals (Menzies et al., 2002
), and nucleases. It is also important to note that the mitochondrial genome in S. cerevisiae is circular, rather than linear, and the binding of Abf2p to circular DNA has been shown to form negative supercoils (Diffley and Stillman, 1992
) which may impact the compaction of mtDNA through the formation of plectonemes (Strick et al., 2000
). Further studies comparing the compaction of DNA by Abf2p and its homolog, h-mtTFA, using both linear and circular DNA, should provide insight into how mtDNA packaging impacts human mitochondrial genome-related diseases.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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Work was performed at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy under contract W-7405-ENG-48 and partially supported by the National Science Foundation Biophotonics Center at University of California at Davis under Agreement No. PHY 0120999. (R.J.B.).
Submitted on April 24, 2003; accepted for publication June 23, 2003.
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