JPK’s NanoTracker™ 2 optical tweezers system is used in the Modesti group at the Centre for Cancer Research, INSERM, to manipulate individual DNA molecules
JPK Instruments, a world-leading manufacturer of nanoanalytic instrumentation for research in life sciences and soft matter, reports on the use of their NanoTracker™ 2 Optical Tweezers system at the Centre for Cancer Research in Marseilles, a part of CNRS and INSERM located at the Aix-Marseille Université. The research team lead by Dr Mauro Modesti at the Centre for Cancer Research, Marseilles (CRCM), focuses on the study and understanding of the molecular mechanisms that assure DNA repair and the maintain of genome integrity in human cells. Failure to detect and/or repair of DNA genotoxic lesions, such as double-strand breaks, can lead to the appearance of mutations, genomic instability and, eventually, cancer. In order to better understand the DNA-repair processes, Dr Modesti’s team exploits and merges different techniques going from classical ensemble biochemical assays and cell biology to the use of “single-molecule” biophysical methods that allow visualization and monitoring of the dynamic behavior of repair proteins acting on DNA molecules. Given that tumor treatments by radiotherapy or chemotherapy rely on the induction of DNA double-strand breaks in cancer cells in order to kill them, targeting the factors involved in DNA repair is thus a sensible strategy to improve cancer therapy but still necessitates a deeper understanding at the fundamental level of the DNA repair mechanisms, which is the goal of the research group. The group uses JPK’s NanoTracker™ 2 optical tweezers system as a unique tool that enables the grabbing and manipulation of individual DNA molecules. This way, the researchers of the group are able to hold the DNA, like a wire between two handles, and study the action of different DNA-repair proteins. Optical tweezers are used to “feel” the mechanical action of the proteins on the DNA and are combined with fluorescence imaging in order to observe, in real time, the position of the (fluorescently labelled) proteins as they move along the DNA and interact between them and with the DNA substrate. In particular, the group has recently developed an assay where two DNA molecules are captured and used to test whether and how different DNA-repair complexes are able to bring and maintain together the two DNA molecules. This mimics the situation in which the DNA is broken in two pieces and the two pieces need to be held together and then reconnected, as illustrated in the schematics below. 

