posted on 2019-10-24, 15:46authored byYinan Wang, Samuel F. H. Barnett, Shimin Le, Zhenhuan Guo, Xueying Zhong, Pakorn Kanchanawong, Jie Yan
Chemically
induced dimerization (CID) has been applied to study
numerous biological processes and has important pharmacological applications.
However, the complex multistep interactions under various physical
constraints involved in CID impose a great challenge for the quantification
of the interactions. Furthermore, the mechanical stability of the
ternary complexes has not been characterized; hence, their potential
application in mechanotransduction studies remains unclear. Here,
we report a single-molecule detector that can accurately quantify
almost all key interactions involved in CID and the mechanical stability
of the ternary complex, in a label-free manner. Its application is
demonstrated using rapamycin-induced heterodimerization of FRB and
FKBP as an example. We revealed the sufficient mechanical stability
of the FKBP/rapamycin/FRB ternary complex and demonstrated its utility
in the precise switching of talin-mediated force transmission in integrin-based
cell adhesions.