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

Biochemistry, Biophysics, and Structural Biology Commons

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

Articles 1 - 21 of 21

Full-Text Articles in Biochemistry, Biophysics, and Structural Biology

Calmodulin Like 38 Is Required For Autophagy Of Hypoxia-Induced Cytoplasmic Rna Granules In Arabidopsis Thaliana, Sterling Field Dec 2021

Calmodulin Like 38 Is Required For Autophagy Of Hypoxia-Induced Cytoplasmic Rna Granules In Arabidopsis Thaliana, Sterling Field

Doctoral Dissertations

In response to the energy crisis resulting from submergence stress and hypoxia, the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana limits non-essential mRNA translation, and accumulates cytosolic stress granules. Stress granules are phase-separated mRNA-protein particles that partition transcripts for various fates: storage, degradation, or return to translation after stress alleviation. Another response by the plant cell to low oxygen stress is the induction of the turnover pathway autophagy. Stress granule regulation by autophagy occurs by a ‘granulophagy’ pathway in yeast and mammalian systems through which parts or whole stress granules are degraded. Whether this occurs in plants has not been investigated.

A connection …


Erecta Family Genes Regulate The Shoot Apical Meristem And Organ Formation, Daniel A. Degennaro Dec 2021

Erecta Family Genes Regulate The Shoot Apical Meristem And Organ Formation, Daniel A. Degennaro

Doctoral Dissertations

Plants are sessile and must adjust their organ growth to their environments. A reservoir of stem cells in the shoot apical meristem (SAM) supplies cells for differentiation into organs. The SAM must balance organ production with stem cell maintenance. The ERECTA family (ERfs) encodes the leucine-rich repeat receptor-like kinases ERECTA (ER), ERECTA-LIKE 1 (ERL1), and ERL2. ERf signaling regulates organ initiation and stem cell maintenance. Results presented in this work include the following:

1) WUSCHEL (WUS) and CLAVATA3 (CLV3) make up a negative feedback loop to maintain SAM size. WUS and CLV3 expression localization is critical for …


Microbial Community Dynamics Of A Microcystis Bloom, Helena Pound Dec 2021

Microbial Community Dynamics Of A Microcystis Bloom, Helena Pound

Doctoral Dissertations

Harmful algal bloom events are notoriously associated with massive economic and environmental consequences, causing wildlife and human health risks. As these blooms increase in occurrence, duration, and severity around the world, it is essential to understand conditions leading to bloom formation and why they persist. Abiotic factors such as nutrients are commonly considered in bloom dynamics, but biotic interactions with co-occurring microbial species and viruses must also be taken into account. Harmful algal blooms dominated by the cyanobacterial genus Microcystis occur in bodies of water around the world and provide an ideal system in which to study top-down controls on …


Analytical Considerations And Methods For Comprehensive Analysis Of Bacterial Phospholipidomics Using Hilic-Ms/Ms, David Thomas Reeves Dec 2021

Analytical Considerations And Methods For Comprehensive Analysis Of Bacterial Phospholipidomics Using Hilic-Ms/Ms, David Thomas Reeves

Doctoral Dissertations

Omics technologies have rapidly evolved over the last half century through vast improvements in efficient extraction methodologies, advances in instrumentation for data collection, and a wide assortment of informatics tools to help deconvolute sample data sets. However, there are still untapped pools of molecules that warrant further analytical attention. As the frontline defense of the cell against exterior influences, the phospholipid membrane is key in structure, defense, and signaling, but current omics studies are only just now catching up to the potential hidden within cellular lipid profiles. Examination of shifts in phospholipid speciation and character could provide researchers with a …


Understanding How Camkii Holoenzyme Dynamics Facilities Activation-Triggered Subunit Exchange, Ana P. Torres-Ocampo Oct 2021

Understanding How Camkii Holoenzyme Dynamics Facilities Activation-Triggered Subunit Exchange, Ana P. Torres-Ocampo

Doctoral Dissertations

Long-term memory and learning are still poorly understood from a molecular and cellular standpoint. Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) is an oligomeric kinase that is involved in this remarkable process. However, the molecular details of its specific roles in these processes remains elusive. CaMKII activation-triggered subunit exchange presents a novel possible mechanism involved in long-term memory and learning by exchanging active subunits with other CaMKIIs. CaMKII subunit exchange also shows that exchanged CaMKIIs spread their phosphorylation state to newly synthesized CaMKIIs. This provides a long-lasting signal that might possibly be involved in long-term memory by escaping a cell’s …


Mechanistic Insights Into Diverse Protease Adaptor Functions, Nathan J. Kuhlmann Oct 2021

