I. Chromosome structure and dynamics
Transcription
I. Chromosome structure and dynamics
Biological Physics of DNA, protein-DNA interactions, and Chromosomes Part I. Micromechanics of DNA and its interactions with proteins DNA and DNA-protein micromechanics (emphasis on single-DNA studies) DNA supercoiling and knotting Part II. Chromosomes bacterial chromosome – structure and dynamics eukaryote chromosome – structure and mechanics DNA-protein interactions DNA folding (packaging) looping < 1 pN contacts > few pN DNA processing (transcription, replication, recombination and repair) RNApol 40 pN Micromechanics important part of the story Molecular-biological forces work done ~ kBT reaction distances ~ nm 4 × 10 Joule work = force = -9 distance 10 meter -21 = 4 × 10 -12 Newton = 4 pN B-DNA double helix stiff polymer genetic memory element 1 base-pair = 0.34 nm 1 helix turn = 10 bp = 3.5 nm polyelectrolyte (2e-/bp) [but 150 mM ion conc so range of electrostatic interactions ~ 2 nm] Chemical bonds in dsDNA C G T A G A T C T A C G NDB ID: BDL042 TBP binding to dsDNA D.B. Nikolov, H. Chen, E.D. Halay, A. Hoffman, R.G. Roeder, S.K. Burley PNAS 1996 Bending Energy of an Elastic Rod L R Bending Energy = ? Bending Energy of an Elastic Rod L R Bending kT AL 1 kT AL 2 = = κ 2 Energy 2 R 2 For dsDNA A = 50 nm How long a DNA is bent 1 rad by kT? L R=L kT A L kT Bending Energy = = 2 2 L 2 DNA bends 1 rad about every A = 50 nm or 150 bp kT Entropic force scale = = 0.1 pN A DNAs longer than 150 bp (L >> A) A Every A along the molecule its tangent direction changes DNAs longer than 150 bp (L >> A) A Every A along the molecule its tangent direction changes Correlation in tangent direction decays away over contour length A DNAs longer than 150 bp (L >> A) A Every A along the molecule its tangent direction changes Correlation in tangent direction decays away over contour length A Average end-to-end distance = (2AL)1/2 L = 3 kb = 1µ circular DNA, ∆t=2 msec step length b=2A=100 nm Random walk overall size R = 2 AL = 300 nm L = 50 kb = 16 µ DNA in aqueous solution b=2A=100 nm R = bL R = 2 AL = 1300 nm This is only 1/90 of a 4.5 Mb E. coli chromosome Micromanipulation of a single dsDNA (S. Smith et al, Science 1992) exploits AT and GC base pairing 49 kb λ dsDNA ss overhangs on ends ssDNA +DIG antiDIG microscope slide ≡ ssDNA +biotin avidin +3 µ bead 5’-GGGCGGCGACCT-biotin 5’-GGGCGGCGACCT---------------CCCGCCGCTGGA-5’ 49140 bp dig-CCCGCCGCTGGA-5’ DNA single-molecule elasticity Entropic regime: kBT/A = 0.08 pN z/L = 0.5 Elastic regime: f = kBT/A to 3 kBT/nm 1 kBT/nm = 4 pN z/L = 0.9 > 3 kBT/nm = 12 pN Single-DNA elasticity Smith, Bustamante, Finzi Science 1992, 98 kb These data from Strick et al Science 1995, 50 kb Cluzel, Chatenay et al, Science 1996, 50 kb see also Cui et al Science 1996 Entropic elasticity of dsDNA dr du κ= u= ds ds E 1 2 f = u ⊥q Aq + ∑ kT 2 L q kT (suitable for u⊥q 2 = f > k BT / A) L Aq 2 + f / kT k BT z / L = 1− 4 Af fit to expt data gives A = 50 nm (150 bp) 1 kBT/nm = 4.1 pN (300 K) 2 Science (1994) Macromolecules (1995) PRE (1995) A,B: Single-DNA polymer elasticity k BT f = A z 1 + − 1 2 L 4(1 − z / L) A = 50 nm Regimes A,B sensitive