4.7 Article

Structural interpretation of DNA-protein hydroxyl-radical footprinting experiments with high resolution using HYDROID

Journal

NATURE PROTOCOLS
Volume 13, Issue 11, Pages 2535-2556

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41596-018-0048-z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Library of Medicine
  2. National Cancer Institute
  3. National Institutes of Health
  4. Russian Science Foundation [14-24-00031, 14-24-00031-p]
  5. Johns Hopkins University
  6. US-Russia Collaboration in the Biomedical Sciences, National Institutes of Health Visiting Fellows program
  7. NIH [R21DE025398, P50DE019032, R01GM119398, R21CA220151]
  8. Howard Hughes Medical Institute Janelia Research Campus
  9. NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE [R21CA220151] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
  10. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF GENERAL MEDICAL SCIENCES [R01GM119398] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
  11. NATIONAL LIBRARY OF MEDICINE [ZIALM000071] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
  12. Russian Science Foundation [17-24-00007] Funding Source: Russian Science Foundation

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Hydroxyl-radical footprinting (HRF) is a powerful method for probing structures of nucleic acid-protein complexes with single-nucleotide resolution in solution. To tap the full quantitative potential of HRF, we describe a protocol, hydroxyl-radical footprinting interpretation for DNA (HYDROID), to quantify HRF data and integrate them with atomistic structural models. The stages of the HYDROID protocol are extraction of the lane profiles from gel images, quantification of the DNA cleavage frequency at each nucleotide and theoretical estimation of the DNA cleavage frequency from atomistic structural models, followed by comparison of experimental and theoretical results. Example scripts for each step of HRF data analysis and interpretation are provided for several nucleosome systems; they can be easily adapted to analyze user data. As input, HYDROID requires polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) images of HRF products and optionally can use a molecular model of the DNA-protein complex. The HYDROID protocol can be used to quantify HRF over DNA regions of up to 100 nucleotides per gel image. In addition, it can be applied to the analysis of RNA-protein complexes and free RNA or DNA molecules in solution. Compared with other methods reported to date, HYDROID is unique in its ability to simultaneously integrate HRF data with the analysis of atomistic structural models. HYDROID is freely available. The complete protocol takes similar to 3 h. Users should be familiar with the command-line interface, the Python scripting language and Protein Data Bank (PDB) file formats. A graphical user interface (GUI) with basic functionality (HYDROID_GUI) is also available.

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