Light Seminars
October 18, 2013
L4H SEMINAR DAVID RUEDA 'Watching AID/APOBEC3G Scanning Single Stranded and Transcribed DNA with Single Molecule Resolution'
L4H SEMINAR DAVID RUEDA 'Watching AID/APOBEC3G Scanning Single Stranded and Transcribed DNA with Single Molecule Resolution'
DAVID RUEDA
Friday, October 18, 2013, 10:30. Seminar Room
DAVID RUEDA
Single Molecule Imaging Group, MRC Clinical Sciences Centre, Imperial College London, UK
DAVID RUEDA
Single Molecule Imaging Group, MRC Clinical Sciences Centre, Imperial College London, UK
The activation-induced deoxycytidine deaminase (AID) is a member the Apobec family of enzymes that catalyzes C to U deamination on ssDNA tri-nucleotide motifs. In B cells, it is required to generate antibody diversity by initiating somatic hypermutation (SHM) in the variable region of immunoglobulin genes and class-switch recombination (CSR) in immunoglobulin switch regions. In turn, SHM and CSR are required to generate high-affinity antibodies that bind and neutralize invading antigens. Thus, AID plays an indispensable role in causing mutational diversity to enhance fitness and optimize the immune response.
Here, we have used single-molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer (smFRET) to visualize co-transcriptional scanning of AID. Our data show that AID can follow an active RNA polymerase directionally and processively with speeds upwards of 200 nt/s. However, transcription-stalling leads to bidirectional scanning in the transcription bubble, which in turn, provides AID the necessary time window to carry out deaminations. In bear ssDNA, AID scanning is slow (~1 s-1), random and bi-directional. The enzyme remains bound to the ssDNA for ~250 s on average. During this time, it can scan large (>70 nt) ssDNA regions, and it exhibits ‘quasi-localization’ near favorable deamination motifs. AID also creases the ssDNA during scanning in a sequence dependant manner.
Friday, October 18, 2013, 10:30. Seminar Room
Hosted by Prof. Melike Lakadamyali
Friday, October 18, 2013, 10:30. Seminar Room
Hosted by Prof. Melike Lakadamyali
Light Seminars
October 18, 2013
L4H SEMINAR DAVID RUEDA 'Watching AID/APOBEC3G Scanning Single Stranded and Transcribed DNA with Single Molecule Resolution'
L4H SEMINAR DAVID RUEDA 'Watching AID/APOBEC3G Scanning Single Stranded and Transcribed DNA with Single Molecule Resolution'
DAVID RUEDA
Friday, October 18, 2013, 10:30. Seminar Room
DAVID RUEDA
Single Molecule Imaging Group, MRC Clinical Sciences Centre, Imperial College London, UK
DAVID RUEDA
Single Molecule Imaging Group, MRC Clinical Sciences Centre, Imperial College London, UK
The activation-induced deoxycytidine deaminase (AID) is a member the Apobec family of enzymes that catalyzes C to U deamination on ssDNA tri-nucleotide motifs. In B cells, it is required to generate antibody diversity by initiating somatic hypermutation (SHM) in the variable region of immunoglobulin genes and class-switch recombination (CSR) in immunoglobulin switch regions. In turn, SHM and CSR are required to generate high-affinity antibodies that bind and neutralize invading antigens. Thus, AID plays an indispensable role in causing mutational diversity to enhance fitness and optimize the immune response.
Here, we have used single-molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer (smFRET) to visualize co-transcriptional scanning of AID. Our data show that AID can follow an active RNA polymerase directionally and processively with speeds upwards of 200 nt/s. However, transcription-stalling leads to bidirectional scanning in the transcription bubble, which in turn, provides AID the necessary time window to carry out deaminations. In bear ssDNA, AID scanning is slow (~1 s-1), random and bi-directional. The enzyme remains bound to the ssDNA for ~250 s on average. During this time, it can scan large (>70 nt) ssDNA regions, and it exhibits ‘quasi-localization’ near favorable deamination motifs. AID also creases the ssDNA during scanning in a sequence dependant manner.
Friday, October 18, 2013, 10:30. Seminar Room
Hosted by Prof. Melike Lakadamyali
Friday, October 18, 2013, 10:30. Seminar Room
Hosted by Prof. Melike Lakadamyali
All Insight Seminars
Light Seminars
December 11, 2013
L4H SEMINAR JEAN FRANCOIS LEGER 'Exploring the Functions of the Brain in Vivo with Two-Photon Microscopy: the Case of the Tactile Cortex of Rat'
Light Seminars
November 26, 2013
L4H SEMINAR KHALID SALAITA 'Using Light to Visualize Molecular Forces in Cells'
Light Seminars
November 14, 2013
L4H SEMINAR HATICE ALTUG 'Integrated Nanoplasmonic Systems for Ultrasensitive Spectroscopy and High-Throughput Bio-Detection'
Light Seminars
November 6, 2013
L4H Seminar MARIE-CLAIRE SCHANNE-KLEIN'In Situ Visulalization of Collagen Architecture in Biological Tissues Using Polarization-Resolved SHG Microscopy'
Light Seminars
October 30, 2013
L4H Seminar ALFRED J. MEIXNER 'Tip-Enhanced Nanometer Scale Optical Imaging And Spectroscopy'
Light Seminars
September 27, 2013
L4H SEMINAR SEBASTIAN DEINDL 'A novel nucleosome remodeling mechanism revealed by single-molecule fluorescence microscopy'
Light Seminars
September 23, 2013
L4H SEMINAR VALENTINA EMILIANI 'Two-photon optogenetics by wave front shaping of ultrafast pulses'
Light Seminars
September 18, 2013
L4H SEMINAR TERESA NEVES PETERSEN 'Photonic cancer therapy: modulating cellular metabolism with light'
Light Seminars
September 4, 2013
L4H SEMINAR MIKE HEILEMANN 'Quantitative single-molecule super-resolution microscopy of cellular structures'
Light Seminars
July 3, 2013
L4H SEMINAR PAUL W. WISEMAN 'Mapping Adhesion, Cytoskeletal and Signaling Protein Transport and Interactions in Living Cells by Image Correlation Methods'
Light Seminars
June 12, 2013
L4H Seminar JONAS RIES 'Novel Labeling Schemes for Single-Molecule Localization Microscopy'
Light Seminars
May 29, 2013
Light Seminars
May 21, 2013
L4H Seminar XAVIER INTES 'Towards Whole-Body Foster Resonance Energy Transfer Pre-Clinical Imaging'
Light Seminars
April 22, 2013
L4H SEMINAR CORINNE LORENZO 'Development of 3D Imaging of Large Spheroid Tumor Models Using Light Sheet Microscopy'
Light Seminars
March 13, 2013
L4H Seminar JORGE RIPOLL 'From ballistic to diffusive regimes: Light Propagation Models and Applications for In-vivo Optical Tomography'
Light Seminars
February 20, 2013
L4H Seminar ANDREU LLOBERA 'Photonic Lab on a Chip: Mergence of Photonics and Microfluidics for Real Time Cell Screening'