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Photocrosslinking and photodamage in protein-nucleic acid systems resulting from UV and IR radiation

Posted on:1996-04-11Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Vanderbilt UniversityCandidate:Kozub, John AndrewFull Text:PDF
GTID:1461390014487045Subject:Physics
Abstract/Summary:
Photocrosslinking of protein-nucleic acid complexes with low intensity UV has frequently been used to study biological systems. We have investigated the photochemistry of protein-nucleic acid systems using nanosecond UV pulses from a Nd:YAG-pumped dye laser system, low-intensity continuous UV from a typical germicidal lamp, and high-intensity mid-IR pulses from the Vanderbilt Free Electron Laser. Quantum yields for UV-induced nucleic acid damage from laser pulses and the germicidal lamp were found to be nearly equivalent. We have demonstrated the general applicability of the laser to this technique by successfully crosslinking hnRNP protein to RNA, yeast TATA-binding protein to dsDNA, and gene 32 protein to ssDNA with UV laser pulses. Our results indicate that UV-crosslinking has an intrinsic specificity for nucleic acid sites containing thymidine (or uridine), forcing a distinction between preferred binding sites and favorable crosslinking sites. We have found in each system that protein and nucleic acid photodamage competes with crosslinking, limits the yield, and may interfere with subsequent analysis. The distribution of photoproducts in the gene 32 protein-ssDNA system was investigated as a function of the total dose of UV radiation and the intensity of UV laser pulses. It was found that laser pulses providing up to 50 photons per nucleic acid base induce a linear response from the system; the absolute and relative yields of photoproducts depend only on the total dose of UV and not on the rate of delivery. At higher intensities, the yield of crosslinks per incident photon was reduced. A single pulse at the optimum intensity (about 100-200 photons per nucleic acid base) induced roughly 80% of the maximum attainable yield of crosslinks in this system.; The early results of our search for photochemistry induced by Free Electron Laser pulses indicate the potential to induce a unique photoreaction in the gene 32 protein-ssDNA system. The yield is apparently enhanced by simultaneous exposure to UV pulses. Future experiments will test the potential of IR and UV irradiations to increase the specificity for photocrosslinks.
Keywords/Search Tags:Nucleic acid, System, Crosslinking, Pulses
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