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Archive for the ‘Basri’ Category
Basri submitted this paper
Chemical Approaches to DNA Nanotechnology
Posted by tanlab on September 13, 2009
Posted in Basri, Review | Leave a Comment »
Diagnosing lung cancer in exhaled breath using gold nanoparticles
Posted by tanlab on September 9, 2009
Conventional diagnostic methods for lung cancer1,2 are unsuitable
for widespread screening2,3 because they are expensive and
occasionally miss tumours. Gas chromatography/mass spectrometry
studies have shown that several volatile organic compounds,
which normally appear at levels of 1–20 ppb in healthy
human breath, are elevated to levels between 10 and 100 ppb in
lung cancer patients4–6. Here we show that an array of sensors
based on gold nanoparticles can rapidly distinguish the breath
of lung cancer patients from the breath of healthy individuals in
an atmosphere of high humidity. In combination with solidphase
microextraction7, gas chromatography/mass spectrometry
was used to identify 42 volatile organic compounds
that represent lung cancer biomarkers. Four of these were
used to train and optimize the sensors, demonstrating good
agreement between patient and simulated breath samples.
Our results show that sensors based on gold nanoparticles
could form the basis of an inexpensive and non-invasive diagnostic
tool for lung cancer.
Posted in Basri, Nature Nanotechnology | Tagged: lung cancer, Nanotechnology | Leave a Comment »
Inhibiting Plasmodium falciparum growth and heme detoxification pathway using heme-binding DNA aptamers
Posted by tanlab on July 28, 2009
The human parasite Plasmodium falciparum enzymatically digests hemoglobin during its intra-erythrocytic developmental stages in acidic food vacuole compartments. The released heme is rapidly detoxified by polymerization into the chemically inert pigment, hemozoin. Several heme-binding anti-malarial compounds, such as chloroquine, efficiently inhibit this process, and this is believed to be the predominant mechanism by which these drugs induce parasite toxicity. In an effort to expand the biochemical tools available for exploration of this pathogen’s basic biology, we chose this heme-detoxification pathway as a model system for exploring the suitability of DNA aptamers for modulating this essential parasite biochemical pathway. In this report, we demonstrate that heme-binding DNA aptamers efficiently inhibit in vitro hemozoin formation catalyzed by either a model lipid system or parasite-derived extracts just as or more potently than chloroquine. Furthermore, when parasites are grown in red cells loaded with heme-binding aptamers, their growth is significantly inhibited relative to parasites exposed to non-heme-binding DNA oligonucleotides. Both the timing of parasite-induced toxicity and the concentration of heme-binding aptamer required for inducing toxicity correlate well with the uptake of red cell cytosolic components by the parasite, and the requirement for compounds with similar in vitro hemozoin inhibitory potency to preconcentrate within the parasite before observing toxicity. Thus, these heme-binding aptamers recapitulate the in vitro hemozoin inhibition activity and induce parasite toxicity in a manner consistent with inhibition of this pathway. Altogether, these data demonstrate that aptamers can be versatile tools with applicability in functionally dissecting important P. falciparum-specific pathways both in vitro and in vivo.
Posted in Basri, PNAS | Tagged: aptamers for malaria | Leave a Comment »
Mass-spectrometric identification and relative quantification of N-linked cell surface glycoproteins
Posted by tanlab on May 1, 2009
Nature Biotechnology 27, 378 – 386 (2009)
Although the classification of cell types often relies on the identification of cell surface proteins as differentiation markers, flow
cytometry requires suitable antibodies and currently permits detection of only up to a dozen differentiation markers in a single
measurement. We use multiplexed mass-spectrometric identification of several hundred N-linked glycosylation sites specifically
from cell surface–exposed glycoproteins to phenotype cells without antibodies in an unbiased fashion and without a priori
knowledge. We apply our cell surface–capturing (CSC) technology, which covalently labels extracellular glycan moieties on
live cells, to the detection and relative quantitative comparison of the cell surface N-glycoproteomes of T and B cells, as
well as to monitor changes in the abundance of cell surface N-glycoprotein markers during T-cell activation and the controlled
differentiation of embryonic stem cells into the neural lineage. A snapshot view of the cell surface N-glycoproteins will enable
detection of panels of N-glycoproteins as potential differentiation markers that are currently not accessible by other means.
