1 research outputs found
Single-Molecule Spectroscopic Study of Dynamic Nanoscale DNA Bending Behavior of HIV-1 Nucleocapsid Protein
We have studied the conformational dynamics associated
with the
nanoscale DNA bending induced by human immunodeficiency virus type
1 (HIV-1) nucleocapsid (NC) protein using single-molecule Förster
resonance energy transfer (SM-FRET). To gain molecular-level insights
into how the HIV-1 NC locally distorts the structures of duplexed
DNA segments, the dynamics, reversibility, and sequence specificity
of the DNA bending behavior of NC have been systematically studied.
We have performed SM-FRET measurements on a series of duplexed DNA
segments with varying sequences, lengths, and local structures in
the presence of the wide-type HIV-1 NC and NC mutants lacking either
the basic N-terminal domain or the zinc fingers. On the basis of the
SM-FRET results, we have proposed a possible mechanism for the NC-induced
DNA bending in which both NC’s zinc fingers and N-terminal
domain are found to play crucial roles. The SM-FRET results reported
here add new mechanistic insights into the biological behaviors and
functions of HIV-1 NC as a retroviral DNA-architectural protein which
may play critical roles in the compaction, nuclear import, and integration
of the proviral DNA during the retroviral life cycle
