Single-molecule study of DNA unlinking by eukaryotic and prokaryotic type-II topoisomerases

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Abstract

Type-II topoisomerases are responsible for untangling DNA during replication by removing supercoiled and interlinked DNA structures. Using a single-molecule micromanipulation setup, we follow the real-time decatenation of two mechanically braided DNA molecules Drosophila melanogaster topoisomerase (Topo) II and Escherichia coli Topo IV. Although Topo II relaxes left-handed (L) and right-handed (R-) braids similarly at a rate of ≈2.9 s-1, Topo IV has a marked preference for L-braids, which it relaxes completely and processively at a rate of ≈2.4 s-1. However, Topo IV can unlink R-braids at about half that rate when they supercoil to form L-plectonemes. These results imply that the preferred substrate for unlinking by Topo IV has the symmetry of an L-crossing and shed new light on the decatenation of daughter strands during DNA replication, which are usually assumed to be linked in an R-braid.

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Charvin, G., Bensimon, D., & Croquette, V. (2003). Single-molecule study of DNA unlinking by eukaryotic and prokaryotic type-II topoisomerases. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 100(17), 9820–9825. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1631550100

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