to DNA deformation by protein ‘effective persistence length’ Proteins that organize DNA can easily be studied by micromanipulation naked DNA + loops + sharp bends Study the action of these proteins via mechanical response of the DNA they are binding to Build chromosome-like protein-DNA complexes LEF-1 (Mouse) HU (E. coli) HMGD (Human) IHF (E. coli) DNA-bending proteins: simple compaction effect Yan and JM, PRE 2003 z k BT / A = 1− +L L 4f 2 k BT 1 f = +L 4A 1− z / L NHP6A HU Effective persistence length reduced by protein-generated Bends Easy to detect bends A = 150 bp apart 20 kD DNA-bending proteins roughly 2 nm in size, cover 10 to 20 bp DNA-bending proteins: compaction effect Yan and JM, PRE 2003 Skoko et al, Biochem 2004 NHP6A HU DNA-bending proteins: compaction effect Yan and JM, PRE 2003 Dame et al, PNAS 2004 Skoko et al, Biochem 2004 NHP6A 3,5,10,33,75 nM HU “bimodal” C: Double helix stretching elasticity z f = f0 L f 0 = 1100 pN f0 Y = 2 = 300 MPa πr A,B vs C: Bending vs stretching elasticity Y = 300 MPa b = 100 nm π Y r4 b= 2 k BT D,E: Overstretching of DNA (S-DNA) 60 pN = 15 kBT / nm = 5 kBT / bp Work done ~ 3 kBT / bp DNA melting protein binding thermal fluctuation RecA protein polymerizes onto DNA and elongates it by 1.5x Stasiak, Di Capua, Koller JMB 1981 h Rad51 Sc Rad51 Ec RecA 9.1 nm/turn 6.16 RecA/turn 18 DNA bases/turn 0.5 nm/base Yu et al PNAS 98, 8419 (2001) EM data lengthening in microns RecA binding to DNA under tension Leger et al, PNAS 1998 DNA Topology dsDNA shape and free energy depends on values of topological ‘charges’ DNA Supercoiling Interlinking of two DNAs Knotting of a DNA Lk strand links Ca molecule links knot type Cells control DNA topology (topoisomerases) Statistical mechanics of polymers with constrained topology is interesting physics Double helix linking number Lk two strands are RH-linked once every 10.5 bp Lk0 = N / (10.5 bp) = L / (3.5 nm) σ = (Lk − Lk0) / Lk0 Energy cost to twist dsDNA θ L E C 2 = θ kT 2L θ 2 L = C -C = 75 to 100 nm -one thermal twist every ~300 nm or 1000 bp -linkage changes |σ| < 0.01 have small effect on DNA conformation σ = − 0.033 σ = − 0.062 (in vivo) σ = 0.000 (relaxed) σ = − 0.016 Boles, White, Cozzarelli JMB 1991 Plectonemic Supercoiling ( |σ| > 0.01 ) Separation of helix repeat (3.5 nm) and self-crossing distance (~ A = 50 nm) allows separation of local (twisting) and nonlocal (writhing) contributions to ∆Lk Lk = Tw + Wr Wr ≈ -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 dsDNA crossings can soak up ∆Lk, reducing Tw and therefore “screening” the twisting energy (RH) Plectonemic Supercoiling ( |σ| > 0.01 ) E C 2 A 2 = θ + ∫ ds κ kT 2L 2 θ = 2π (∆ Lk − Wr) -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 Wr ≈ n for n-crossing tight plectoneme Free energy extensive F ~ L f(σ) (Experiments: F ≈ 10 kT Nbp σ2) RH Plectonemic Supercoiling ( |σ| > 0.01 ) E C 2 A 2 = θ + ∫ ds κ kT 2L 2 θ = 2π (∆ Lk − Wr) +1 +1 +1 +1 +1 Wr ≈ n for n-crossing tight plectoneme Free energy extensive F ~ L f(σ) (Experiments: F ≈ 10 kT Nbp σ2) LH Branching of Plectonemic Supercoils is Entropically Favored One ‘Y’ branch point per 2 kb Large supercoiled DNA is annealed branched