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Published 2009 | public
Book Section - Chapter

Calibration of Tethered Particle Motion Experiments

Abstract

The Tethered Particle Motion (TPM) method has been used to observe and characterize a variety of protein-DNA interactions including DNA loping and transcription. TPM experiments exploit the Brownian motion of a DNA-tethered bead to probe biologically relevant conformational changes of the tether. In these experiments, a change in the extent of the bead's random motion is used as a reporter of the underlying macromolecular dynamics and is often deemed sufficient for TPM analysis. However, a complete understanding of how the motion depends on the physical properties of the tethered particle complex would permit more quantitative and accurate evaluation of TPM data. For instance, such understanding can help extract details about a looped complex geometry (or multiple coexisting geometries) from TPM data. To better characterize the measurement capabilities of TPM experiments involving DNA tethers, we have carried out a detailed calibration of TPM magnitude as a function of DNA length and particle size. We also explore how experimental parameters such as acquisition time and exposure time affect the apparent motion of the tethered particle. We vary the DNA length from 200 bp to 2.6 kbp and consider particle diameters of 200, 490 and 970 nm. We also present a systematic comparison between measured particle excursions and theoretical expectations, which helps clarify both the experiments and models of DNA conformation.

Additional Information

© 2009 Springer. Partially supported by the Keck Foundation, National Science Foundation grants CMS-0301657 and CMS-0404031, and the National Institutes of Health Director's Pioneer Award grant DP1 OD000217. Partially supported by NSF grants DGE-0221664, DMR04-25780, and DMR-0404674. The senior authors gratefully acknowledge Nick Cozarelli's direct and indirect influence on our work. We especially recall Nick's tactful, wise counsel at a time when one of us was an embryonic biological physicist with an interesting, but poorly presented, idea. Multiplied manyfold, such attentions have shaped a generation of researchers. We are grateful to generous colleagues who have advised us on many aspects of this work, including: Meredith Betterton, David Dunlap, Laura Finzi, Arivalagan Gajraj, Jeff Gelles, Jané Kondev, Chris Meiners, Keir Neuman, Matthew Pennington, Tom Perkins, Bob Schleif, Kevin Towles.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
January 12, 2024