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Condensin extrudes DNA loops in steps up to hundreds of base pairs that are generated by ATP binding events
Author(s) -
JeKyung Ryu,
Sang-Hyun Rah,
Richard Janissen,
Jacob Kerssemakers,
Andrea Bonato,
Davide Michieletto,
Cees Dekker
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gkab1268
Subject(s) - condensin , biology , dna , biophysics , atp hydrolysis , magnetic tweezers , molecular dynamics , extrusion , mutant , molecular motor , microbiology and biotechnology , crystallography , biochemistry , atpase , cohesin , materials science , chemistry , gene , chromatin , computational chemistry , metallurgy , enzyme
The condensin SMC protein complex organizes chromosomal structure by extruding loops of DNA. Its ATP-dependent motor mechanism remains unclear but likely involves steps associated with large conformational changes within the ∼50 nm protein complex. Here, using high-resolution magnetic tweezers, we resolve single steps in the loop extrusion process by individual yeast condensins. The measured median step sizes range between 20–40 nm at forces of 1.0–0.2 pN, respectively, comparable with the holocomplex size. These large steps show that, strikingly, condensin typically reels in DNA in very sizeable amounts with ∼200 bp on average per single extrusion step at low force, and occasionally even much larger, exceeding 500 bp per step. Using Molecular Dynamics simulations, we demonstrate that this is due to the structural flexibility of the DNA polymer at these low forces. Using ATP-binding-impaired and ATP-hydrolysis-deficient mutants, we find that ATP binding is the primary step-generating stage underlying DNA loop extrusion. We discuss our findings in terms of a scrunching model where a stepwise DNA loop extrusion is generated by an ATP-binding-induced engagement of the hinge and the globular domain of the SMC complex.

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