Biophys J. 2012 Feb 22;102(4):839-48
Fuentes-Perez ME, Gwynn EJ, Dillingham MS, Moreno-Herrero F.
Atomic force microscopy can potentially provide information on protein
volumes, shapes, and interactions but is susceptible to variable
tip-induced artifacts. In this study, we present an atomic force
microscopy approach that can measure volumes of nonglobular polypeptides
such as structural maintenance of chromosomes (SMC) proteins, and use
it to study the interactions that occur within and between SMC
complexes. Together with the protein of interest, we coadsorb a DNA
molecule and use it as a fiducial marker to account for tip-induced
artifacts that affect both protein and DNA, allowing normalization of
protein volumes from images taken on different days and with different
tips.
This approach significantly reduced the error associated with
volume analysis, and allowed determination of the oligomeric states and
architecture of the Bacillus subtilis SMC complex, formed by the SMC
protein, and by the smaller ScpA and ScpB subunits. This work reveals
that SMC and ScpB are dimers and that ScpA is a stable monomer.
Moreover, whereas ScpA binds directly to SMC, ScpB only binds to SMC in
the presence of ScpA. Notably, the presence of both ScpA and ScpB
favored the formation of higher-order structures of SMC complexes,
suggesting a role for these subunits in the organization of SMC
oligomers.