We reanalyze trajectories of hOGG1 repair proteins diffusing on DNA. A previous analysis of these trajectories with the popular mean-squared-displacement approach revealed only simple diffusion. Here, a new optimal estimator of diffusion coefficients reveals two-state kinetics of the protein. A simple, solvable model, in which the protein randomly switches between a loosely bound, highly mobile state and a tightly bound, less mobile state is the simplest possible dynamic model consistent with the data. It yields accurate estimates of hOGG1's (i) diffusivity in each state, uncorrupted by experimental errors arising from shot noise, motion blur and thermal fluctuations of the DNA; (ii) rates of switching between states and (iii) rate of detac...
Diffusion is a phenomenon of very widespread importance in molecular biophysics. Diffusion can deter...
30% of the DNA in E. coli bacteria is covered by proteins. Such a high degree of crowding affects th...
Abstract. We address the long-standing puzzle of why some proteins find their targets faster than al...
Single-particle tracking is an important technique in the life sciences to understand the kinetics o...
AbstractWe perform single-molecule spatial tracking measurements of a DNA repair protein, the C-term...
A lot of vital biological processes require recognition and binding of specific sites on DNA, by pro...
We introduce a probabilistic model for protein sliding motion along DNA during the search of a targe...
A central mystery in the function of site-specific DNA-binding proteins is the detailed mechanism fo...
The idea that non-specific DNA-binding proteins are capable of finding their cognate sites on DNA mu...
DNA binding proteins efficiently search for their cognitive sites on long genomic DNA by combining 3...
It is known that DNA-binding proteins can slide along the DNA helix while searching for specific bin...
Background Proteins search along the DNA for targets, such as transcription initiation sequences, ac...
Single particle tracking is a powerful technique often used in the study of dynamic mechanisms on th...
AbstractGene regulatory proteins find their target sites on DNA remarkably quickly; the experimental...
In the course of various biological processes, specific DNA-binding proteins must efficiently find a...
Diffusion is a phenomenon of very widespread importance in molecular biophysics. Diffusion can deter...
30% of the DNA in E. coli bacteria is covered by proteins. Such a high degree of crowding affects th...
Abstract. We address the long-standing puzzle of why some proteins find their targets faster than al...
Single-particle tracking is an important technique in the life sciences to understand the kinetics o...
AbstractWe perform single-molecule spatial tracking measurements of a DNA repair protein, the C-term...
A lot of vital biological processes require recognition and binding of specific sites on DNA, by pro...
We introduce a probabilistic model for protein sliding motion along DNA during the search of a targe...
A central mystery in the function of site-specific DNA-binding proteins is the detailed mechanism fo...
The idea that non-specific DNA-binding proteins are capable of finding their cognate sites on DNA mu...
DNA binding proteins efficiently search for their cognitive sites on long genomic DNA by combining 3...
It is known that DNA-binding proteins can slide along the DNA helix while searching for specific bin...
Background Proteins search along the DNA for targets, such as transcription initiation sequences, ac...
Single particle tracking is a powerful technique often used in the study of dynamic mechanisms on th...
AbstractGene regulatory proteins find their target sites on DNA remarkably quickly; the experimental...
In the course of various biological processes, specific DNA-binding proteins must efficiently find a...
Diffusion is a phenomenon of very widespread importance in molecular biophysics. Diffusion can deter...
30% of the DNA in E. coli bacteria is covered by proteins. Such a high degree of crowding affects th...
Abstract. We address the long-standing puzzle of why some proteins find their targets faster than al...