Eli Rothenberg
University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign
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Featured researches published by Eli Rothenberg.
Physical Review Letters | 2002
David Katz; Tommer Wizansky; Oded Millo; Eli Rothenberg; Taleb Mokari; Uri Banin
Photoluminescence excitation spectroscopy and scanning-tunneling spectroscopy are used to study the electronic states in CdSe quantum rods that manifest a transition from a zero-dimensional to a one-dimensional quantum-confined structure. Both optical and tunneling spectra show that the level structure depends primarily on the diameter of the rod and not its length. With increasing diameter, the band gap and the excited state level spacings shift to the red. The level structure was assigned using a multiband effective-mass model, showing a similar dependence on rod dimensions.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007
Eli Rothenberg; Michael A. Trakselis; Stephen D. Bell; Taekjip Ha
The archaeal minichromosome maintenance protein MCM forms a homohexameric complex that functions as the DNA replicative helicase and serves as a model system for its eukaryotic counterpart. Here, we applied single molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer methods to probe the substrate specificity and binding mechanism of MCM from the hyperthermophilic Archaea Sulfolobus solfataricus on various DNA substrates. S. solfataricus MCM displays a binding preference for forked substrates relative to partial or full duplex substrates. Moreover, the nature of MCM binding to Y-shaped substrates is distinct in that MCM loads on the 3′-tail while interacting with the 5′-tail likely via the MCM surface. These results provide the first elucidation of a dynamic nature of interaction between a ring-shaped helicase interacting with an opposing single-stranded DNA tail. This interaction contributes to substrate selectivity and increases the stability of the forked DNA-MCM complex, with possible implications for the MCM unwinding mechanism.
Nano Letters | 2011
Paul D. Simonson; Eli Rothenberg; Paul R. Selvin
Several super-resolution techniques exist, yet most require multiple lasers, use either large or weakly emitting fluorophores, or involve chemical manipulation. Here we show a simple technique that exceeds the standard diffraction limit by 5-15× on fixed samples, yet allows the user to localize individual fluorophores from among groups of crowded fluorophores. It relies only on bright, organic fluorophores and a sensitive camera, both of which are commercially available. Super-resolution is achieved by subtracting sequential images to find the fluorophores that photobleach (temporarily or permanently), photoactivate, or bind to the structure of interest in transitioning from one frame to the next. These fluorophores can then be localized via Gaussian fitting with selective frame averaging to achieve accuracies much better than the diffraction limit. The signal-to-noise ratio decreases with the square root of the number of nearby fluorophores, producing average single-molecule localization errors that are typically <30 nm. Surprisingly, one can often extract signal when there are approximately 20 fluorophores surrounding the fluorophore of interest. Examples shown include microtubules (in vitro and in fixed cells) and chromosomal DNA.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2010
Jill M. Grimme; Masayoshi Honda; Rebecca Wright; Yusuke Okuno; Eli Rothenberg; Alexander V. Mazin; Taekjip Ha; Maria Spies
Rad52 promotes the annealing of complementary strands of DNA bound by replication protein A (RPA) during discrete repair pathways. Here, we used a fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between two fluorescent dyes incorporated into DNA substrates to probe the mechanism by which human Rad52 (hRad52) interacts with and mediates annealing of ssDNA–hRPA complexes. Human Rad52 bound ssDNA or ssDNA–hRPA complex in two, concentration-dependent modes. At low hRad52 concentrations, ssDNA was wrapped around the circumference of the protein ring, while at higher protein concentrations, ssDNA was stretched between multiple hRad52 rings. Annealing by hRad52 occurred most efficiently when each complementary DNA strand or each ssDNA–hRPA complex was bound by hRad52 in a wrapped configuration, suggesting homology search and annealing occur via two hRad52–ssDNA complexes. In contrast to the wild type protein, hRad52RQK/AAA and hRad521–212 mutants with impaired ability to bind hRPA protein competed with hRPA for binding to ssDNA and failed to counteract hRPA-mediated duplex destabilization highlighting the importance of hRad52-hRPA interactions in promoting efficient DNA annealing.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Eli Rothenberg; Jill M. Grimme; Maria Spies; Taekjip Ha
The Rad52 protein has critical functions in distinct pathways of the homology-directed DNA repair, one of which is to promote the annealing of complementary strands of DNA. Both yeast and human Rad52 proteins organize into ring-shaped oligomers with the predominant form being a heptamer. Despite the wealth of information obtained in previous investigations, how Rad52 mediates homology search and annealing remains unclear. Here, we developed single-molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer approaches to probe hRad52-mediated DNA annealing events in real time. We found that annealing proceeds in successive steps involving rearrangements of the ssDNA–hRad52 complex. Moreover, after initial pairing, further search for extended homology occurs without dissociation. This search process is driven by an interaction between 2 overlapping nucleoprotein complexes. In light of these observations we propose a model for hRad52-mediated DNA annealing where ssDNA release and dsDNA zippering are coordinated through successive rearrangement of overlapping nucleoprotein complexes.
