Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Life Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 19 of 19

Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Dissecting The Molecular Mechanism Of Familial Cardiomyopathies, Sarah Ruth Clippinger Schulte Dec 2021

Dissecting The Molecular Mechanism Of Familial Cardiomyopathies, Sarah Ruth Clippinger Schulte

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Familial cardiomyopathies, including hypertrophic (HCM), restrictive (RCM) and dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), are the leading cause of sudden cardiac death in young people. These diseases, which are characterized by altered cardiac contractility and remodeling of the heart, can lead to heart failure. These diseases are primarily caused by point mutations in sarcomeric proteins that generate or regulate heart contraction, such as troponin T. In the heart, the troponin complex together with tropomyosin lie along the actin filament and regulate myosin’s ability to bind actin and produce force. Here I show how mutations in troponin T affect contractility at the molecular level …


Regulatory Effects Of The E. Coli Recbcd Nuclease Domain On Dna Unwinding Kinetics, Nicole Fazio Dec 2021

Regulatory Effects Of The E. Coli Recbcd Nuclease Domain On Dna Unwinding Kinetics, Nicole Fazio

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

I have examined the effects of deleting the nuclease domain of the E. coli helicase RecBCD on the rates of ATP-independent DNA melting, single stranded (ss) DNA translocation, and double stranded (ds) DNA unwinding by RecBCD. The canonical role of the nuclease domain is DNA degradation, but the removal of this domain showed unexpected effects on other RecBCD activities including DNA binding, melting, and unwinding. This thesis presents a mechanistic study of DNA unwinding by RecBCD and a RecBCD variant with the nuclease domain deleted (RecBΔnucCD). I examined the rates of ssDNA translocation and dsDNA unwinding by RecBCD and RecBΔnucCD …


The Role Of Excited States In Determining Β-Lactamase Function And Bacterial Fitness, Catherine Rae Knoverek Aug 2021

The Role Of Excited States In Determining Β-Lactamase Function And Bacterial Fitness, Catherine Rae Knoverek

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Proteins are macromolecular machines that play a role in nearly every biological process. They are dynamic molecules which adopt many different conformations as they fold into their 3D structures, interact with their binding partners, and perform their functions. The most probable (lowest energy) protein conformation is referred to as the ground state, and this is often assumed to be the state determined by experimental methods such as x-ray crystallography. However, proteins also adopt higher energy excited states which can have significant probabilities. As these excited states are notoriously difficult to find and study, it is unclear if excited states contribute …


C. Elegans Response To Cadmium Toxicity, Brian James Earley Aug 2021

C. Elegans Response To Cadmium Toxicity, Brian James Earley

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Cadmium is an environmental pollutant and significant health hazard that is similar to the physiological metal zinc. Residing in the same group of the periodic table, cadmium and zinc share chemical characteristics that are important for their industrial uses in electroplating, batteries, pigments, and metal alloys. The similarities of ionic cadmium and zinc have significant repercussions on biological systems. While it has long been clear that cadmium is toxic to biological systems, the mechanisms of cadmium toxicity remain poorly understood. In contrast, mechanisms of zinc homeostasis have been elucidated in growing detail. In C. elegans high zinc homeostasis is regulated …


The Regulation Of Plasmodium Falciparum Metabolism By Haloacid Dehalogenase Proteins, Philip Frasse Aug 2021

The Regulation Of Plasmodium Falciparum Metabolism By Haloacid Dehalogenase Proteins, Philip Frasse

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Malaria is an enormous financial and public health burden for much of the world, infecting over 200 million and killing over 400,000 people every year. While much progress has been made combating malaria in the past few decades, those advances have slowed in recent years, partially due to the emergence of resistance to all known antimalarials used to date. To achieve the goal of eliminating malaria as a major global health problem, new therapeutics need to be developed, targeting novel categories of parasite biology. One poorly understood area of parasite biology is the regulation of various metabolic pathways. We have …


