SEMINAR 2023

Universality in RNA and DNA Deformations Induced by Salt, Temperature Change, Stretching Force, and Protein Binding

SpeakerLiang Dai, Department of physics, City University of Hong Kong
HostYan Jie
Date/TimeWednesday, 5 April 2023, 3:00 PM
LocationConference room: S11-02-07

Abstract

Nucleic acid deformations play important roles in many biological processes. The physical understanding of nucleic acid deformation by environmental stimuli is limited due to the challenge in the precise measurement of RNA and DNA deformations and the complexity of interactions in RNA and DNA. Magnetic tweezers experiments provide an excellent opportunity to precisely measure DNA and RNA twist changes induced by environmental stimuli. In this work, we applied magnetic tweezers to measure double-stranded RNA twist changes induced by salt and temperature changes. We observed RNA unwinds when lowering salt concentration, or increasing temperature. Our molecular dynamics simulations revealed the mechanism: lowering salt concentration or increasing temperature enlarges RNA major groove width, which causes twist decrease through twist-groove coupling. Combining these results with previous results, we discovered some universality in RNA and DNA deformations induced by three different stimuli: salt change, temperature, and stretching force. For RNA, these stimuli first modify the major groove width, which is transduced into twist change through twist-groove coupling. For DNA, these stimuli first modify diameter, which is transduced into twist change through twist-diameter coupling. Twist-groove coupling and twist-diameter coupling appear to be utilized by protein binding to reduce DNA and RNA deformation energy cost upon protein binding.

Biography

Liang Dai is an assistant professor in the Department of Physics at City University of Hong Kong (CityU). Dr. Dai obtained his BSc degree in physics from University of Science and Technology of China in 2004, and his PhD degree in physics from National University of Singapore in 2009. Before joining CityU, he worked as a research scientist in Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology (SMART). Dr Dai performs research in soft matter physics and biophysics using multi-scale modelling, from atomistic to coarse-grained, and statistical mechanics, with tight collaboration with experimental groups. Currently, Dr Dai’s research focuses on polymer/DNA/protein knotting, structures and interactions of DNA and RNA, the interaction between antimicrobial peptide and cell membrane, and the applications of machine learning in drug design.