Posted in Approved Literature, Basri, Nature Biotechnology | Leave a Comment »
A Bipedal DNA Brownian Motor with Coordinated Legs
Posted by tanlab on April 15, 2009
A substantial challenge in engineering molecular motors is designing mechanisms to coordinate the motion between multiple domains of the motor so as to bias random thermal motion. For bipedal motors, this challenge takes the form of coordinating the movement of the biped’s legs so that they can move in a synchronized fashion. To address this problem, we have constructed an autonomous DNA bipedal walker that coordinates the action of its two legs by cyclically catalyzing the hybridization of metastable DNA fuel strands. This process leads to a chemically ratcheted walk along a directionally polar DNA track. By covalently cross-linking aliquots of the walker to its track in successive walking states, we demonstrate that this Brownian motor can complete a full walking cycle on a track whose length could be extended for longer walks. We believe that this study helps to uncover principles behind the design of unidirectional devices that can function without intervention. This device should be able to fulfill roles that entail the performance of useful mechanical work on the nanometer scale.
Posted in Approved Literature, Basri, Science | Leave a Comment »
Photodegradable Hydrogels for Dynamic Tuning of Physical and Chemical Properties
Posted by tanlab on April 15, 2009
We report a strategy to create photodegradable poly(ethylene glycol)–based hydrogels through rapid polymerization of cytocompatible macromers for remote manipulation of gel properties in situ. Postgelation control of the gel properties was demonstrated to introduce temporal changes, creation of arbitrarily shaped features, and on-demand pendant functionality release. Channels photodegraded within a hydrogel containing encapsulated cells allow cell migration. Temporal variation of the biochemical gel composition was used to influence chondrogenic differentiation of encapsulated stem cells. Photodegradable gels that allow real-time manipulation of material properties or chemistry provide dynamic environments with the scope to answer fundamental questions about material regulation of live cell function and may affect an array of applications from design of drug delivery vehicles to tissue engineering systems.
Posted in Approved Literature, Basri, Science | Leave a Comment »
Structure of P-Glycoprotein Reveals a Molecular Basis for Poly-Specific Drug Binding
Posted by tanlab on April 15, 2009
P-glycoprotein (P-gp) detoxifies cells by exporting hundreds of chemically unrelated toxins but has been implicated in multidrug resistance (MDR) in the treatment of cancers. Substrate promiscuity is a hallmark of P-gp activity, thus a structural description of poly-specific drug-binding is important for the rational design of anticancer drugs and MDR inhibitors. The x-ray structure of apo P-gp at 3.8 angstroms reveals an internal cavity of 6000 angstroms cubed with a 30 angstrom separation of the two nucleotide-binding domains. Two additional P-gp structures with cyclic peptide inhibitors demonstrate distinct drug-binding sites in the internal cavity capable of stereoselectivity that is based on hydrophobic and aromatic interactions. Apo and drug-bound P-gp structures have portals open to the cytoplasm and the inner leaflet of the lipid bilayer for drug entry. The inward-facing conformation represents an initial stage of the transport cycle that is competent for drug binding.
