Cellular functions are fundamentally regulated by intracellular temperature, which influences biochemical reactions inside a cell. Despite the important contributions to biological and medical applications that it would offer, intracellular temperature mapping has not been achieved. Here we demonstrate the first intracellular temperature mapping based on a fluorescent polymeric thermometer and fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy. The spatial and temperature resolutions of our thermometry were at the diffraction limited level (200 nm) and 0.18–0.58 °C. The intracellular temperature distribution we observed indicated that the nucleus and centrosome of a COS7 cell, both showed a significantly higher temperature than the cytoplasm and that the temperature gap between the nucleus and the cytoplasm differed depending on the cell cycle. The heat production from mitochondria was also observed as a proximal local temperature increase. These results showed that our new intracellular thermometry could determine an intrinsic relationship between the temperature and organelle function.
Visualization of single actin filaments by fluorescence microscopy led to the development of new in vitro assays for analysing actomyosin-based motility at the molecular level. The ability to manipulate actin filaments with a microneedle or an optical trap combined with position-sensitive detectors has enabled direct measurements of nanometre displacements and piconewton forces exerted by individual myosin molecules. To elucidate how myosin generates movement, it is necessary to understand how ATP hydrolysis is coupled to mechanical work at the level of the single molecule. But the most sensitive microscopic ATPase assay available still requires over 1,000 myosins. To enhance the sensitivity of such assays, we have refined epifluorescence and total internal reflection microscopies to visualize single fluorescent dye molecules. We report here that this approach can be used directly to image single fluorescently labelled myosin molecules and detect individual ATP turnover reactions. In contrast to previously reported single fluorescent molecule imaging methods, which used specimens immobilized on an air-dried surface, our method allows video-rate imaging of single molecules in aqueous solution, and hence can be applied to the study of many types of enzymes and biomolecules.
Kinesin is a two-headed motor protein that powers organelle transport along microtubules. Many ATP molecules are hydrolysed by kinesin for each diffusional encounter with the microtubule. Here we report the development of a new assay in which the processive movement of individual fluorescently labelled kinesin molecules along a microtubule can be visualized directly; this observation is achieved by low-background total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy in the absence of attachment of the motor to a cargo (for example, an organelle or bead). The average distance travelled after a binding encounter with a microtubule is 600 nm, which reflects a approximately 1% probability of detachment per mechanical cycle. Surprisingly, processive movement could still be observed at salt concentrations as high as 0.3 M NaCl. Truncated kinesin molecules having only a single motor domain do not show detectable processive movement, which is consistent with a model in which kinesin's two force-generating heads operate by a hand-over-hand mechanism.
The first methodology to measure intracellular temperature is described. A highly hydrophilic fluorescent nanogel thermometer developed for this purpose stays in the cytoplasm and emits stronger fluorescence at a higher temperature. Thus, intracellular temperature variations associated with biological processes can be monitored by this novel thermometer with a temperature resolution of better than 0.5 degrees C.
Filamentous structures are abundant in cells. Relatively rigid filaments, such as microtubules and actin, serve as intracellular scaffolds that support movement and force, and their mechanical properties are crucial to their function in the cell. Some aspects of the behaviour of DNA, meanwhile, depend critically on its flexibility-for example, DNA-binding proteins can induce sharp bends in the helix. The mechanical characterization of such filaments has generally been conducted without controlling the filament shape, by the observation of thermal motions or of the response to external forces or flows. Controlled buckling of a microtubule has been reported, but the analysis of the buckled shape was complicated. Here we report the continuous control of the radius of curvature of a molecular strand by tying a knot in it, using optical tweezers to manipulate the strand's ends. We find that actin filaments break at the knot when the knot diameter falls below 0.4 microm. The pulling force at breakage is around 1 pN, two orders of magnitude smaller than the tensile stress of a straight filament. The flexural rigidity of the filament remained unchanged down to this diameter. We have also knotted a single DNA molecule, opening up the possibility of studying curvature-dependent interactions with associated proteins. We find that the knotted DNA is stronger than actin.
