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Dive into the research topics where Deepak Kumar Sinha is active.

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Featured researches published by Deepak Kumar Sinha.


ChemBioChem | 2010

Photocontrol of protein activity in cultured cells and zebrafish with one- and two-photon illumination.

Deepak Kumar Sinha; Pierre Neveu; Nathalie Gagey; Isabelle Aujard; Chouaha Benbrahim-Bouzidi; Thomas Le Saux; Christine Rampon; Carole Gauron; Bernard Goetz; Sylvie Dubruille; Marc Baaden; Michel Volovitch; David Bensimon; Sophie Vriz; Ludovic Jullien

We have implemented a noninvasive optical method for the fast control of protein activity in a live zebrafish embryo. It relies on releasing a protein fused to a modified estrogen receptor ligand binding domain from its complex with cytoplasmic chaperones, upon the local photoactivation of a nonendogenous caged inducer. Molecular dynamics simulations were used to design cyclofen‐OH, a photochemically stable inducer of the receptor specific for 4‐hydroxy‐tamoxifen (ERT2). Cyclofen‐OH was easily synthesized in two steps with good yields. At submicromolar concentrations, it activates proteins fused to the ERT2 receptor. This was shown in cultured cells and in zebrafish embryos through emission properties and subcellular localization of properly engineered fluorescent proteins. Cyclofen‐OH was successfully caged with various photolabile protecting groups. One particular caged compound was efficient in photoinducing the nuclear translocation of fluorescent proteins either globally (with 365 nm UV illumination) or locally (with a focused UV laser or with two‐photon illumination at 750 nm). The present method for photocontrol of protein activity could be used more generally to investigate important physiological processes (e.g., in embryogenesis, organ regeneration and carcinogenesis) with high spatiotemporal resolution.


Zebrafish | 2010

Photoactivation of the CreERT2 Recombinase for Conditional Site-Specific Recombination with High Spatiotemporal Resolution

Deepak Kumar Sinha; Pierre Neveu; Nathalie Gagey; Isabelle Aujard; Thomas Le Saux; Christine Rampon; Carole Gauron; Koichi Kawakami; Christoph Leucht; Laure Bally-Cuif; Michel Volovitch; David Bensimon; Ludovic Jullien; Sophie Vriz

We implemented a noninvasive optical method for the fast control of Cre recombinase in single cells of a live zebrafish embryo. Optical uncaging of the caged precursor of a nonendogeneous steroid by one- or two-photon illumination was used to restore Cre activity of the CreER(T2) fusion protein in specific target cells. This method labels single cells irreversibly by inducing recombination in an appropriate reporter transgenic animal and thereby can achieve high spatiotemporal resolution in the control of gene expression. This technique could be used more generally to investigate important physiological processes (e.g., in embryogenesis, organ regeneration, or carcinogenesis) with high spatiotemporal resolution (single cell and 10-min scales).


Applied Physics Letters | 2004

Kinetic measurement of ribosome motor stalling force

Deepak Kumar Sinha; Upinder S. Bhalla; G. V. Shivashankar

We measure the ribosome motor stalling forces to unzip mRNA polymers during gene expression. An approach of using the changes in the reaction rate constants to determine the molecular motor forces is presented. Specific antisense DNA oligomers complementary to mRNA templates are used as kinetic barriers for estimating the ribosome forces using real time bioluminescence detection of luciferase gene expression. The rate constants are determined by comparing the experimental data with numerical simulation of gene expression to deduce the ribosome force (26.5±1pN) required to unzip mRNA polymers. Understanding the forces generated by the ribosome may also enable the construction of information-based artificial nanoscale machines.


Development | 2012

Spatiotemporal manipulation of retinoic acid activity in zebrafish hindbrain development via photo-isomerization

Lijun Xu; Zhiping Feng; Deepak Kumar Sinha; Bertrand Ducos; Yuval Ebenstein; Arbel D. Tadmor; Carole Gauron; Thomas Le Saux; Shuo Lin; Shimon Weiss; Sophie Vriz; Ludovic Jullien; David Bensimon