polymer, R ~ L1/2 Internal ‘Slithering’ Dynamics Internal ‘slithering’ motion in addition to usual polymer bending modes - changes branching & juxtapositions of distance sequences No-branching slithering time ~L3 Slithering relaxation time ~ L2 (JM Physica A 1997) Control of plectonemic supercoiling (E. coli): 1. DNA gyrase – injects ∆Lk = – 2, ATP-powered +1 -1 2. Topoisomerase I – cuts one strand, Lk relaxes thermally 3. Transcription – generates + (ahead) and – supercoils (behind) Also, Lk of DNA is modified when bound to proteins (contributes -0.02 to net σ in E. coli) Knotting probability for phantom circular Gaussian polymer Punknot = e − L /( 260 b ) L >> b Characteristic length for a (trefoil) knot is 260 segments (520 persistence lengths = 78 kb for ds DNA) Where does this big polymer length scale come from? Unknotting probability is exponential in chain length for Gaussian and SA polymers SA u ga i an ss dsD NA Koniaris & Muthukumar PRL 1991 ‘Knotting length’ drastically increases with self-avoidance (gaussian) (dsDNA) (denatured RNA or protein) (Self-avoiding) Koniaris & Muthukumar PRL 1991 (n.b. collapsed polymer case) DNA Equilibrium Knotting Probability 5.6 kb 8.6 kb 0.005 0.015 SW expt, SW expt, theory Theory 10 kb 0.02 RCV expt, theory 100 kb ~ 0.5 (?) theory 0.1 M NaCl ionic conditions, ring closure Knots are rare on < 10 kb dsDNAs Pknot = 0.01 Punknot = 0.99 Fknot − Funknot = 4.5 kT Cellular control of knotting topology: Topoisomerase II ∆Lk = ± 2, ATP-powered (Roca lect) +1 -1 (Topo II in eukaryotes, Topo IV in E. coli) Topo II is small (10 nm) compared to the size of a 10 kb plasmid (500 nm) or a whole chromosome and cannot determine topology by itself… Topo II+ATP steady-state vs thermal equilibrium (Rybenkov et al, Science 1997) ea t s e at t -s y d = ( )2 m u i r li ib u eq Entanglement-reducing effect of plectonemic supercoiling •experimentally observed (Zechiedrich et al 1997) •simulations show this effect (Vologodskii & Cozz. BJ 1998) •can be discussed in terms of free energy (Marko PRE 1999) Local DNA compaction can reduce entanglement Punknot e − L /( 300b ) L >> b = −8π 2b/L L<b 1 − e Make L smaller, b bigger by local compaction DNA DNA + protein DNA + many proteins = chromosome bp, genes, chromosomes 1 bp = 0.34 nm 1 gene ~ 103 to 104 bp 1 chromosome ~ 103 to 104 genes ~ 106 to 109 bp E. coli chromosome (1) ~ 4.5 106 bp (1.5 mm) human chromosomes (23) ~ 108 bp each (3 cm) newt chromosome (11) ~ 3 109 bp each (1 m) Bacterial Chromosome 1. Folding scheme -loops and supercoiling 2. Communication processes -slithering over >10 kb distances 3. Chromosome is laid out linearly E. Coli - one chromosome 4.5 Mb = 1.5 mm 2 microns E. Coli - one chromosome 4.5 Mb = 1.5 mm Random walk estimate of free coil size: 2A L = 0.1 µm × 1500 µm = 13 µm 2 microns dsDNA is at high concentration inside E. coli E. coli chromosome = 4.5 Mb = 15,000 segments nucleoid volume < 1 µm3 = 1000 segments3 so >15 segments per segment-length-cubed (concentration of DNA ~ a few mg/ml) Wang, Possoz, Sherratt Genes Dev 2005 E. coli (phase contrast) J Struct Biol 2001, Bar 5 um E. coli chromosome dragged out of lysed cell into gel Bars 20 µm