Method Development For Enhancing Sensitivity Of Dynamic Nuclear Polarization Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy For Structural Studies Of Pkc-Drug Interactions, Patrick Terrence Judge Aug 2021

Method Development For Enhancing Sensitivity Of Dynamic Nuclear Polarization Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy For Structural Studies Of Pkc-Drug Interactions, Patrick Terrence Judge

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

To perform the most relevant structural studies on biological systems, experiments need to be carried out when the target proteins are in their endogenous cellular environment. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) is well-suited to probe the structure and dynamics of a wide variety of systems, including biologically relevant proteins. However, NMR suffers from an inherent lack of sensitivity. Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) NMR is a powerful technique that is used to enhance NMR sensitivity by transferring the greater polarization of exogenously doped electron spins to nuclear spins of interest though the use of a high-power microwave source. Solid effect radicals offer …


Copper-Mediated Regulation Of A Traditional Iron Uptake System In Uropathogenic Escherichia Coli., George Lwanga Katumba Aug 2021

Copper-Mediated Regulation Of A Traditional Iron Uptake System In Uropathogenic Escherichia Coli., George Lwanga Katumba

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Transition metals constitute an important part of the host-pathogen interface. Iron is an essential nutrient that functions as a cofactor for numerous bacterial and host proteins, as either a ligand for oxygen in carrier proteins or an enzyme catalytic site due to its natural redox properties. As part of the innate immune response, infected hosts sequester iron from pathogens to limit their growth, a phenomenon known as nutritional immunity. On the other hand, copper ions are deployed at infection sites as a potent antimicrobial agent to kill bacteria. The ability to survive within multiple, often harsh, microenvironments is fundamental to …


Rna Polymerase Binding Protein A (Rbpa) Regulation Of Mycobacteria Transcription And Sensitivity To Fidaxomicin, Jerome Prusa Aug 2021

Rna Polymerase Binding Protein A (Rbpa) Regulation Of Mycobacteria Transcription And Sensitivity To Fidaxomicin, Jerome Prusa

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Mycobacterium tuberculosis is the causative agent of the disease tuberculosis (TB) and remains one of the deadliest microorganisms on the planet. The effort to eradicate M. tuberculosis would benefit from the development of novel therapeutics, which requires a detailed understanding of M. tuberculosis physiology. Like all living organisms, M. tuberculosis gene expression requires transcription. Transcription in the phylum Actinobacteria, which includes mycobacteria, is unique because it includes RNA Polymerase Binding Protein A (RbpA) that is essential in both M. tuberculosis and the nonpathogenic model organism Mycobacterium smegmatis. RbpA increases the housekeeping A and housekeeping like B interactions with the RNA …


Chemical Damage To Mrna And Its Impact On Ribosome Quality-Control And Stress-Response Pathways In Eukaryotic Cells, Liewei Yan Aug 2021

Chemical Damage To Mrna And Its Impact On Ribosome Quality-Control And Stress-Response Pathways In Eukaryotic Cells, Liewei Yan

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Ribosome often faces defective adducts that disrupt its movement along the mRNA template. These adducts are primarily caused by chemical damage to mRNA and are highly detrimental to the decoding process on the ribosome. Hence, unless dealt with, chemical damage to RNA has been hypothesized to lead to the production of toxic protein products. Even more detrimental is the ability of damaged mRNA to drastically affect ribosome homeostasis through stalling. This in turn would lead to greatly diminished translation capacity of cells. Therefore, the inability of cells to recognize and resolve translational-stalling events is detrimental to proteostasis and could even …


Potentiation Of Tmem16a Currents By Clca1 In Cystic Fibrosis Airway, Kayla Berry May 2021

Potentiation Of Tmem16a Currents By Clca1 In Cystic Fibrosis Airway, Kayla Berry

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

In the airway, proper activity of the anion channel cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) contributes to innate immune defense by maintaining a hydratedand alkaline mucus layer through the conductance of chloride and bicarbonate ions. This allows potentially pathogenic microorganisms to be trapped, quickly killed, and cleared via mucociliary clearance, thus preventing microbial colonization of the lungs. In cystic fibrosis (CF), this activity is impaired, resulting in repeated pulmonary infections that damage the lung and, if severe and prolonged, may lead to premature death without lung transplantation. Available therapies remain focused on targeted rescue of the CFTR mutation. However, given …