All-trans retinoic acid (RA) is a key player in many developmental pathways. Most methods used to study its effects in development involve continuous all-trans RA activation by incubation in a solution of all-trans RA or by implanting all-trans RA-soaked beads at desired locations in the embryo. Here we show that the UV-driven photo-isomerization of 13-cis RA to the trans-isomer (and vice versa) can be used to non-invasively and quantitatively control the concentration of all-trans RA in a developing embryo in time and space. This facilitates the global or local perturbation of developmental pathways with a pulse of all-trans RA of known concentration or its inactivation by UV illumination. In zebrafish embryos in which endogenous synthesis of all-trans RA is impaired, incubation for as little as 5 minutes in 1 nM all-trans RA (a pulse) or 5 nM 13-cis RA followed by 1-minute UV illumination is sufficient to rescue the development of the hindbrain if performed no later than bud stage. However, if subsequent to this all-trans RA pulse the embryo is illuminated (no later than bud stage) for 1 minute with UV light (to isomerize, i.e. deactivate, all-trans RA), the rescue of hindbrain development is impaired. This suggests that all-trans RA is sequestered in embryos that have been transiently exposed to it. Using 13-cis RA isomerization with UV light, we further show that local illumination at bud stage of the head region (but not the tail) is sufficient to rescue hindbrain formation in embryos whose all-trans RA synthetic pathway has been impaired.


Methods in Cell Biology | 2010

Dynamic Organization of Chromatin Assembly and Transcription Factories in Living Cells

Bidisha Sinha; Dipanjan Bhattacharya; Deepak Kumar Sinha; Shefali Talwar; Shovamayee Maharana; Soumya Gupta; G. V. Shivashankar

The interphase nucleus is an active organelle involved in processing genetic information. In higher order eukaryotes, information control is compartmentalized - for example at the scale of inter-chromosome territories and nuclear bodies. Regulatory proteins, nuclear bodies and chromatin assembly are found to be highly dynamic within the nucleus of primary cells and through cellular differentiation programs. In this chapter we describe live-cell fluorescence based techniques and single particle tracking analysis, to probe the spatio-temporal dimension in nuclear function.


Applied Physics Letters | 2006

Probing messenger RNA conformational heterogeneity using single-molecule fluorescence anisotropy

Deepak Kumar Sinha; Srikanth Sastry; G. V. Shivashankar

In this letter we describe a method to probe biomolecular conformations and their dynamics at the single molecule level. We show, using fluorescence anisotropy based methods, that the hydrodynamic volume of biomolecules captures the intrinsic heterogeneity within a population. Population distributions of conformations and their dynamics are studied by making anisotropy measurements on one molecule at a time within a confocal volume. The mean anisotropy of mRNA is lowered on addition of salt while the spread remains the same. The intrinsic heterogeneity is revealed when conformational transitions are frozen, resulting in a drastic increase in the spread of the anisotropy. These studies reveal that mRNA samples a broad range of conformations.


Archive | 2010

Single Cell Physiology

Pierre Neveu; Deepak Kumar Sinha; Petronella Kettunen; Sophie Vriz; Ludovic Jullien; David Bensimon

The possibility to control at specific times and specific places the activity of biomolecules (enzymes, transcription factors, RNA, hormones, etc.) is opening up new opportunities in the study of physiological processes at the single cell level in a live organism. Most existing gene expression systems allow for tissue specific induction upon feeding the organism with exogenous inducers (e.g., tetracycline). Local genetic control has earlier been achieved by micro-injection of the relevant inducer/repressor molecule, but this is an invasive and possibly traumatic technique. In this chapter, we present the requirements for a noninvasive optical control of the activity of biomolecules and review the recent advances in this new field of research.


Biophysical Journal | 2008

Probing the Dynamic Organization of Transcription Compartments and Gene Loci within the Nucleus of Living Cells

Deepak Kumar Sinha; Bidisha Banerjee; Shovamayee Maharana; G. V. Shivashankar


Nonlinearity | 2008

Some nonlinear challenges in biology

Francesco Mosconi; Thomas Julou; Nicolas Desprat; Deepak Kumar Sinha; Jean-François Allemand; Vincent Croquette; David Bensimon


Current Science | 2004

Development of single-molecule tracking confocal microscope combined with force spectroscopy for gene-expression analysis

Deepak Kumar Sinha; Dipanjan Bhattacharya; Bidisha Banerjee; Feroz M. Hameed; G. V. Shivashankar

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David Bensimon

École Normale Supérieure

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Ludovic Jullien

École Normale Supérieure

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G. V. Shivashankar

National University of Singapore

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Thomas Le Saux

École Normale Supérieure

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Pierre Neveu

University of California

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Isabelle Aujard

École Normale Supérieure

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Nathalie Gagey

École Normale Supérieure

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Bernard Goetz

École Normale Supérieure

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