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Watching cellular machinery in action, one molecule at a time

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-16, 03:47 authored by Enrico Monachino, Lisanne SpenkelinkLisanne Spenkelink, Antonius van OijenAntonius van Oijen
Single-molecule manipulation and imaging techniques have become important elements of the biologist's toolkit to gain mechanistic insights into cellular processes. By removing ensemble averaging, single-molecule methods provide unique access to the dynamic behavior of biomolecules. Recently, the use of these approaches has expanded to the study of complex multiprotein systems and has enabled detailed characterization of the behavior of individual molecules inside living cells. In this review, we provide an overview of the various force-and fluorescence-based single-molecule methods with applications both in vitro and in vivo, highlighting these advances by describing their applications in studies on cytoskeletal motors and DNA replication. We also discuss how singlemolecule approaches have increased our understanding of the dynamic behavior of complex multiprotein systems. These methods have shown that the behavior of multicomponent protein complexes is highly stochastic and less linear and deterministic than previously thought. Further development of single-molecule tools will help to elucidate the molecular dynamics of these complex systems both inside the cell and in solutions with purified components.

Funding

Functional Dissection of the Bacterial Replisome

Australian Research Council

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Under the hood: single-molecule studies of multi-protein machines

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Monachino, E., Spenkelink, L. M. & van Oijen, A. M. (2017). Watching cellular machinery in action, one molecule at a time. The Journal of Cell Biology, 216 (1), 41-51.

Journal title

Journal of Cell Biology

Volume

216

Issue

1

Pagination

41-51

Language

English

RIS ID

111796

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