Bluesky Facebook Reddit Email

Molecular machine shuffles beads on a DNA string

04.17.03 | University of California - Davis

SAMSUNG T9 Portable SSD 2TB

SAMSUNG T9 Portable SSD 2TB transfers large imagery and model outputs quickly between field laptops, lab workstations, and secure archives.

Postgraduate researchers Andrei Alexeev and Alexander Mazin, with Stephen Kowalczykowski, a professor of microbiology at UC Davis, studied a protein called Rad54 in brewer's yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae). Rad54 is known to bind to and change the shape of DNA strands.

Using a piece of DNA with artificial nucleosomes attached, the researchers found that Rad54 could not only move the nucleosomes along the strand but knock them off altogether.

When another protein, Rad51, was added, the process became much more efficient. Rad51 binds to single strands of DNA.

Together, Rad54 and Rad51 form a molecular machine that can carry a piece of DNA to the right place, push the nucleosomes out of the way, expose the DNA double helix and begin the process of stitching a new piece of DNA into place.

The work is published in the March issue of Nature Structural Biology.

Nature Structural & Molecular Biology

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

How to Cite This Article

APA:
University of California - Davis. (2003, April 17). Molecular machine shuffles beads on a DNA string. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/8XG4WVP1/molecular-machine-shuffles-beads-on-a-dna-string.html
MLA:
"Molecular machine shuffles beads on a DNA string." Brightsurf News, Apr. 17 2003, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/8XG4WVP1/molecular-machine-shuffles-beads-on-a-dna-string.html.