Bacterial protein complexes studied by single-molecule imaging and single-cell micromanipulation techniques in microfluidic devices
Item Status
Embargo End Date
Date
Authors
Abstract
Biological systems of bacteria were investigated at the single-cell and single-molecule
level. Additionally, aspects of the techniques employed were studied.
A unifying theme in each project is the reliance on optical imaging techniques
coupled to microfluidic devices.
Hypo-osmotic shock experiments with an Escherichia coli mechanosensitive
channel deletion mutant were carried out at the single-cell level. E. coli MJF465
cells in which the three major mechanosensitive channel genes are deleted (∆mscL,
∆mscS, ∆mscK) show only 10% cell viability upon hypo-osmotic shock (from LB
+ 0.5 M NaCl into distilled water), compared to 90% viability of the wild-type
strain. Bacterial cells were trapped with optical tweezers in microfluidic devices,
enabling the first direct observation of single-cell behaviour upon hypo-osmotic
shock. Phase-contrast microscopy revealed intra-population diversity in the cells
response: Different features of lysis included cells bursting rapidly and leakage
of ribosomes, DNA and protein from the cytoplasm. Fluorescence microscopy of
hypo-osmotically-shocked GFP-expressing MJF465 cells showed either bursting
of cells, which was a rare event, or fast leakage of GFP, indicating cell membrane
ruptures. Data were analysed in terms of their kinetic behaviour and showed that
lysis occurs on a timescale of milliseconds to seconds. The implications of these
findings for the bacterial cell wall and cell membranes are discussed.
Enzymes involved in homologous recombination and repair of double-stranded
DNA (dsDNA) breaks are essential for maintaining genomic integrity in both
eukaryotes and prokaryotes. RecBCD of E. coli and AddAB, found widely in
bacteria, are involved in these processes, carrying out the same function. Both
enzymes were studied kinetically with single-molecule total internal reflection
fluorescence microscopy (TIRFM). Surface-tethered, hydrodynamically stretched
lambda-DNA molecules, stained with YOYO-1, were imaged with TIRFM in a
microfluidic flowcell. The RecBCD enzyme is a well characterised DNA helicase
and was introduced to this system for method validation purposes. The
AddAB enzyme of Bacteroides fragilis was then characterised as a helicase acting on lambda-DNA. It was found that AddAB helicase unwinds dsDNA with high
processivity of on average 14,000 bp and up to 40,000 bp for individual enzyme
complexes at an ATP-dependent rate ranging from 50-250 bp s−1 (for Mg2+-ATP
concentrations larger or equal than 0.1 mM). This activity was detected by DNA
binding dye (YOYO-1) displacement from the dsDNA and studied for different
Mg2+-ATP concentrations, flow (shear) rates and different YOYO-1 staining ratios
of DNA.
Aspects of this last experimental setup were investigated. A kinetic analysis of
intercalation of YOYO-1 into lambda-DNA is presented, occurring on a timescale
of minutes. Different flow rates and staining ratios that influence the apparent
(stretched) DNA molecule length were also examined.
Several image analysis techniques were employed to enhance the data quality
in images showing stretched lambda-DNA molecules. The Singular Value Decomposition
was found to be the most effective technique which strongly reduces the
noise in the obtained kymograph images.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)

