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Dive into the research topics where Micah J. McCauley is active.

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Featured researches published by Micah J. McCauley.


Physics of Life Reviews | 2010

Biophysical characterization of DNA binding from single molecule force measurements.

Kathy R. Chaurasiya; Thayaparan Paramanathan; Micah J. McCauley; Mark C. Williams

Single molecule force spectroscopy is a powerful method that uses the mechanical properties of DNA to explore DNA interactions. Here we describe how DNA stretching experiments quantitatively characterize the DNA binding of small molecules and proteins. Small molecules exhibit diverse DNA binding modes, including binding into the major and minor grooves and intercalation between base pairs of double-stranded DNA (dsDNA). Histones bind and package dsDNA, while other nuclear proteins such as high mobility group proteins bind to the backbone and bend dsDNA. Single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) binding proteins slide along dsDNA to locate and stabilize ssDNA during replication. Other proteins exhibit binding to both dsDNA and ssDNA. Nucleic acid chaperone proteins can switch rapidly between dsDNA and ssDNA binding modes, while DNA polymerases bind both forms of DNA with high affinity at distinct binding sites at the replication fork. Single molecule force measurements quantitatively characterize these DNA binding mechanisms, elucidating small molecule interactions and protein function.


Nature Methods | 2007

Quantifying force-dependent and zero-force DNA intercalation by single-molecule stretching

Ioana Vladescu; Micah J. McCauley; Megan E. Núñez; Ioulia Rouzina; Mark C. Williams

We used single DNA molecule stretching to investigate DNA intercalation by ethidium and three ruthenium complexes. By measuring ligand-induced DNA elongation at different ligand concentrations, we determined the binding constant and site size as a function of force. Both quantities depend strongly on force and, in the limit of zero force, converge to the known bulk solution values, when available. This approach allowed us to distinguish the intercalative mode of ligand binding from other binding modes and allowed characterization of intercalation with binding constants ranging over almost six orders of magnitude, including ligands that do not intercalate under experimentally accessible solution conditions. As ligand concentration increased, the DNA stretching curves saturated at the maximum amount of ligand intercalation. The results showed that the applied force partially relieves normal intercalation constraints. We also characterized the flexibility of intercalator-saturated dsDNA for the first time.


Biophysical Journal | 2008

DNA Overstretching in the Presence of Glyoxal: Structural Evidence of Force-Induced DNA Melting

Leila Shokri; Micah J. McCauley; Ioulia Rouzina; Mark C. Williams

When a long DNA molecule is stretched beyond its B-form contour length, a transition occurs in which its length increases by a factor of 1.7, with very little force increase. A quantitative model was proposed to describe this transition as force-induced melting, where double-stranded DNA is converted into single-stranded DNA. The force-induced melting model accurately describes the thermodynamics of DNA overstretching as a function of solution conditions and in the presence of DNA binding ligands. An alternative explanation suggests a transformation into S-DNA, a double-stranded form which preserves the interstrand base pairing. To determine the extent to which DNA base pairs are exposed to solution during the transition, we held DNA overstretched to different lengths within the transition in the presence of glyoxal. If overstretching involved strand separation, then force-melted basepairs would be glyoxal-modified, thus essentially permanently single-stranded. Subsequent stretches confirm that a significant fraction of the DNA melted by force is permanently melted. This result demonstrates that DNA overstretching is accompanied by a disruption of the DNA helical structure, including a loss of hydrogen bonding.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2009

Mechanism of DNA flexibility enhancement by HMGB proteins

Jingyun Zhang; Micah J. McCauley; L. James Maher; Mark C. Williams; N. E. Israeloff

The mechanism by which sequence non-specific DNA-binding proteins enhance DNA flexibility is studied by examining complexes of double-stranded DNA with the high mobility group type B proteins HMGB2 (Box A) and HMGB1 (Box A+B) using atomic force microscopy. DNA end-to-end distances and local DNA bend angle distributions are analyzed for protein complexes deposited on a mica surface. For HMGB2 (Box A) binding we find a mean induced DNA bend angle of 78°, with a standard error of 1.3° and a SD of 23°, while HMGB1 (Box A+B) binding gives a mean bend angle of 67°, with a standard error of 1.3° and a SD of 21°. These results are consistent with analysis of the observed global persistence length changes derived from end-to-end distance measurements, and with results of DNA-stretching experiments. The moderately broad distributions of bend angles induced by both proteins are inconsistent with either a static kink model, or a purely flexible hinge model for DNA distortion by protein binding. Therefore, the mechanism by which HMGB proteins enhance the flexibility of DNA must differ from that of the Escherichia coli HU protein, which in previous studies showed a flat angle distribution consistent with a flexible hinge model.


