Transverse Magnetic Tweezers Allowing Coincident Epi-Fluorescence Microscopy on Horizontally Extended DNA

Methods Mol Biol. 2022:2476:75-93. doi: 10.1007/978-1-0716-2221-6_7.

Abstract

Longitudinal magnetic tweezers (L-MT) have seen wide-scale adoption as the tool of choice for stretching and twisting a single DNA molecule. They are also used to probe topological changes in DNA as a result of protein binding and enzymatic activity. However, in the longitudinal configuration, the DNA molecule is extended perpendicular to the imaging plane. As a result, it is only possible to infer biological activity from the motion of the tethered paramagnetic microsphere. Described here is a "transverse" magnetic tweezers (T-MT) geometry featuring simultaneous control of DNA extension and spatially coincident video-rate epi-fluorescence imaging. Unlike in L-MT, DNA tethers in T-MT are extended parallel to the imaging plane between two micron-sized spheres, and importantly protein targets on the DNA can be localized using fluorescent nanoparticles. The T-MT can manipulate a long DNA construct at molecular extensions approaching the contour length defined by B-DNA helical geometry, and the measured entropic elasticity agrees with the wormlike chain model (force <35 pN). By incorporating a torsionally constrained DNA tether, the T-MT would allow both the relative extension and twist of the tether to be manipulated, while viewing far-red emitting fluorophore-labeled targets. This T-MT design has the potential to enable the study of DNA binding and remodeling processes under conditions of constant force and defined torsional stress.

Keywords: Coincident fluorescence microscopy; DNA micromanipulation; Single-molecule manipulation; Transverse magnetic tweezers.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • DNA* / chemistry
  • Magnetic Phenomena
  • Magnetics* / methods
  • Microscopy, Fluorescence
  • Nanotechnology

Substances

  • DNA