Encyclopedia of Experiments
Biological Techniques
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Encyclopedia of Experiments Biological Techniques
Helicase Activity Measurement of a Target Protein Using Biotin-Labeled RNA Duplexes

Helicase Activity Measurement of a Target Protein Using Biotin-Labeled RNA Duplexes

Transcript

Proteins with RNA helicase activity can help unwind and separate individual RNA molecules in an RNA duplex.

To determine a protein's helicase activity, take tubes containing a mixture of biotin-labeled RNA duplexes with a 5'-overhang, ATPs, and RNA traps — unlabeled strands complementary to the duplexes' biotinylated strands.

Add the protein with helicase activity to each tube and incubate for different durations. The protein binds to the duplexes' 5'-overhang.

Using ATP molecules, it breaks hydrogen bonds between two duplex strands, resulting in their unwinding and releasing the biotinylated single-stranded RNA. The RNA traps interact with the biotin-labeled strands, preventing reannealing with the separated strands.

Terminate the reaction using a termination buffer.

Load the samples in different wells of a native polyacrylamide gel. Run electrophoresis. Low-molecular-weight, single-stranded RNA moves faster than high-molecular-weight duplexes. This mobility shift generates two distinct bands.

Blot the gel on a nylon membrane, transferring the RNAs to the membrane. Post-blotting, expose the membrane to UV light, crosslinking the RNAs onto the membrane.

Add chemiluminescent enzyme-conjugated streptavidin, which interacts with the biotin on the duplexes and single-stranded strands. Use chemiluminescent substrates to produce chemiluminescence products.

Upon imaging, the low-molecular-weight band's intensity increases over time, correlating with the target protein's helicase activity.

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