Nanoscale pores have potential to be used as biosensors and are an established tool for analysing the structure and composition of single DNA or RNA molecules 1-3 . Recently, nanopores have been used to measure the binding of enzymes to their DNA substrates 4,5 . In this technique, a polynucleotide bound to an enzyme is drawn into the nanopore by an applied voltage. The force exerted on the charged backbone of the polynucleotide by the electric field is used to examine the enzyme-polynucleotide interactions. Here we show that a nanopore sensor can accurately identify DNA templates bound in the catalytic site of individual DNA polymerase molecules. Discrimination among unbound DNA, binary DNA/polymerase complexes, and ternary DNA/polymerase/ deoxynucleotide triphosphate complexes was achieved in real time using finite state machine logic. This technique is applicable to numerous enzymes that bind or modify DNA or RNA including exonucleases, kinases and other polymerases.We describe a nanopore device that monitors ionic current through a single protein pore inserted in a lipid bilayer (Fig. 1a). The limiting aperture of the pore is just sufficient to accommodate single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) 6,7 , and the adjacent pore vestibule can accommodate doublestranded (duplex) DNA (dsDNA) 7-9 . In the absence of DNA, the open channel current (I o ) through the α-haemolysin pore is 60 pA at 180 mV applied potential in 0.3 M KCl. DNA capture in the nanopore results in a decrease in the current (I). The DNA resides in the pore for a time (t D ) until it leaves, moving to the trans compartment (Fig. 1b). These two parameters, I and t D , together with current noise, are typically used to report results from nanopore experiments 6,10-19 .We used a nanopore instrument to probe the interaction of the Klenow fragment (KF) of Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I with its DNA substrate. This substrate is a duplex DNA formed by base-pairing of a short ssDNA primer with a longer template DNA. The KF catalyses DNA replication by the sequential addition of nucleotides to the primer strand, dictated by Watson-Crick complementarity to the template strand 20 . In contrast with earlier studies examining Exonuclease I/DNA complexes 4 and EcoRI/DNA complexes 5 , our nanopore Capture and translocation of a model DNA template (14 bp hairpin with a 36-nucleotide 5′ overhang and 2′-3′ dideoxycytidine terminus) resulted in a cluster of events with a median duration of 1 ms and an average blockade amplitude I = 20 pA (Fig. 2a). When the KF (2 μM) was subsequently added to the cis compartment under conditions where catalytic activity had been demonstrated in separate experiments (see Supplementary Information, Fig. S1), a second population of events emerged with a 3-ms median dwell time and a higher blockade current (I = 23 pA, Fig. 2b). This class of events is enzyme-concentration-dependent (see Supplementary Information, Fig. S2 and Table S1), consistent with nanopore capture of a DNA/ KF binary complex.Addition of a deoxynucleotide triphosphat...
We propose that the primary defect in grp-derived embryos is a failure to replicate or repair DNA completely before mitotic entry during the late syncytial divisions. This suggests that wild-type grp functions in a developmentally regulated DNA replication/damage checkpoint operating during the late syncytial divisions. These results are discussed with respect to the proposed function of the chk1/rad27 gene.
Cytosine, 5-methylcytosine, and 5-hydroxymethylcytosine were identified during translocation of single DNA template strands through a modified Mycobacterium smegmatis porin A (M2MspA) nanopore under control of phi29 DNA polymerase. This identification was based on three consecutive ionic current states that correspond to passage of modified or unmodified CG dinucleotides and their immediate neighbors through the nanopore limiting aperture. To establish quality scores for these calls, we examined ∼3,300 translocation events for 48 distinct DNA constructs. Each experiment analyzed a mixture of cytosine-, 5-methylcytosine-, and 5-hydroxymethylcytosine-bearing DNA strands that contained a marker that independently established the correct cytosine methylation status at the target CG of each molecule tested. To calculate error rates for these calls, we established decision boundaries using a variety of machine-learning methods. These error rates depended upon the identity of the bases immediately 5′ and 3′ of the targeted CG dinucleotide, and ranged from 1.7% to 12.2% for a single-pass read. We estimate that Q40 values (0.01% error rates) for methylation status calls could be achieved by reading single molecules 5-19 times depending upon sequence context.MspA | epigenetics E pigenetic modifications of DNA help regulate gene transcription in biological cells. In mammals, 5-methylcytosine (mC) modification of CG dinucleotides is known to influence development (1, 2) and contribute to human diseases including cancer (3). Other modifications have been detected at carbon 5 of cytosine including 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (hmC) (4), and more recently 5-formylcytosine, and 5-carboxycytosine (5). Physiological roles for hmC in carcinogenesis and embryonic stem cell differentiation have been proposed (6).High-throughput techniques for mC detection are based on bisulfite treatment of genomic DNA (7). In the conventional assay, cytosine (but not mC nor hmC) is converted to uracil (8). Thus, positions not converted to uracil identify cytosines that were modified in the original genomic sequence. In a landmark paper, Lister et al. (9) used this technique to map genome-wide cytosine methylation in human embryonic stem cells and fetal lung fibroblasts at single-nucleotide precision. Recently, bisulfite strategies for discriminating between mC and hmC using the Tet1 enzyme (10) or by chemical modification of hmC (11) have been described.Single-molecule techniques have emerged as possible alternatives to bisulfite treatment for detecting epigenetic modifications of DNA (12). These single-molecule approaches share several useful features including few processing steps before sequence analysis, long reads that routinely exceed several thousand nucleotides, and the ability to read native DNA strands in heterogeneous mixtures. The most advanced of these single-molecule techniques, from Pacific Biosciences, uses fluorescence to detect labeled nucleotide triphosphates during daughter-strand elongation. This elongation is catalyzed by a DNA pol...
