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Directed Assembly of 3-nm-long RecA Nucleoprotein Filaments on Double-Stranded DNA with Nanometer Resolution
Author(s) -
Rajan Sharma,
A. G. Davies,
Christoph Wälti
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
acs nano
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.554
H-Index - 382
eISSN - 1936-086X
pISSN - 1936-0851
DOI - 10.1021/nn405281s
Subject(s) - nucleoprotein , double stranded , dna , nanometre , nanotechnology , dna nanotechnology , biophysics , materials science , chemistry , biology , genetics , composite material
Protein-mediated self-assembly is arguably one of the most promising routes for building complex molecular nanostructures. Here, we report a molecular self-assembly technique that allows programmable, site-specific patterning of double-stranded DNA scaffolds, at a single-base resolution, by 3-nm-long RecA-based nucleoprotein filaments. RecA proteins bind to single-stranded DNA to form nucleoprotein filaments. These can self-assemble onto a double-stranded DNA scaffold at a region homologous to the nucleoprotein's single-stranded DNA sequence. We demonstrate that nucleoprotein filaments can be formed from single-stranded DNA molecules ranging in length from 60 nucleotides down to just 6 nucleotides, and these can be assembled site-specifically onto a model DNA scaffold both at the end of the scaffold and away from the end. In both cases, successful site-specific self-assembly is demonstrated even for the smallest nucleoprotein filaments, which are just 3 nm long, comprise only two monomers of RecA, and cover less than one helical turn of the double-stranded DNA scaffold. Finally, we demonstrate that the RecA-mediated assembly process is highly site-specific and that the filaments indeed bind only to the homologous region of the DNA scaffold, leaving the neighboring scaffold exposed.

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