Classical loop domain model 50 to 100 loops Typical loop 60 to 100 kb 20 to 30 µm Loop anchors? ‘Star Polymer’ L=1500 µm DNA n=100 loops L/(2n) DNA per `bristle’ Chromosome size = (2AL / 2n )1/2 ~ 1 µm (2A = 0.1 µm) Plectonemic Supercoiling One branch/2 kb ‘branched star’ Chromosome size still roughly = ( 2AL / 2n )1/2 ≈ 1 µm DNA near DNA DNA condensation Short unconstrained DNA segment < 1000 bp (300 nm) DNA-DNA adhesion (polyions) Loop domain elements (proteins?) Bending/coiling (HU, IHF, SMC) Condensed DNA ‘disappears’ from total L in random-walk estimates Self-avoidance increases Studies of communication on the bacterial chromosome and dynamics of supercoiled “domains” Slithering Random collision/bending “Random coil” collisions Contour length between sites = L Typical distance d = (AL)1/2 Diffusion constant D= kT/ (ηd) Time to diffuse distance d τ = d2/D τ = (η A3 / kT) (L/A)3/2 τ = (30 µsec) (L/A)3/2 ≈ 20 msec for 10 kb Typical time to first collsion (Doi 1976) τ = (η A3 / kT) (L/A)3/2 ln(L/A) Effective viscosity for random collision? “Slithering” inside a supercoil Entire coil of length L must move on order of distance L Diffusion constant D= kT / (ηL) Time to diffuse distance L τ = L2/D τ = (η A3 / kT) (L/A)3 τ = (30 µsec) (L/A)3 e.g. for L = 2 kb, L/A = 20 gives τ = 0.2 sec Branching of superhelix neglected in this simple argument PRE 1995 Slithering inside a supercoil + branching One Y every 2 kb. Large supercoil is ‘living branched polymer’. More complicated due to possibilities of: branch birth/death branch & branch-clump ‘sliding’ Scaling behavior (L is intersite distance) τ = (200 µsec) (L/A)2 ≈ 1 sec for 10 kb 100 sec for 100 kb Physica A 1998, 2001 Resolvase only acts on scDNA targets separated by 3 RH nodes Resolvase cuts efficiently over 10 kb in vivo Barriers to supercoil motion are stochastic Deng, Stein, Higgins Mol Micro 2005 Rapid growth Higgins, Yang, Fu, Roth, J Bact 1996 Not growing 100 nm 500 nm Postow, Hardy, Asuaga, Cozzarelli, Genes Dev 2004 Visualization of small E. coli loop domains Teleman AA, Graumann PL, Lin DCH, Grossman AD, Losick R Curr Biol 1998 (B. subtilis) Rapid and sequential movement of individual chromosomal loci to specific subcellular locations during bacterial DNA replication (Caulobacter) Viollier, Thanbichler, McGrath, West, Meewan, McAdams, Shapiro PNAS 2004 Chromosome and Replisome Dynamics in E. coli (E. coli) Bates, Kleckner Cell 2005 Progressive segregation of the E. coli chromosome Nielsen, Li, Youngren, Hansen, Austin Mol Micro 2006 “Linear” nucleoid One Y branch/2 kb 200 20 kb clumps along ~1000 nm One clump/50 nm Chromosome size determined by inner “circuit” Still question of what are cross-linkers Eukaryote Chromosomes 1. Chromosomes are made of a DNA-protein fiber, one nucleosome/200 bp (‘chromatin fiber’) 2. Between cell divisions chromosomes are dispersed 3. During cell division chromosomes are formed into isolated bodies (‘mitotic chromosomes’) 4. ‘Condensin’ SMC protein complexes play a vital role in this process 5. Combined micromechanical-biochemical properties of mitotic chromosomes Nucleosome (8 ‘histone’ proteins + 146 bp DNA) basic organizational unit of chromosomes