Mechanistic Insights Into Diverse Protease Adaptor Functions, Nathan J. Kuhlmann

Doctoral Dissertations

Protein degradation is an essential cellular process that helps maintain proper homeostasis. The ClpXP protease broadly regulates bacterial development and quality control during the cell cycle. The range and order of substrates that ClpXP degrades during the cell cycle is dictated by 3 accessory proteins, which are known as adaptors. This thesis will elaborate on how dimerization tightly regulates the stability and activity of the adaptor protein at the center of this hierarchy, RcdA, and show how this affects normal cellular processes in Caulobacter crescentus. I will discuss the mechanism by which dimerization limits RcdA activity and how the dimerization …


Amyloidogenesis Of Β-2-Microglobulin Studied By Mass Spectrometry And Covalent Labeling, Blaise G. Arden Oct 2021

Amyloidogenesis Of Β-2-Microglobulin Studied By Mass Spectrometry And Covalent Labeling, Blaise G. Arden

Doctoral Dissertations

Amyloid-forming proteins are implicated in a number of debilitating diseases. While many amyloid-forming proteins are well studied, the early stages of amyloidosis are still not well understood on a molecular level. Covalent labeling, combined with mass spectrometry (CL-MS), is uniquely well suited to provide molecular-level insight into the factors governing the early stages of amyloidosis. This dissertation leverages CL-MS techniques to examine the early stages of β-2-microglobulin (β2m) amyloidosis. β2m is the protein that forms amyloids in the condition known as dialysis-related amyloidosis. An automated CL-MS technique that uses dimethyl(2-hydroxy-5-nitrobenzyl) sulfonium bromide as a labeling reagent was developed and used …


Primary Kinetic Isotope Effect For Substrate Hydroxylation And Iron Binding Regulation In Factor Inhibiting Hif-1, Michael A. Mingroni Oct 2021

Primary Kinetic Isotope Effect For Substrate Hydroxylation And Iron Binding Regulation In Factor Inhibiting Hif-1, Michael A. Mingroni

Doctoral Dissertations

The hypoxic response is a vast and complex system, delicately designed through evolution to allow our tissues to rapidly adapt and survive fluctuations in pO2. HIF1α, the master regulator of oxygen, is tightly controlled through oxygen-dependent, post-translational hydroxylation via PHD2 and FIH1.The aberrant stabilization of HIF1α is an adverse consequence of disease states, but can also occur under normoxia in the presence of ROS or in iron depletion. The extensive transcriptional network regulated by HIF1α makes the HIF pathway an attractive therapeutic target, particularly through the inhibition of the hydroxylases, PHD2 and FIH, however the active site chemistry is mechanistically …


Structural Analysis Of Protein Therapeutics By Hydrogen Deuterium Exchange And Covalent Labeling Mass Spectrometry, Catherine Yvonne Tremblay Sep 2021

Structural Analysis Of Protein Therapeutics By Hydrogen Deuterium Exchange And Covalent Labeling Mass Spectrometry, Catherine Yvonne Tremblay

Doctoral Dissertations

This dissertation focuses on the use of mass spectrometry (MS) to study therapeutic protein higher order structure (HOS) by encoding the structure into the mass of the protein. As therapeutic proteins become more common in the pharmaceutical industry, the need for methods that accurately determine their HOS has grown. Two methods applied here are hydrogen deuterium exchange (HDX) MS and diethylpyrocarbonate (DEPC) covalent labeling (CL) MS. We demonstrate how these two methods provide complementary, and sometimes synergistic, information about protein HOS. HDX/MS reports on both changes in solvent exposure and changes in protein dynamics, and as a result it can …


The Histone Variant H2av Regulates Stress Responses And Tissue Development Through Interactions With Chromatin Insulator Proteins In Drosophila Melanogaster, James Ryan Simmons Aug 2021

The Histone Variant H2av Regulates Stress Responses And Tissue Development Through Interactions With Chromatin Insulator Proteins In Drosophila Melanogaster, James Ryan Simmons

Doctoral Dissertations

The ability of a cell to sense and respond to various forms of stress is essential to maintain integrity of the genome. Numerous pathways have been implicated in cellular responses to environmental and genotoxic stresses, often involving proteins and complexes that bind DNA directly to orchestrate changes in transcription and genome organization. Chromatin insulators describe a class of protein complex that bind specific sequences in the genome and work through two classically described functions: to restrict communication between enhancers and promoters through physical separation into different genomic domains and to prevent the spread of heterochromatin into euchromatic regions of the …


Modulation Of Protein Dynamics By Ligand Binding And Solvent Composition, Richard J. Lindsay Aug 2021

