Constructing a magnetic tweezers to monitor RNA translocation at the single-molecule level

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Abstract

Single-molecule methods have become an invaluable tool in the investigation of the mechanisms of nucleic-acid motors. Magnetic tweezers is a single-molecule manipulation technique that permits the realtime measurement of enzyme activities on single nucleic-acid molecules at high-resolution, highthroughput, and inherently constant force. Here, we describe several aspects of the implementation of magnetic tweezers, with special emphasis on the construction of a simple magnetic trap and, in particular, on the detailed description of image analysis methods to measure the extension changes in nucleic-acid molecules induced by protein activity. Finally, we carefully describe the steps involved in performing a full magnetic tweezers experiment.

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Salas, D., Gocheva, V., & Nöllmann, M. (2015). Constructing a magnetic tweezers to monitor RNA translocation at the single-molecule level. Methods in Molecular Biology, 1259, 257–273. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-2214-7_16

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