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Featured researches published by Dunja Skoko.


Nature Methods | 2011

Probing protein heterogeneity in the plasma membrane using PALM and pair correlation analysis

Prabuddha Sengupta; Tijana Jovanovic-Talisman; Dunja Skoko; Malte Renz; Sarah L. Veatch; Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz

Photoactivated localization microscopy (PALM) is a powerful approach for investigating protein organization, yet tools for quantitative, spatial analysis of PALM datasets are largely missing. Combining pair-correlation analysis with PALM (PC-PALM), we provide a method to analyze complex patterns of protein organization across the plasma membrane without determination of absolute protein numbers. The approach uses an algorithm to distinguish a single protein with multiple appearances from clusters of proteins. This enables quantification of different parameters of spatial organization, including the presence of protein clusters, their size, density and abundance in the plasma membrane. Using this method, we demonstrate distinct nanoscale organization of plasma-membrane proteins with different membrane anchoring and lipid partitioning characteristics in COS-7 cells, and show dramatic changes in glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored protein arrangement under varying perturbations. PC-PALM is thus an effective tool with broad applicability for analysis of protein heterogeneity and function, adaptable to other single-molecule strategies.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Barrier-to-autointegration factor (BAF) condenses DNA by looping

Dunja Skoko; Min Li; Ying Huang; Michiyo Mizuuchi; Mengli Cai; Christina Marchetti Bradley; Paul J. Pease; Botao Xiao; John F. Marko; Robert Craigie; Kiyoshi Mizuuchi

Barrier-to-autointegration factor (BAF) is a protein that has been proposed to compact retroviral DNA, making it inaccessible as a target for self-destructive integration into itself (autointegration). BAF also plays an important role in nuclear organization. We studied the mechanism of DNA condensation by BAF using total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy. We found that BAF compacts DNA by a looping mechanism. Dissociation of BAF from DNA occurs with multiphasic kinetics; an initial fast phase is followed by a much slower dissociation phase. The mechanistic basis of the broad timescale of dissociation is discussed. This behavior mimics the dissociation of BAF from retroviral DNA within preintegration complexes as monitored by functional assays. Thus the DNA binding properties of BAF may alone be sufficient to account for its association with the preintegration complex.


Molecular Microbiology | 2006

Tn5 transposase loops DNA in the absence of Tn5 transposon end sequences

Christian D. Adams; Bernhard Schnurr; Dunja Skoko; John F. Marko; William S. Reznikoff

Transposases mediate transposition first by binding specific DNA end sequences that define a transposable element and then by organizing protein and DNA into a highly structured and stable nucleoprotein ‘synaptic’ complex. Synaptic complex assembly is a central checkpoint in many transposition mechanisms. The Tn5 synaptic complex contains two Tn5 transposase subunits and two Tn5 transposon end sequences, exhibits extensive protein–end sequence DNA contacts and is the node of a DNA loop. Using single‐molecule and bulk biochemical approaches, we found that Tn5 transposase assembles a stable nucleoprotein complex in the absence of Tn5 transposon end sequences. Surprisingly, this end sequence‐independent complex has structural similarities to the synaptic complex. This complex is the node of a DNA loop; transposase dimerization and DNA specificity mutants affect its assembly; and it likely has the same number of proteins and DNA molecules as the synaptic complex. Furthermore, our results indicate that Tn5 transposase preferentially binds and loops a subset of non‐Tn5 end sequences. Assembly of end sequence‐independent nucleoprotein complexes likely plays a role in the in vivo downregulation of transposition and the cis‐transposition bias of many bacterial transposases.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2006

Mechanism of chromosome compaction and looping by the Escherichia coli nucleoid protein Fis.

Dunja Skoko; Daniel Yoo; Hua Bai; Bernhard Schnurr; Jie Yan; Sarah M. McLeod; John F. Marko; Reid C. Johnson


Biochemistry | 2004

Micromechanical Analysis of the Binding of DNA-Bending Proteins HMGB1, NHP6A, and HU Reveals Their Ability To Form Highly Stable DNA−Protein Complexes†

Dunja Skoko; Ben Wong; Reid C. Johnson; John F. Marko


Physical Review E | 2004

Near-field-magnetic-tweezer manipulation of single DNA molecules

Jie Yan; Dunja Skoko; John F. Marko


Molecular Cell | 2005

Defining a Centromere-like Element in Bacillus subtilis by Identifying the Binding Sites for the Chromosome-Anchoring Protein RacA

Sigal Ben-Yehuda; Masya Fujita; Xiaole Shirley Liu; Boris Gorbatyuk; Dunja Skoko; Jie Yan; John F. Marko; Jun S. Liu; Patrick Eichenberger; David Z. Rudner; Richard Losick


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2006

Micromanipulation studies of chromatin fibers in Xenopus egg extracts reveal ATP-dependent chromatin assembly dynamics.

Jie Yan; Thomas J. Maresca; Dunja Skoko; Christian D. Adams; Botao Xiao; Morten O. Christensen; Rebecca Heald; John F. Marko


Physical Review Letters | 2005

Low-Force DNA Condensation and Discontinuous High-Force Decondensation Reveal a Loop-Stabilizing Function of the Protein Fis

Dunja Skoko; Jie Yan; Reid C. Johnson; John F. Marko


Biophysical Journal | 2011

Quantitative Analysis of the Lateral Organization of Plasma Membrane Proteins using Photoactivated Localization Microscopy (PALM)

Tijana Jovanovic-Talisman; Prabuddha Sengupta; Dunja Skoko; Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz

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Jie Yan

National University of Singapore

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Botao Xiao

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Christian D. Adams

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Prabuddha Sengupta

National Institutes of Health

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Rebecca Heald

University of California

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Thomas J. Maresca

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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