Modulation Of Protein Dynamics By Ligand Binding And Solvent Composition, Richard J. Lindsay

Doctoral Dissertations

Many proteins undergo conformational switching in order to perform their cellular functions. A multitude of factors may shift the energy landscape and alter protein dynamics with varying effects on the conformations they explore. We apply atomistic molecular dynamics simulations to a variety of biomolecular systems in order to investigate how factors such as pressure, the chemical environment, and ligand binding at distant binding pockets affect the structure and dynamics of these protein systems. Further, we examine how such changes should be characterized. We first investigate how pressure and solvent modulate ligand access to the active site of a bacterial lipase …


Novel Approaches Towards Improved Purity In High Yield Transcription Reactions, Elvan Cavac Jun 2021

Novel Approaches Towards Improved Purity In High Yield Transcription Reactions, Elvan Cavac

Doctoral Dissertations

High yields of RNA (e.g., mRNA, gRNA, lncRNA) are routinely prepared following a two-step approach: high yield in vitro transcription using T7 RNA polymerase, followed by extensive purification using gel or chromatic methods. In high yield transcription reactions, as RNA accumulates in solution, T7 RNA polymerase rebinds and extends the encoded RNA (using the RNA as a template), resulting in a product pool contaminated with longer than desired, (partially) double stranded impurities. Current purification methods often fail to fully eliminate these impurities which, if present in therapeutics, can stimulate the innate immune response with potentially fatal consequences. This study establishes …


Pharmacological Chaperoning Of Human Lysosomal Neuraminidase 1, Di Chu May 2021

Pharmacological Chaperoning Of Human Lysosomal Neuraminidase 1, Di Chu

Doctoral Dissertations

Human lysosomal neuraminidase 1 (hNEU1) is an exo-a-sialidase which cleaves a(2-3) and a(2-6) linked sialic acids on glycoproteins in the lysosome. Deficiency of hNEU1 in the lysosome results in sialidosis, a lysosomal storage disease. Currently there is no effective treatment for sialidosis, which leads to a rising interest in discovering potential therapies. Here we presented a small molecule, α-D-N-acetylneuraminic acid (NANA), increases the protein amount and activity of both wild-type hNEU1 and three different hNEU1 mutations found in sialidosis patients in our mammalian cell system, suggesting that NANA works as a potential pharmacological chaperone for hNEU1 and provides …


Investigative Mechanisms To Exploit Caspase-Induced Apoptosis Using Polymeric Nanogels, Francesca Edith Anson May 2021

Investigative Mechanisms To Exploit Caspase-Induced Apoptosis Using Polymeric Nanogels, Francesca Edith Anson

Doctoral Dissertations

Cysteine aspartate proteases (caspases) act as the molecular scissors of cell death, disintegrating diverse cellular components necessary for survival and growth via proteolysis. Caspases are tightly regulated through a myriad of mechanisms including proteolytic processing, structural changes, post-translational modifications and metal binding. Correspondingly, cancers have evolved numerous resistance and desensitization mechanisms upstream or within the caspase pathway to avoid death signals. These mechanisms are extremely diverse and are not fully understood however, the field overwhelming suggests caspase activity and caspase inhibition antagonism to be critical for efficacious cancer therapies. Accordingly, exploiting the role of caspases in apoptosis has become an …


The Hidden Life Of Tropical Roots: Functional Root Traits And Their Response To Climatic Disturbances, Daniela Yaffar May 2021

The Hidden Life Of Tropical Roots: Functional Root Traits And Their Response To Climatic Disturbances, Daniela Yaffar

Doctoral Dissertations

Roots play a critical role in plant nutrition, and terrestrial carbon cycling. However, they are often understudied compared to their aboveground counterparts; especially in the tropics, where more carbon is cycled than in any other ecosystem. Some tropical forests, like in Puerto Rico, are more represented in scientific studies than others. However, this information is sparse, complicating the interpretation of root trait patterns. Trees in Puerto Rico have adapted mechanisms for withstanding hurricane disturbances, including in their roots. Additionally, as many tropical forests, some in Puerto Rico have low available phosphorus (P); thus, trees rely on root traits to enhance …


Engineering Modularity Of Ester Biosynthesis Across Biological Scales, Hyeongmin Seo May 2021

Engineering Modularity Of Ester Biosynthesis Across Biological Scales, Hyeongmin Seo