Deep Learning Deleterious Small Molecule Biochemistry From The Lab To The Clinic, Matthew Matlock May 2021

Deep Learning Deleterious Small Molecule Biochemistry From The Lab To The Clinic, Matthew Matlock

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Small molecules are key tools in biology and medicine. In biology, small molecules are used to probe biological systems and gain insight into their structure and function. In medicine, this role is further refined to reverse the biological conditions that contribute to human disease. Developing new small molecules into biological probes or drugs can be a daunting scientific task. These projects often begin with many thousands of potential candidates, which are progressively screened and eliminated from consideration by high-throughput experimental assays. Those molecules that emerge from this process as candidate drugs are also subject to extensive in vitro, in vivo, …


Thermodynamics And Conformational Heterogeneity Of Recbcd Binding To Dna Ends, Linxuan Hao Jan 2021

Thermodynamics And Conformational Heterogeneity Of Recbcd Binding To Dna Ends, Linxuan Hao

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

E. coli RecBCD is crucial in initiating repair of double stranded (ds) DNA breaks. It is a heterotrimeric helicase and nuclease complex possessing two ATPase motors, RecB and RecD, and a regulatory subunit without ATPase activity, RecC. The RecB subunit also contains a 30kDa nuclease domain (RecBNuc) that, according to published structural data, is situated over 60Å away from the site of dsDNA binding. Surprisingly, we have shown in previous studies that deletion of RecBNuc to form RecBΔNucCD affects its dsDNA unwinding properties. The mechanism by which RecBNuc influences RecBCD dsDNA unwinding is unclear. In this thesis, equilibrium binding techniques, …


Mass Spectrometry-Based Strategies In Protein Higher Order Structure Analysis: Fundamentals And Applications In Protein-Ligand Interactions, Xiaoran Liu Jan 2021

Mass Spectrometry-Based Strategies In Protein Higher Order Structure Analysis: Fundamentals And Applications In Protein-Ligand Interactions, Xiaoran Liu

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Protein ligand interaction is a fundamental question in biology and biochemistry, and many approaches including X-ray crystallography, nuclear magnetic resonance, cryogenic electron microscopy, mass spectroscopy (MS), infrared spectroscopy, circular dichroism, fluorescence spectroscopy and many others have been applied to address this question. Among these techniques, mass spectroscopy has the advantage of high throughput, low sample amount requirement, and mid-to-high spatial resolution. One of the MS-based approaches is protein footprinting, which utilizes labeling reagents to map the solvent accessible surface of the protein of interest thus deliver structural information. Irreversible labeling is represented by covalent labeling and radical labeling, in which …


Prodrug Activation In Staphylococci And The Implications For Antimicrobial Development, Justin J. Miller Jan 2021

Prodrug Activation In Staphylococci And The Implications For Antimicrobial Development, Justin J. Miller

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Antibiotic resistance is an increasing concern for global health care, with some estimates suggesting that 10 million people will die from antibiotic resistant infections in the year 2050. Fueling this prospect, few antimicrobials are being actively developed and recently commercial entities have fled from the development of new anti-infectives. New antimicrobials and drug development strategies are urgently needed to revitalize this critical pipeline. While many putative antibiotics demonstrate promising in vitro potency, they routinely fail in vivo due to poor drug-like properties (e.g. oral bioavailability, serum-half life, toxicity) resulting in overly expensive drug development pipelines. Fortunately, drug-like properties can be …