Biopolymers | 2009

Optical tweezers experiments resolve distinct modes of DNA-protein binding.

Micah J. McCauley; Mark C. Williams

Optical tweezers are ideally suited to perform force microscopy experiments that isolate a single biomolecule, which then provides multiple binding sites for ligands. The captured complex may be subjected to a spectrum of forces, inhibiting or facilitating ligand activity. In the following experiments, we utilize optical tweezers to characterize and quantify DNA binding of various ligands. High mobility group type B (HMGB) proteins, which bind to double-stranded DNA, are shown to serve the dual purpose of stabilizing and enhancing the flexibility of double stranded DNA. Unusual intercalating ligands are observed to thread into and lengthen the double-stranded structure. Proteins binding to both double- and single-stranded DNA, such as the alpha polymerase subunit of E. coli Pol III, are characterized, and the subdomains containing the distinct sites responsible for binding are isolated. Finally, DNA binding of bacteriophage T4 and T7 single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) binding proteins is measured for a range of salt concentrations, illustrating a binding model for proteins that slide along double-stranded DNA, ultimately binding tightly to ssDNA. These recently developed methods quantify both the binding activity of the ligand as well as the mode of binding.


Nature Chemistry | 2014

Oligomerization transforms human APOBEC3G from an efficient enzyme to a slowly dissociating nucleic acid-binding protein

Kathy R. Chaurasiya; Micah J. McCauley; Wei Wang; Dominic F. Qualley; Tiyun Wu; Shingo Kitamura; Hylkje Geertsema; Denise S.B. Chan; Amber Hertz; Yasumasa Iwatani; Judith G. Levin; Karin Musier-Forsyth; Ioulia Rouzina; Mark C. Williams

The human APOBEC3 proteins are a family of DNA-editing enzymes that play an important role in the innate immune response and have broad activity against retroviruses and retrotransposons. APOBEC3G is a member of this family that inhibits HIV-1 replication in the absence of the viral infectivity factor Vif. Inhibition of HIV replication occurs by both deamination of viral single-stranded DNA and a deamination-independent mechanism. Efficient deamination requires rapid binding to and dissociation from ssDNA. However, a relatively slow dissociation rate is required for the proposed deaminase-independent roadblock mechanism in which APOBEC3G binds the viral template strand and blocks reverse transcriptase-catalyzed DNA elongation. Here we show that APOBEC3G initially binds ssDNA with rapid on-off rates and subsequently converts to a slowly dissociating mode. In contrast, an oligomerization-deficient APOBEC3G mutant did not exhibit a slow off rate. We propose that catalytically active monomers or dimers slowly oligomerize on the viral genome and inhibit reverse transcription.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

Force spectroscopy reveals the DNA structural dynamics that govern the slow binding of Actinomycin D

Thayaparan Paramanathan; Ioana Vladescu; Micah J. McCauley; Ioulia Rouzina; Mark C. Williams

Actinomycin D (ActD) is a small molecule with strong antibiotic and anticancer activity. However, its biologically relevant DNA-binding mechanism has never been resolved, with some studies suggesting that the primary binding mode is intercalation, and others suggesting that single-stranded DNA binding is most important. To resolve this controversy, we develop a method to quantify ActD’s equilibrium and kinetic DNA-binding properties as a function of stretching force applied to a single DNA molecule. We find that destabilization of double stranded DNA (dsDNA) by force exponentially facilitates the extremely slow ActD-dsDNA on and off rates, with a much stronger effect on association, resulting in overall enhancement of equilibrium ActD binding. While we find the preferred ActD–DNA-binding mode to be to two DNA strands, major duplex deformations appear to be a pre-requisite for ActD binding. These results provide quantitative support for a model in which the biologically active mode of ActD binding is to pre-melted dsDNA, as found in transcription bubbles. DNA in transcriptionally hyperactive cancer cells will therefore likely efficiently and rapidly bind low ActD concentrations (∼10 nM), essentially locking ActD within dsDNA due to its slow dissociation, blocking RNA synthesis and leading to cell death.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Peeling back the mystery of DNA overstretching

