Quantification
of Topological Coupling between DNA
Superhelicity and G‑quadruplex Formation
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Abstract
It has been proposed
that new transcription modulations can be
achieved via topological coupling between duplex DNA and DNA secondary
structures, such as G-quadruplexes, in gene promoters through superhelicity
effects. Limited by available methodologies, however, such a coupling
has not been quantified directly. In this work, using novel magneto-optical
tweezers that combine the nanometer resolution of optical tweezers
and the easy manipulation of magnetic tweezers, we found that the
flexibility of DNA increases with positive superhelicity (σ).
More interestingly, we found that the population of G-quadruplex increases
linearly from 2.4% at σ = 0.1 to 12% at σ = −0.03.
The population then rapidly increases to a plateau of 23% at σ
< −0.05. The rapid increase coincides with the melting of
double-stranded DNA, suggesting that G-quadruplex formation is correlated
with DNA melting. Our results provide evidence for topology-mediated
transcription modulation at the molecular level. We anticipate that
these high-resolution magneto-optical tweezers will be instrumental
in studying the interplay between the topology and activity of biological
macromolecules from a mechanochemical perspective