Doctoral Dissertations

Metabolic engineering and synthetic biology enable controlled manipulation of whole-cell biocatalysts to produce valuable chemicals from renewable feedstocks in a rapid and efficient manner, helping reduce our reliance on the conventional petroleum-based chemical synthesis. However, strain engineering process is costly and time-consuming that developing economically competitive bioprocess at industrial scale is still challenging. To accelerate the strain engineering process, modular cell engineering has been proposed as an innovative approach that harnesses modularity of metabolism for designing microbial cell factories. It is important to understand biological modularity and to develop design principles for effective implementation of modular cell engineering. In this …


Synthetic Heterosynaptic Plasticity Enhances The Versatility Of Memristive Systems Emulating Bio-Synapse Structure And Function, William T. Mcclintic May 2021

Synthetic Heterosynaptic Plasticity Enhances The Versatility Of Memristive Systems Emulating Bio-Synapse Structure And Function, William T. Mcclintic

Doctoral Dissertations

Memristive systems occur in nature and are hallmarked via pinched hysteresis, the difference in the forward and reverse pathways for a given phenomenon. For example, neurons of the human brain are composed of synapses which apply the properties of memristance for neuronal communication, learning, and memory consolidation. Modern technology has much to gain from the characteristics of memristive systems, including lower power operation, on-chip memory, and bio-inspired computing. What is more, a relationship between memristive systems and synaptic plasticity exists and can be investigated focusing on homosynaptic and heterosynaptic plasticity. Where homosynaptic plasticity applies to interactions between neurons at a …


The Role Of Med31 And Med12 In Directing Adipogenesis Of Human Adult-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells, Joseph Straub May 2021

The Role Of Med31 And Med12 In Directing Adipogenesis Of Human Adult-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells, Joseph Straub

Doctoral Dissertations

Selective gene expression is crucial in maintaining the self-renewing and multipotent properties of stem cells. Mediator is a large, evolutionarily conserved, multisubunit protein complex that modulates gene expression by relaying signals from cell type-specific transcription factors to RNA polymerase II. In humans, this complex consists of 30 subunits arranged in four modules: head, middle, tail, and kinase. In our introduction, we show the state of the field of Mediator study with a focus on the critical kinase module. In the following chapters, we used siRNA knockdowns to investigate the roles of the highly-conserved core subunit MED31 and the kinase module …


High Throughput Analysis To Study Emerging Pollutants And Nanoparticle Fate In Biological Systems, Xiaolong He Jan 2021

High Throughput Analysis To Study Emerging Pollutants And Nanoparticle Fate In Biological Systems, Xiaolong He

Doctoral Dissertations

”The increasing applications of emerging and fugitive contaminants (EFCs) and engineered nanoparticles (ENPs) attract significant research interest for their potential risks to human health and the environment. In order to assess the health risks of these emerging contaminants, rapid and reliable analytical methods to measure the concentrations and fates of these contaminants are imperative. This dissertation focuses on the developments of advanced analytical methods and their applications to study those emerging contaminants in crop plant and simulated gastric fluid (SGF). Three types of mass spectrometry based methodologies have been developed, one is freeze-thaw/centrifugation extraction followed by high performance liquid chromatography …


An Investigation On The Regulation Of The Tweak–Fn14–Nf-Kb Pathway, Jawahar Khetan Jan 2021

An Investigation On The Regulation Of The Tweak–Fn14–Nf-Kb Pathway, Jawahar Khetan

Doctoral Dissertations

“Dysregulation of inflammatory pathways is strongly implicated in cancers and autoimmune diseases. The most consequential of these pathways involves the nuclear translocation of NF-kB, a transcription factor that induces the transcription of multiple proteins associated with cell survival, inflammation, proliferation and death. It is activated when the fibroblast growth factor-inducible 14 kDa protein (Fn14), a trimeric receptor recruits its ligand, TWEAK. Studies have shown that Fn14 is over-expressed in many tumors, the aggressiveness of which is often correlated with the degree of upregulation. Furthermore, TWEAK-Fn14 activation has been shown to result in persistent NF-kB activation. Using a mechanistic model of …


Critical Behavior In Evolutionary And Population Dynamics, Stephen Walter Ordway Jan 2021

Critical Behavior In Evolutionary And Population Dynamics, Stephen Walter Ordway

Doctoral Dissertations

“This study is an exploration of phase transition behavior in evolutionary and population dynamics, and techniques for predicting population changes, across the disciplines of physics, biology, and computer science. Under the looming threat of climate change, it is imperative to understand the dynamics of populations under environmental stress and to identify early warning signals of population decline. These issues are explored here in (1) a computational model of evolutionary dynamics, (2) an experimental system of decaying populations under environmental stress, and (3) a machine learning approach to predict population changes based on environmental factors. Through the lens of critical phase …