Author:
Hoyer Maria,Crevenna Alvaro H.,Kitel Radoslaw,Willems Kherim,Czub Miroslawa,Dubin Grzegorz,Van Dorpe Pol,Holak Tad A.,Lamb Don C.
Abstract
AbstractProtein assembly plays an important role throughout all phyla of life, both physiologically and pathologically. In particular, aggregation and polymerization of proteins are key-strategies that regulate cellular function. In recent years, methods to experimentally study the assembly process on a single-molecule level have been developed. This progress concomitantly has triggered the question of how to analyze this type of single-filament data adequately and what experimental conditions are necessary to allow a meaningful interpretation of the analysis. Here, we developed two analysis methods for single-filament data: the visitation analysis and the average-rate analysis. We benchmarked and compared both approaches with the classic dwell-time-analysis frequently used to study microscopic association and dissociation rates. In particular, we tested the limitations of each analysis method along the lines of the signal-to-noise ratio, the sampling rate, and the labeling efficiency and bleaching rate of the fluorescent dyes used in single-molecule fluorescence experiments. Finally, we applied our newly developed methods to study the monomer assembly of actin at the single-molecule-level in the presence of the class II nucleator Cappuccino and the WH2 repeats of Spire. For Cappuccino, our data indicated fast elongation circumventing a nucleation phase whereas, for Spire, we found that the four WH2 motifs are not sufficient to promote de novo nucleation of actin.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Programa Operacional Competitividade e Internacionalização
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
National Science Centre, Poland
Nanosystems Initative Munich
Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich
LMUInnovativ BioImaging Network
Center for NanoScience
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
1 articles.
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