Taq DNA polymerase functions at elevated temperatures with fast conformational dynamics—regimes previously inaccessible to mechanistic, single-molecule studies. Here, single-walled carbon nanotube transistors recorded the motions of Taq molecules processing matched or mismatched template–deoxynucleotide triphosphate pairs from 22° to 85°C. By using four enzyme orientations, the whole-enzyme closures of nucleotide incorporations were distinguished from more rapid, 20-μs closures of Taq’s fingers domain testing complementarity and orientation. On average, one transient closure was observed for every nucleotide binding event; even complementary substrate pairs averaged five transient closures between each catalytic incorporation at 72°C. The rate and duration of the transient closures and the catalytic events had almost no temperature dependence, leaving all of Taq’s temperature sensitivity to its rate-determining open state.
Clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) and polymerases are powerful enzymes and their diverse applications in genomics, proteomics, and transcriptomics have revolutionized the biotechnology industry today. CRISPR has been widely adopted for genomic editing applications and Polymerases can efficiently amplify genomic transcripts via polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Further investigations into these enzymes can reveal specific details about their mechanisms that greatly expand their use. Single‐molecule techniques are an effective way to probe enzymatic mechanisms because they may resolve intermediary conformations and states with greater detail than ensemble or bulk biosensing techniques. This review discusses various techniques for sensing and manipulation of single biomolecules that can help facilitate and expedite these discoveries. Each platform is categorized as optical, mechanical, or electronic. The methods, operating principles, outputs, and utility of each technique are briefly introduced, followed by a discussion of their applications to monitor and control CRISPR and Polymerases at the single molecule level, and closing with a brief overview of their limitations and future prospects.
Nanoscale materials provide new opportunities to interface solid-state electronics with biomolecules and biochemical activity. For example, single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) have the special property of electronic resistance that is sensitive to single electrons. We have exploited this sensitivity to build nanoelectronic biosensors that monitor the biochemical activity of individual proteins [1]. As an attached protein moves, binds, or performs catalysis, its charged amino acid sidechains induce resistance fluctuations in the SWNT device that may be monitored with microsecond resolution [2]. Recently, we have used this measurement platform for single-molecule measurements of DNA polymerases [3]. Polymerases are the key enzymes for converting single-stranded DNA to double-stranded helices, the primary step in DNA replication, amplification, and most sequencing technologies. When a polymerase processing DNA is also attached to a SWNT device, the electrical signal provides a high-resolution readout of single-nucleotide incorporations and exciting possibilities for high-density, high-throughput electronic DNA sequencing. To investigate the feasibility of electronic DNA sequencing, we have compared single-molecule transduction by DNA polymerases from three different organisms. By working with multiple families of DNA polymerases, we have tested the applicability of the electronic technique while also generating detailed records of differences among the enzymes. For example, we observe an anomalous rate variability when measuring the polymerase from the bacillus phage φ29. Base incorporation rates average 20 s-1 for most the enzymes processing single-stranded DNA templates, but rates up to 200 and 400 s-1 occurred when φ29 encountered homopolymeric sequences of poly(dT) or poly(dC), respectively. When processing poly(dA) and poly(dG) sequences, on the other hand, φ29 had bursts of activity interrupted by pauses lasting 50 to 300 s. This sequence-dependent activity illustrates one way that single-molecule methods reveal information hidden in ensemble-based techniques. Another workhorse protein in DNA sequencing technologies is the DNA polymerase derived from the thermophilic bacteria Thermus aquaticus (Taq). Anomalous stability at high temperatures makes Taq a unique enzyme for the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and commercial amplification of DNA. In a first for single-molecule biophysics, SWNT devices have recorded Taq activity over a wide temperature range from 22 to 94 °C, including the typical PCR operating temperature of 72 °C. Even operating at this high temperature, the technique resolved Taq testing incoming nucleotides for complementarity and incorporating correct matches in the base-by-base construction of Watson-Crick pairs. The detailed recordings reveal the similarities of Taq’s operation to other, room temperature polymerases. [1] Y. Choi, et. al., Science 335, 319 (2012). [2] M. V. Akhterov, et. al., ACS Chem. Biol. 10, 1495 (2015). [3] T. J. Olsen et. al., JACS 135, 7855 (2013); O. T. Gul et. al., Biosensors 6, 29 (2016)
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