Molecular Strategies To Overcome Antibiotic Resistance, Luting Fang Jan 2021

Molecular Strategies To Overcome Antibiotic Resistance, Luting Fang

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Antibiotics have greatly reduced the number of deaths caused by infectious diseases for the last 70 years, but as a result of overuse, antimicrobial resistance emerged. Resistance is the major reason why most traditional antibiotics currently have reduced clinical efficacy. However, there is still a drive to overcome this resistance in a variety of ways. There are two main avenues of research to overcome resistance; to discover and develop new drug candidates acting on new targets and pathways, and to determine the mechanisms of antibiotic resistance in order to combat it through multi-drug therapies, bringing back the effectiveness of antibiotics …


Protein Synthesis Adaptation To The Au-Rich Transcriptome Of Plasmodium Falciparum, Jessey Lee Erath Jan 2021

Protein Synthesis Adaptation To The Au-Rich Transcriptome Of Plasmodium Falciparum, Jessey Lee Erath

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

The process of protein synthesis whereby a messenger RNA is decoded into an amino acid chainis conserved among the domains. Fastidious protein synthesis is necessary for organism survival. However, exceptions negatively affecting the mRNA translation cycle – inadvertently or by design – may occur. Polyadenosine tracts are one such motif causing ribosomal stalling and frameshifting in almost all organisms tested thus far; save Plasmodium spp. Thus, with ~60% of their protein-coding genome harboring polyadenosine tracts, the elucidation of such paradigm-breaking adaptations enabling Plasmodium spp. to translate this typically problematic motif without issue is salient from both basic science and clinical …


Understanding And Exploiting Protein Allostery And Dynamics Using Molecular Simulations, Sukrit Singh Jan 2021

Understanding And Exploiting Protein Allostery And Dynamics Using Molecular Simulations, Sukrit Singh

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Protein conformational landscapes contain much of the functionally relevant information that is useful for understanding biological processes at the chemical scale. Understanding and mapping out these conformational landscapescan provide valuable insight into protein behaviors and biological phenomena, and has relevance to the process of therapeutic design.

While structural biology methods have been transformative in studying protein dynamics, they are limited by technicallimitations and have inherent resolution limits. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations are a powerful tool for exploring conformational landscapes, and provide atomic-scale information that is useful in understanding protein behaviors. With recent advances in generating datasets of large timescale simulations …


Understanding The Molecular Mechanisms Of Photoferrotrophy And Phototrophic Extracellular Electron Uptake, Dinesh Gupta Jan 2021

Understanding The Molecular Mechanisms Of Photoferrotrophy And Phototrophic Extracellular Electron Uptake, Dinesh Gupta

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Several anoxygenic phototrophs grow by utilizing soluble iron or insoluble mixed-valence iron minerals (such as rust) as electron donors to fix carbon dioxide using light energy, a process called photoferrotrophy. Photoferrotrophs can also use electron donors such as poised electrodes that serve as proxies for rust via phototrophic extracellular electron uptake (EEU). Despite the recognition that these two related microbial processes contribute to various biogeochemical cycles such as iron and carbon, the electron uptake mechanisms underlying photoferrotrophy and phototrophic EEU are poorly understood. To address the key knowledge gaps in our understanding of these microbial metabolisms, here we characterized Rhodopseudomonas …


Measuring And Manipulating Tension-Dependent Behavior Of Mechanosensitive Ion Channels, Angela M. Schlegel Jan 2021

Measuring And Manipulating Tension-Dependent Behavior Of Mechanosensitive Ion Channels, Angela M. Schlegel

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Mechanical forces play critical roles throughout the lives of all organisms and, as such, diverse arrays of mechanotransduction systems have evolved to detect and initiate responses to force. Many mechanotransduction systems consist of mechanosensitive (MS) ion channels, membrane pores that open in response to sufficient mechanical force. My dissertation focuses on both the study and application of force-dependent conformational changes of MS channels. I tested whether charged pore-lining residues R326 and D327 of the Arabidopsis thaliana mitochondrial MS channel MSL1 function in inward rectification or gating kinetics. Mutating these residues showed no effect on MSL1 rectification; however, these residues are …