The Stubble-stubbloid (Sb-sbd) gene is required for hormone-dependent epithelial morphogenesis of imaginal discs of Drosophila, including the formation of bristles, legs, and wings. The gene has been cloned by using Sb-sbd-associated DNA lesions in a 20-kilobase (kb) region of a 263-kb genomic walk. The region specifies an -3.8-kb transcript that is induced by the steroid hormone 20-hydroxyecdysone in imaginal discs cultured in vitro. The conceptually translated protein is an apparent 786-residue type II transmembrane protein (N terminus in, C terminus out), including an intracellular N-terminal domain of at least 35 residues and an extracellular C-terminal trypsin-like serine protease domain of 244 residues. Sequence analyses indicate that the Sb-sbd-encoded protease could activate itself by proteolytic cleavage. Consistent with the cell-autonomous nature of the Sb-sbd bristle phenotype, a disulfide bond between cysteine residues in the noncatalytic N-terminal fragment and the C-terminal catalytic fragment could tether the protease to the membrane after activation. Both dominant Sb and recessive sbd mutations affect the organization of microfilament bundles during bristle morphogenesis. We propose that the Sb-sbd product has a dual function. (i) It acts through its proteolytic extraceliular domain to detach imaginal disc cells from extracellular matrices, and (it) it transmits an outside-to-inside signal to its intracellular domain to modify the cytoskeleton and facilitate cell shape changes underlying morphogenesis.The attachment of cells to extracellular substrates-for example, by integrins (1)-plays an important role in determining cell shape and the intracellular organization of the cytoskeleton. Likewise, detachment of cells from substrates also leads to profound changes in cell shape and cytoskeletal organization. In particular, cell surface-associated proteases have been shown to mediate cell shape changes by local degradation of extracellular matrices and by signaling the reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton (2, 3). Proteases are also implicated in morphogenesis of imaginal discs to form adult appendages in Drosophila (4-7). The formation of legs and wings from discs results in part from actin-and myosindependent cell shape changes in the disc epithelium elicited by the steroid hormone 20-hydroxyecdysone (20HE) (8). Later in development, specific disc cells undergo actinmediated cell shape changes to form bristles (9, 10). Stubblestubbloid (Sb-sbd) mutants cause failures in cell-shape changes required for both disc and bristle morphogenesis. Gain-of-function Sb mutations affect bristle morphogenesis in a dominant manner. Both Sb and allelic loss-of-function sbd mutations act recessively to affect disc morphogenesis, producing characteristically malformed legs and wings (11).The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. This article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. §1734 solely to indicate this fact.We show here...
We describe a method for direct tRNA sequencing using the Oxford Nanopore MinION. The principal technical advance is custom adapters that facilitate end-to-end sequencing of individual transfer RNA (tRNA) molecules at subnanometer precision. A second advance is a nanopore sequencing pipeline optimized for tRNA. We tested this method using purified E. coli tRNAfMet, tRNALys, and tRNAPhe samples. 76–92% of individual aligned tRNA sequence reads were full length. As a proof of concept, we showed that nanopore sequencing detected all 43 expected isoacceptors in total E. coli MRE600 tRNA as well as isodecoders that further define that tRNA population. Alignment-based comparisons between the three purified tRNAs and their synthetic controls revealed systematic nucleotide miscalls that were diagnostic of known modifications. Systematic miscalls were also observed proximal to known modifications in total E. coli tRNA alignments, including a highly conserved pseudouridine in the T loop. This work highlights the potential of nanopore direct tRNA sequencing as well as improvements needed to implement tRNA sequencing for human healthcare applications.
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