K. Luger, A.W. Maeder, R.K. Richmond, D.F. Sargent, T.J. Richmond, Nature 1997. String of Nucleosomes = Chromatin Fiber 10 mM NaCl 10 nm 100 mM NaCl 30 nm •octamer+146 bp DNA + linker histone+20-50 bp DNA, repeated every 180-200 bp •extensible polymer (Cui & Bustamante, PNAS 2000) •cm-long DNAs, mm-long chromatin fibers •compaction factor, physical properties not clear •cell-cycle dependence of chromatin structure •enzyme modifications of chromatin structure NSB 2001 Xenopus egg extract + λ DNA (48.5 kb = 16.5 µm) Ladoux et al PNAS 2000 Compacted chromatin ~ 1/10 DNA length Nucleosome pop-off (buffer) > 15 pN Force constant ~ 10 pN Persistence length ~ 30 nm (?) WD ~ 50 nm x 15 pN = 180 kT = 120 kcal/mol Nonequilibrium crossing of large free energy barrier to nucl removal In-plane magnetic tweezer (Yan Jie) 97 kb 32.8 µm dimer of λ •micropipette holds left 3 µm bead •right bead under 1 pN tension applied by magnet to right Chromatin (nucleosome) assembly onto 97 kb DNA against 1 pN, Yan Jie (collab. Tom Maresca, Rebecca Heald, UC Berkeley) •Xenopus high-speed interphase extract, diluted w/ buffer (Ladoux et al PNAS 2000, Bennink et al NSB 2001) •32.8 m DNA becomes 3.6 m fiber (400 nucl) in 600 sec •Starting point for chromatin structure studies ‘in extractio’ Force-controlled nucleosome assembly/disassembly, -ATP (a) 2.8 pN (c) 3.5 pN (b) 2.8 pN (d) 4.5 pN 79 kb bare DNA 40 (f) 9.6 pN 15 kb 36 (g) 32 28 3.9 Count (e) 15 pN Length (µm) 4.0 3.8 24 20 16 12 8 4 3.7 0 0 50 100 150 200 250 Time (sec) 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 220 Step size (nm) Nucleosome open-close equilibrium (extract) ~ 3 pN ∆G ~ 50 nm x 3 pN = 35 kT = 25 kcal/mol N +ATP stimulates processive opening/closing events (a) -ATP 3.5 pN (b) +ATP 3.5 pN What ATPase is responsible for this? Plan to use antibodies to deplete specific enzymes (ISWI family chromatin remodeling enzymes) Add purified enzymes to assembled fibers Chromatin organization - between cell divisions Attachments/loops every ~100 kb (Jackson et al 1990) Territories (T. Cremer et al CSHSQB 1993 JMB 1999) Self-contact map consistent with RW, b~60 nm (J. Dekker et al Science 2002) Random-walk structure R = (bL)1/2 at two scales, suggesting both b = 60 nm and Mbp loop structure (Sachs et al PNAS 1995) Diffusive ~1 µm motions in vivo suggesting polymer motion of loops of chromatin (Marshall et al Curr. Biol. 1997) (1.5 µm)2/Mbp = (50 nm)2/kb + larger-scale loop structure Sachs, Trask, Yokota, Hearst PNAS 1995 (also JMB 1995) Levi, Ruan, Plutz, Belmont, Gratton BPJ 2005 +ATP 2x10-4 µm2/s 3x10-3 µm2/s -ATP Bar: 20 µm Paulson & Laemmli Cell 12, 817 1977 Stack & Anderson Chromosome Res. 9, 175 (2001) Compacted Mitotic Chromatid A •Suggested by observed loops released from de-proteinized metaphase chromosomes (Laemmli et al, 1977) B •Suggested by other EM studies (Belmont et al, 1987) New development in 1990s - SMCs •ATPase essential for chromosome compaction during mitosis •Introducing antibodies to block leads to chromosome disassembly (Hirano and Mitchison Cell 1994) •Related proteins involved in a variety of chromosome dynamics •Basic structure is long (0.1 µm) heterodimeric (2 