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      Helicase processivity and not the unwinding velocity exhibits universal increase with force

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          Abstract

          Helicases, involved in a number of cellular functions, are motors that translocate along singlestranded nucleic acid and couple the motion to unwinding double-strands of a duplex nucleic acid. The junction between double and single strands creates a barrier to the movement of the helicase, which can be manipulated in vitro by applying mechanical forces directly on the nucleic acid strands. Single molecule experiments have demonstrated that the unwinding velocities of some helicases increase dramatically with increase in the external force, while others show little response. In contrast, the unwinding processivity always increases when the force increases. The differing responses of the unwinding velocity and processivity to force has lacked explanation. By generalizing a previous model of processive unwinding by helicases, we provide a uni?ed framework for understanding the dependence of velocity and processivity on force and the nucleic acid sequence. We predict that the sensitivity of unwinding processivity to external force is a universal feature that should be observed in all helicases. Our prediction is illustrated using T7 and NS3 helicases as case studies. Interestingly, the increase in unwinding processivity with force depends on whether the helicase forces base pair opening by direct interaction or if such a disruption occurs spontaneously due to thermal uctuations. Based on the theoretical results, we propose that proteins like single-strand binding proteins associated with helicases in the replisome, may have co-evolved with helicases to increase the unwinding processivity even if the velocity remains una?ected.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          2015-05-15
          Article
          1505.04139
          898987a6-8c1f-4782-a2c8-a3896cd22598

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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          Custom metadata
          q-bio.BM cond-mat.stat-mech physics.bio-ph q-bio.QM

          Condensed matter,Quantitative & Systems biology,Molecular biology,Biophysics
          Condensed matter, Quantitative & Systems biology, Molecular biology, Biophysics

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