Nanometer-accuracy distance measurements between fluorophores at the single-molecule level

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Abstract

Light microscopy is a powerful tool for probing the conformations of molecular machines at the single-molecule level. Single-molecule Förster resonance energy transfer can measure intramolecular distance changes of single molecules in the range of 2 to 8 nm. However, current superresolution measurements become error-prone below 25 nm. Thus, new single-molecule methods are needed for measuring distances in the 8- to 25-nm range. Here, we describe methods that utilize information about localization and imaging errors to measure distances between two different color fluorophores with ∼1-nm accuracy at distances >2 nm. These techniques can be implemented in high throughput using a standard total internal reflection fluorescence microscope and open-source software. We applied our two-color localization method to uncover an unexpected ∼4-nm nucleotide-dependent conformational change in the coiled-coil “stalk” of the motor protein dynein. We anticipate that these methods will be useful for high-accuracy distance measurements of single molecules over a wide range of length scales.

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Niekamp, S., Sung, J., Huynh, W., Bhabha, G., Vale, R. D., & Stuurman, N. (2019). Nanometer-accuracy distance measurements between fluorophores at the single-molecule level. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 116(10), 4275–4284. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1815826116

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