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Studying DNA and DNA/Protein Interaction

Dorothy Erie in Chemistry and other collaborators are studying the shape
of DNA and the behavior of DNA/Protein complexes. Within the Resource, we
are developing image-analysis tools to help build quantitative models of
DNA systems, AFM simulation tools to provide precise descriptions of what
should be visible in experiment scans, and visualization tools to enable
the direct visual comparison of experiment output with the expected result
of scanning a model with an AFM tip.
Extracting DNA shape
from images
The image above right
shows a model of a tube that was extracted from an AFM image using MIDAG-produced
CORE-tracking software. The model is drawn in green raised above the image
from which it was extracted. This software (Yonatan Fridman's dissertation
work) is able to extract the 3D shape of the tube along with its width
and curvature information at each point along the tube. This enables us
to extract and analyze tubular objects such as DNA, fibrin, and mucin
from images.
The
image on the left shows the centerline trace (in red) and boundaries (in
blue) of one of several strands of DNA on a surface. The DNA was scanned
by Dorothy Erie's group in a Digital Instruments AFM. The user selects
points on the ends of the strand and a starting direction and the tube
tracing code finds the centerline, reporting orientation (for curvature)
and radius along the entire strand. The code used here is available on
the CISMM software
download page.
The image below shows
a trace of DNA on an AFM image as it passes through a protein. This tracing
was produced by code that was custom-designed for quantitatively producing
the length of DNA outside the protein, the length of the interpolated
line through the protein, and the angle between the incoming and outgoing
DNA strands. The length information enables the scientists to estimate
how much DNA is free to wrap around the protein (since they know the total
strand length) while the angle information provides hints as to the geometry
of wrapping (see below for why this is important). The boundary of the
DNA as detected by the Resource code is shown as a thin blue line. The
medial axis of the DNA is shown as a thin red line. The interpolated trace
of the DNA and an estimated bend angle as the DNA leaves the protein is
indicated by a thin green line passing through the protein. The use of
this code produced an order-of-magnitude decrease in analysis time and
more accuracy than the manual estimation being routinely used to extract
this parameter.
By feeding these extracted
models to the AFM simulator (described next), a scientist can investigate
which portions of the AFM scans are well-explained by the model. Using
direct visual comparison between the model and scan (described on the
Mixing Model and
Simulation core project page), a scientist can compare the model's
fit and discover where it needs improving.
Which way does the
DNA wrap?
One question that
is being investigated by Dorothy Erie's group is what conformation DNA
makes as it wraps around the lac repressor enzyme. The binding sites on
the DNA, the binding sites on lac repressor, and the length of the DNA
strand bound to the protein are all known. What is not known is the path
taken by the DNA around or through the lac repressor when it is bound.
Dorothy and her team are studying three candidate wrappings by binding
lac repressor to DNA, depositing the bound complexes on a surface, and
scanning the complex with an AFM.
As
described in our
SPIE paper, hardware acceleration enables interactive calculation
of imaging artifacts that would be expected from scanning a model with
an atomic force microscope (AFM). This enables direct comparison between
experimental results and expected microscope scans for both hand-made
models and atom-coordinate data. The images to the left show this technique
applied to a DNA/lac-repressor complex. The four images in the upper right
corner show the result of imaging the crystallographics atom coordinates
with increasingly coarse AFM tips. The bottom image shows a simplified
model of a DNA strand wrapped around a protein; the image above it shows
the AFM scan expected when this model is scanned. The image in the upper
left shows an actual AFM scan of DNA wrapped around a protein. Such comparisons
have enabled Dorothy Erie's chemistry group to determine which of several
possible wrappings occur in actual experiments by showing that conformations
which were not seen experimentally would have been resolvable with AFM
had they occured, ruling out their being hidden by imaging or reconstruction
artifacts.
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