x 1200 aa) hinged stick •Thought to be able to switch conformation possibly from open to closed •Homologues found in eubacterial (E. coli MukB) (Nasmyth, Haering ARBiochem 2005) SMCs are essential to form and maintain mitotic chromosomes (Hirano and Mitchison JCB 1993) −XCAP-C before assembly Native extract −XCAP-C after (10’) (30’) 10 µm +ATP Strick, Kawaguchi, Hirano Curr Biol 2004 -ATP +AMP-PNP http://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/ narcam/idguide/rsnewt.htm Extraction of a mitotic chromosome from a newt cell M.G. Poirier Ph.D. `01 Native mitotic chromosomes are elastic Y=300 Pa Elastic regime: x < 5 f0 = 1 nN Y = 300 Pa Poisson ratio = +0.08 Poirier et al Mol Biol Cell 2000 Shifting local ionic conditions 100 mM MgCl2 in culture buffer Ionic strength shifts can unfold mitotic chromosome in < 1 sec Reversible for short (< 100 sec) exposures Swelling and condensation isotropic Na+ < 50 mM : decondensed (Coulomb repulsion opens chromatin fiber) 50 to 200 mM : native >500 mM : decondensed (‘puffed’ - screening of interactions) Mg++ (added to 100 mM NaCl of extracellular buffer) 10 to 100 mM : condensed (bridging) >100 mM : decondensed (screening) (NH3)6Co+++ (added to 100 mM NaCl of extracellular buffer) ~1 to 150 mM : condensed (bridging) > 150 mM : decondensed (screening) Microscopic network version of experiments on actin, DNA (J. Cell. Biochem. 2002) What happens when we cut DNA only? MC nuclease digestion, 0.1 nN initial tension Force (nN) Force vs time, spray w/ 1 nM MNase Time (sec) Extension after light MC nuclease digestion at zero tension Invisible fibers cut by puff of 1 nM MNase Structural element of chromosome is chromatin Non-DNA components not tightly connected Restriction enzymes cut up chromosomes Longer recog sequences suppress cutting Buffer with no enzyme Dra I TTT^AAA Hinc II GT(T/C)^(A/G)AC Cac8 I Alu I GCN^NGC AG^CT (1/256) Network with node spacing of around 50 kb Proteolysis reduces but does not eliminate elastic response a 0s b 30 90 270 390 0s Increasing trypsin digestion c 120 180 250 Increasing proteinase K digestion d 100 nM trypsin 0s 60 500 nM proteinase K 0s 30 90 270 30 60 390 90 120 L.H. Pope MBC 2006, see also experiments of Maniotis 1997, Almagro 2004 Proteolysis leads to a strong swelling of the mitotic chromosome but never breaks or dissolves it Chromosome still elastic with well-defined shape after >30 min proteolysis 0s 30 60 120 240 480 Enhanced contrast 840 Extensive proteinase K digestion 1320 L.H. Pope MBC 2006 1320 Problems to work on: What molecules and organizational principles define bacterial chromosome domains, and how dynamic and fluid are those domains in the cell? What is the mechanism of condensin SMCs, and how does that mechanism contribute to mitotic chromosome shape and structure? How does large-scale (> 10 kb) Brownian motion of chromosomal domains affect biologically relevant chromosome dynamics? Michael Poirier, Abhijit Sarkar Chee Xiong, Dunja Skoko, Yan Jie Hua Bai, Botao Xiao, Lisa Pope University of Illinois at Chicago Rebecca Heald, Tom Maresca UCB Reid Johnson UCLA NSF-DMR, Whitaker Foundation, ACS-PRF, Research Corporation, Johnson & Johnson