Using total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy, we have directly observed individual interactions of single RNA polymerase molecules with a single molecule of lambda-phage DNA suspended in solution by optical traps. The interactions of RNA polymerase molecules were not homogeneous along DNA. They dissociated slowly from the positions of the promoters and sequences common to promoters at a rate of approximately 0.66 s-1, which was more than severalfold smaller than the rate at other positions. The association rate constant for the slow dissociation sites was 9.2 x 10(2) bp-1 M-1 s-1. The frequency of binding to the fast dissociation sites was dependent on the A-T composition; it was larger in the AT-rich regions than in the GC-rich regions. RNA polymerase molecules on the fast dissociation sites underwent linear diffusion (sliding) along DNA. The binding to the slow dissociation sites was greatly enhanced when DNA was released to a relaxed state, suggesting that the binding depended on the strain exerted on the DNA. The present method is potentially applicable to the examination of a wide variety of protein-nucleic acid interactions, especially those involved in the process of transcription.
DNA segregation ensures the stable inheritance of genetic material prior to cell division. Many bacterial chromosomes and low-copy plasmids, such as the plasmids P1 and F, employ a three-component system to partition replicated genomes: a partition site on the DNA target, typically called parS, a partition site binding protein, typically called ParB, and a Walker-type ATPase, typically called ParA, which also binds non-specific DNA. In vivo, the ParA family of ATPases forms dynamic patterns over the nucleoid, but how ATP-driven patterning is involved in partition is unknown. We reconstituted and visualized ParA-mediated plasmid partition inside a DNA-carpeted flowcell, which acts as an artificial nucleoid. ParA and ParB transiently bridged plasmid to the DNA carpet. ParB-stimulated ATP hydrolysis by ParA resulted in ParA disassembly from the bridging complex and from the surrounding DNA carpet, which led to plasmid detachment. Our results support a diffusion-ratchet model, where ParB on the plasmid chases and redistributes the ParA gradient on the nucleoid, which in turn mobilizes the plasmid. The EMBO Journal (2013Journal ( ) 32, 1238Journal ( -1249Journal ( . doi:10.1038Journal ( / emboj.2013 IntroductionHow is energy used to transport and spatially organize large objects, such as DNA, in a cell? In eukaryotes, a mechanically driven mitotic spindle apparatus separates chromosomes. In bacteria, the most common DNA segregation mechanism employed by chromosomes and plasmids is still unclear. All bacterial chromosomes and most naturally occurring plasmids are of low-copy number, and many employ active segregation (or partition) systems to ensure inheritance. Partition systems in bacteria are minimalistic, involving only three principal components: an NTPase that drives partition, a partition site on the DNA target, and a partition site binding protein that forms a large partition complex on the DNA target. The most prevalent class of partition systems in the microbial world use ParA-type ATPases that carry a deviant Walker-type active site, but the mechanism remains elusive.The plasmids P1 and F are stably maintained in Escherichia coli and their partition systems are paradigms for studying ParA-mediated DNA segregation. The three essential plasmidencoded components are ParA (or F SopA)-the ATPase, ParB (or F SopB)-the partition site binding protein, and parS (or F sopC)-the partition site on the plasmid. ParBs load onto and around their cognate partition site to form partition complexes, which have been observed as punctate foci in vivo by fluorescence microscopy (Hirano et al, 1998;Erdmann et al, 1999;Lim et al, 2005;Adachi et al, 2006;Sengupta et al, 2010). ParA ATPase activity is critical to the partition process (Ebersbach and Gerdes, 2001;Fung et al, 2001;Barilla et al, 2005;Pratto et al, 2008). ParA alone has weak ATPase activity that is mildly stimulated by non-specific DNA (nsDNA) or ParB (Davis et al, 1992;Watanabe et al, 1992). Together, ParB and DNA synergistically stimulate ParA ATPase activity. But...
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