Mark C. Williams; Ioulia Rouzina; Micah J. McCauley

When a single DNA molecule is stretched beyond its normal B-form contour length, it will undergo one of two types of conformational transitions at high or low force, depending on its attachment and ability to rotate. The structure of the DNA during these transitions is difficult to measure with traditional structural methods because it only occurs on a single molecule. More than a decade after its discovery, van Mameren et al. (1) have, in this issue of PNAS, directly visualized the mechanics of DNA overstretching for the first time by combining single-molecule force spectroscopy and fluorescence imaging. They show that, regardless of whether or not the molecule can freely rotate, when DNA is stretched to high force it will melt, as the work done by the force to increase the length of the DNA converts double-stranded duplex DNA into ssDNA.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Mechanically Manipulating the DNA Threading Intercalation Rate

Thayaparan Paramanathan; Fredrik Westerlund; Micah J. McCauley; Ioulia Rouzina; Per Lincoln; Mark C. Williams

The dumbbell shaped binuclear ruthenium complex DeltaDelta-P requires transiently melted DNA in order to thread through the DNA bases and intercalate DNA. Because such fluctuations are rare at room temperature, the binding rates are extremely low in bulk experiments. Here, single DNA molecule stretching is used to lower the barrier to DNA melting, resulting in direct mechanical manipulation of the barrier to DNA binding by the ligand. The rate of DNA threading depends exponentially on force, consistent with theoretical predictions. From the observed force dependence of the binding rate, we demonstrate that only one base pair must be transiently melted for DNA threading to occur.


Virus Research | 2013

Aromatic residue mutations reveal direct correlation between HIV-1 nucleocapsid protein's nucleic acid chaperone activity and retroviral replication.

Hao Wu; Mithun Mitra; Micah J. McCauley; James A. Thomas; Ioulia Rouzina; Karin Musier-Forsyth; Mark C. Williams; Robert J. Gorelick

The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) nucleocapsid (NC) protein plays an essential role in several stages of HIV-1 replication. One important function of HIV-1 NC is to act as a nucleic acid chaperone, in which the protein facilitates nucleic acid rearrangements important for reverse transcription and recombination. NC contains only 55 amino acids, with 15 basic residues and two zinc fingers, each having a single aromatic residue (Phe16 and Trp37). Despite its simple structure, HIV-1 NC appears to have optimal chaperone activity, including the ability to strongly aggregate nucleic acids, destabilize nucleic acid secondary structure, and facilitate rapid nucleic acid annealing. Here we combine single molecule DNA stretching experiments with ensemble solution studies of protein-nucleic acid binding affinity, oligonucleotide annealing, and nucleic acid aggregation to measure the characteristics of wild-type (WT) and aromatic residue mutants of HIV-1 NC that are important for nucleic acid chaperone activity. These in vitro results are compared to in vivo HIV-1 replication for viruses containing the same mutations. This work allows us to directly relate HIV-1 NC structure with its function as a nucleic acid chaperone in vitro and in vivo. We show that replacement of either aromatic residue with another aromatic residue results in a protein that strongly resembles WT NC. In contrast, single amino acid substitutions of either Phe16Ala or Trp37Ala significantly slow down NCs DNA interaction kinetics, while retaining some helix-destabilization capability. A double Phe16Ala/Trp37Ala substitution further reduces the latter activity. Surprisingly, the ensemble nucleic acid binding, annealing, and aggregation properties are not significantly altered for any mutant except the double aromatic substitution with Ala. Thus, elimination of a single aromatic residue from either zinc finger strongly reduces NCs chaperone activity as determined by single molecule DNA stretching experiments without significantly altering its ensemble-averaged biochemical properties. Importantly, the substitution of aromatic residues with Ala progressively decreases NCs nucleic acid chaperone activity while also progressively inhibiting viral replication. Taken together, these data support the critical role of HIV-1 NCs aromatic residues, and establish a direct and statistically significant correlation between nucleic acid chaperone activity and viral replication.

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Fredrik Westerlund

Chalmers University of Technology

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Per Lincoln

Chalmers University of Technology

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Hao Wu

Northeastern University

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