| Description: |
The molecules of life are small to us—billionths of our size. They move fast too, and in the cell they crowd together impossibly. Bringing that strange world into ours is the trick of molecular biology. One approach is to harness many copies of a molecule and iterate a reaction many times to glimpse what happens at that small, foreign scale. This is a powerful way to do things and has provided major insights. But ultimately, the fundamental unit of molecular biology is the individual molecule, the individual interaction, the individual reaction. Single-molecule bioscience is the study of these phenomena. Eukaryotic DNA replication is particularly interesting from the single-molecule perspective because the biological molecules responsible for executing the replication pathway interact so very intricately. This work is based on replication in budding yeast—a model eukaryote. The budding yeast genome harbors several hundred sequence-defined sites of replication initiation called origins. Origins are bound by the Origin Recognition Complex (ORC), which recruits the ring-shaped Mcm2-7 complex during the G1 phase of the cell cycle. A second Mcm2-7 is loaded adjacent to the first in a head-to-head orientation; this Mcm2-7 double hexamer encircles DNA and is generally termed the Pre-Replicative Complex, or Pre-RC. Mcm2-7 loading is strictly dependent on a cofactor, Cdc6, which is expressed in late G1. Much less is known about the details of downstream steps, but a large number of factors assemble to form active replisomes. Origin-specific budding yeast replication has recently been reconstituted in vitro, with cell cycle dependence mimicked by the serial addition of purified Pre-RC components and activating kinases. This work introduces the translation of the bulk biochemical replication assay into a single-molecule assay and describes the consequent insights into the dynamics of eukaryotic replication initiation. I have developed an optical microscopy-based assay to directly visualize DNA replication initiation in ... |