Posted in Approved Literature, Basri, Science | Leave a Comment »
Affinity capture using chimeric membrane proteins bound to magnetic beads for rapid ligand screening by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry
Posted by tanlab on April 6, 2009
Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry, 2009, 23, 745
The rapid and specific detection of therapeutically important ligands in complex mixtures, that may bind to membrane proteins, remains challenging for many research laboratories and pharmaceutical industries. Through its use in the development of screening assays, mass spectrometry (MS) is currently experiencing a period of tremendous expansion. In the study presented here, we took advantage of the remarkable stability properties of a bacterial membrane protein, the KcsA K+ channel, produced in E. coli and purified as a tetrameric protein in the presence of a detergent. This membrane protein can subserve as a molecular template to display the pore-forming region of human K+ channels, which are considered as targets in the search for inhibitory ligands. The engineered chimeric proteins were linked to metal-bound magnetic beads, for the screening of complex peptide mixtures, such as that of scorpion venoms. The affinity-captured scorpion toxins were eluted prior to matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOFMS), and to nano-electrospray ionization tandem mass QqTOF mass spectrometry (MS/MS) analysis. The de novo sequence of the toxins was deduced by combining the MS/MS fragmentation of the reduced form (up to the 33 first residues) and the trypsin digest peptides of the native toxins. This affinity-capture screening assay led to the isolation and characterization of potent and specific ligands of the human K+ channel, Kv1.3. The affinity-capture procedure is fast and reproducible. When linked to magnetic beads, the chimeric membrane protein can be re-used several times without losing any of its selectivity or specificity. This assay also benefits from the fact that it requires minimal amounts of animal venoms or complex mixtures, which can be expensive or difficult to procure.
Posted in Approved Literature, Basri, Rapid Commun MS | Leave a Comment »
Identification of a New Endogenous Metabolite and the Characterization of Its Protein Interactions through an Immobilization Approach
Posted by tanlab on April 6, 2009
J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2009, 131, 378–386
The emerging field of global mass-based metabolomics provides a platform for discovering unknown metabolites and their specific biochemical pathways. We report the identification of a new endogenous metabolite, N4-(N-acetylaminopropyl)spermidine and the use of a novel proteomics based method for the investigation of its protein interaction using metabolite immobilization on agarose beads. The metabolite was isolated from the organism Pyrococcus furiosus, and structurally characterized through an iterative process of synthesizing candidate molecules and comparative analysis using accurate mass LC-MS/MS. An approach developed for the selective preparation of N1-acetylthermospermine, one of the possible structures of the unknown metabolite, provides a convenient route to new polyamine derivatives through methylation on the N8 and N4 of the thermospermine scaffold. The biochemical role of the novel metabolite as well as that of two other polyamines: spermidine and agmatine is investigated through metabolite immobilization and incubation with native proteins. The identification of eleven proteins that uniquely bind with N4-(N-acetylaminopropyl)spermidine, provides information on the role of this novel metabolite in the native organism. Identified proteins included hypothetical ones such as PF0607 and PF1199, and those involved in translation, DNA synthesis and the urea cycle like translation initiation factor IF-2, 50S ribosomal protein L14e, DNA-directed RNA polymerase, and ornithine carbamoyltransferase. The immobilization approach demonstrated here has the potential for application to other newly discovered endogenous metabolites found through untargeted metabolomics, as a preliminary screen for generating a list of proteins that could be further investigated for specific activity.
Posted in Approved Literature, Basri, JACS | Leave a Comment »
A SILAC-based DNA protein interaction screen that identifies candidate binding proteins to functional DNA elements
Posted by tanlab on March 19, 2009
Determining the underlying logic that governs the networks of gene expression in higher eukaryotes is an important task in the post-genome era. Sequence-specific transcription factors (TFs) that can read the genetic regulatory information and proteins that interpret the information provided by CpG methylation are crucial components of the system that controls the transcription of protein-coding genes by RNA polymerase II. We have previously described Stable Isotope Labeling by Amino acids in Cell culture (SILAC) for the quantitative comparison of proteomes and the determination of protein–protein interactions. Here, we report a generic and scalable strategy to uncover such DNA protein interactions by SILAC that uses a fast and simple one-step affinity capture of TFs from crude nuclear extracts. Employing mutated or nonmethylated control oligonucleotides, specific TFs binding to their wild-type or methyl-CpG bait are distinguished from the vast excess of copurifying background proteins by their peptide isotope ratios that are determined by mass spectrometry. Our proof of principle screen identifies several proteins that have not been previously reported to be present on the fully methylated CpG island upstream of the human metastasis associated 1 family, member 2 gene promoter. The approach is robust, sensitive, and specific and offers the potential for high-throughput determination of TF binding profiles.
Posted in Approved Literature, Basri, Genome Res | Leave a Comment »