Litcius/Paper detail

A TeZla micromixer for interrogating the early and broad folding landscape of G-quadruplex via multistage velocity descending

Zheyu Li, Rui Hu, Tao Li, Jiang Zhu, Huijuan You, Yiwei Li, Yiwei Li, Bi‐Feng Liu, Conggang Li, Ying Li, Ying Li, Yunhuang Yang

2024Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Biomacromolecular folding kinetics involves fast folding events and broad timescales. Current techniques face limitations in either the required time resolution or the observation window. In this study, we developed the TeZla micromixer, integrating Tesla and Zigzag microstructures with a multistage velocity descending strategy. TeZla achieves a significant short mixing dead time (40 µs) and a wide time window covering four orders of magnitude (up to 300 ms). Using this unique micromixer, we explored the folding landscape of c-Myc G4 and its noncanonical-G4 derivatives with different loop lengths or G-vacancy sites. Our findings revealed that c-Myc can bypass folding intermediates and directly adopt a G4 structure in the cation-deficient buffer. Moreover, we found that the loop length and specific G-vacancy site could affect the folding pathway and significantly slow down the folding rates. These results were also cross-validated with real-time NMR and circular dichroism. In conclusion, TeZla represents a versatile tool for studying biomolecular folding kinetics, and our findings may ultimately contribute to the design of drugs targeting G4 structures.

Topics & Concepts

Folding (DSP implementation)Loop (graph theory)MicromixerKineticsCircular dichroismProtein foldingCrystallographyChemistryChemical physicsBiophysicsMaterials scienceNanotechnologyPhysicsNuclear magnetic resonanceBiologyMicrofluidicsElectrical engineeringMathematicsQuantum mechanicsEngineeringCombinatoricsDNA and Nucleic Acid ChemistryBacteriophages and microbial interactionsRNA Interference and Gene Delivery