Biological materials have evolved to combine a number of functionally relevant properties. They are sensitive to chemical and mechanical signals and respond to these signals in a highly specific manner. Many biological hydrogels possess the ability to stress-stiffen, a property that is difficult to mimic in synthetic systems. A novel synthetic hydrogel is described that possesses stress-stiffening behavior in the biologically relevant stress regime and, at the same time, contains DNA cross-links as stimuli-responsive elements. The hydrogel scaffold is composed of oligo(ethylene glycol)-functionalized polyisocyanopeptides (PIC), which show a sol-to-gel transition upon increasing the temperature. It is shown that the mechanical properties of the hybrid hydrogel depend on DNA cross-linker concentration and temperature. At high temperature, a hydrophobically bundled stress-stiffening PIC network forms. By contrast, gel formation is controlled by DNA cross-linking at temperatures below the PIC sol-to-gel transition. The DNA cross-linked hydrogel also exhibits stress-stiffening behavior and its properties are controlled by the DNA cross-linker concentration. The hydrogel properties can further be tuned when using DNA cross-linkers with different melting temperature or when breaking cross-links by strand displacement. This clearly shows the potential of DNA cross-links as stimuli-responsive elements, highlighting the possible applications of this hybrid hydrogel as a new sensor
In the past decades, RNA molecules have emerged as important players in numerous cellular processes. To understand these processes at the molecular and atomic level, large amounts of homogeneous RNA are required for structural, biochemical and pharmacological investigations. Such RNAs are generally obtained from laborious and costly in vitro transcriptions or chemical synthesis. In 2007, a recombinant RNA technology has been described for the constitutive production of large amounts of recombinant RNA in Escherichia coli using a tRNA-scaffold approach. We demonstrate a general applicable extension to the described approach by introducing the following improvements: (i) enhanced transcription of large recombinant RNAs by T7 RNA polymerase (high transcription rates, versatile), (ii) efficient and facile excision of the RNA of interest from the tRNA-scaffold by dual cis -acting hammerhead ribozyme mediated cleavage and (iii) rapid purification of the RNA of interest employing anion-exchange chromatography or affinity chromatography followed by denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. These improvements in the existing method pave the tRNA-scaffold approach further such that any (non-)structured product RNA of a defined length can cost-efficiently be obtained in (multi-)milligram quantities without in vitro enzymatic manipulations.
A dogma for DNA polymerase catalysis is that the enzyme binds DNA first, followed by MgdNTP. This mechanism contributes to the selection of correct dNTP by Watson-Crick base pairing, but it cannot explain how low-fidelity DNA polymerases overcome Watson-Crick base pairing to catalyze non-Watson-Crick dNTP incorporation. DNA polymerase X from the deadly African swine fever virus (Pol X) is a half-sized repair polymerase that catalyzes efficient dG:dGTP incorporation in addition to correct repair. Here we report the use of solution structures of Pol X in the free, binary (Pol X:MgdGTP), and ternary (Pol X:DNA:MgdGTP with dG:dGTP non-Watson-Crick pairing) forms, along with functional analyses, to show that Pol X uses multiple unprecedented strategies to achieve the mutagenic dG:dGTP incorporation. Unlike high fidelity polymerases, Pol X can prebind purine MgdNTP tightly and undergo a specific conformational change in the absence of DNA. The prebound MgdGTP assumes an unusual syn conformation stabilized by partial ring stacking with His115. Upon binding of a gapped DNA, also with a unique mechanism involving primarily helix αE, the prebound syn-dGTP forms a Hoogsteen base pair with the template anti-dG. Interestingly, while Pol X prebinds MgdCTP weakly, the correct dG:dCTP ternary complex is readily formed in the presence of DNA. H115A mutation disrupted MgdGTP binding and dG:dGTP ternary complex formation but not dG:dCTP ternary complex formation. The results demonstrate the first solution structural view of DNA polymerase catalysis, a unique DNA binding mode, and a novel mechanism for non-Watson-Crick incorporation by a low-fidelity DNA polymerase.
The formation of cytomimetic protocells that capture the physicochemical aspects of living cells is an important goal in bottom-up synthetic biology. Here, we recreated the crowded cytoplasm in liposome-based protocells and studied the kinetics of cell-free gene expression in these crowded containers. We found that diffusion of key components is affected not only by macromolecular crowding but also by enzymatic activity in the protocell. Surprisingly, size-dependent diffusion in crowded conditions yielded two distinct maxima for protein synthesis, reflecting the differential impact of crowding on transcription and translation. Our experimental data show, for the first time, that macromolecular crowding induces a switch from reaction to diffusion control and that this switch depends on the sizes of the macromolecules involved. These results highlight the need to control the physical environment in the design of synthetic cells.
Expansions of (CTG)·(CAG) repeated DNAs are the mutagenic cause of 14 neurological diseases, likely arising through the formation and processing of slipped-strand DNAs. These transient intermediates of repeat length mutations are formed by out-of-register mispairing of repeat units on complementary strands. The three-way slipped-DNA junction, at which the excess repeats slip out from the duplex, is a poorly understood feature common to these mutagenic intermediates. Here, we reveal that slipped junctions can assume a surprising number of interconverting conformations where the strand opposite the slip-out either is fully base paired or has one or two unpaired nucleotides. These unpaired nucleotides can also arise opposite either of the nonslipped junction arms. Junction conformation can affect binding by various structure-specific DNA repair proteins and can also alter correct nick-directed repair levels. Junctions that have the potential to contain unpaired nucleotides are repaired with a significantly higher efficiency than constrained fully paired junctions. Surprisingly, certain junction conformations are aberrantly repaired to expansion mutations: misdirection of repair to the non-nicked strand opposite the slip-out leads to integration of the excess slipped-out repeats rather than their excision. Thus, slipped-junction structure can determine whether repair attempts lead to correction or expansion mutations.
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