Biophysical Journal | 2011
Eli Rothenberg; Leonardo A. Sepúlveda; Samuel O. Skinner; Lanying Zeng; Paul R. Selvin; Ido Golding
Viral infection begins with the binding of a virus to a specific target on the surface of the host cell, followed by viral genome delivery into the host and a continuation of the infection process. Before binding occurs, the virus must first find its receptor by a process whose details are largely unknown. We applied high-resolution fluorescence microscopy and single-particle tracking to elucidate the target-finding process in bacteriophage λ as it infects an Escherichia coli cell. By monitoring the motion of individual viruses through the early stages of infection, we identified a unique spatial focusing process that allows a virus to arrive from its initial random landing site to its destination at the cell pole. The search process is governed by the interaction between the virus and the LamB receptors, and by the spatial organization of the receptor network on the cell surface. Our findings allowed us to develop a theoretical model for the target-finding process that reproduces the key features observed in experiment. We discuss the possible implications of our findings for the process of viral receptor-finding in higher systems.
Nano Letters | 2011
Ruobing Zhang; Eli Rothenberg; Gilbert O. Fruhwirth; Paul D. Simonson; Fangfu Ye; Ido Golding; Tony Ng; Ward Lopes; Paul R. Selvin
We report the first two-photon (2P) microscopy of individual quantum dots (QDs) in an aqueous environment with both widefield and point-scan excitations at nanometer accuracy. Thiol-containing reductants suppress QD blinking and enable measurement of the 36 nm step size of individual Myosin V motors in vitro. We localize QDs with an accuracy of 2-3 nm in all three dimensions by using a 9 × 9 matrix excitation hologram and an array detector, which also increases the 3D scan imaging rate by 80-fold. With this 3D microscopy we validate the LamB receptor distribution on E. coli and the endocytosis of EGF-receptors in breast cancer cells.
Nanotechnology | 2004
Oded Millo; David Katz; Dov Steiner; Eli Rothenberg; Taleb Mokari; Miri Kazes; Uri Banin
We summarize our correlated scanning tunnelling microscopy and optical spectroscopy investigations of the electronic level structure and single-electron charging effects in CdSe quantum rods. Both optical and tunnelling spectra show that the level structure depends primarily on rod diameter and not on length. With increasing diameter, the bandgap and the excited state level spacings shift to the red. The level structure is assigned using a multi-band effective-mass model. The tunnelling spectra also exhibit, depending on the tunnel-junction parameters, single-electron charging effects that yield information on the degeneracy of the electronic states.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2009
Eli Rothenberg; Taekjip Ha
In recent years, advancements in single-biomolecule probing techniques have provided critical information on and greater insight into the nature of biomolecules. Of significance is the application of single-molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer (smFRET) to probe isolated events and changes at the nanometer scales. In particular, the study of helicases using smFRET has supplied much information regarding the nature and dynamics of these enzymes and provided a toolbox for further investigations. In this chapter we provide a general guide for the construction and execution of single-molecule FRET assays for the study of helicase properties and functionalities.
Israel Journal of Chemistry | 2004
Eli Rothenberg; Taleb Mokari; Miri Kazes; Uri Banin; David Katz; Dov Steiner; Oded Millo
Optical spectroscopy and scanning tunneling microscopy are used to study the size and shape dependence of the electronic states in CdSe quantum rods. Samples having average rod dimensions ranging from 10 to 60 nm in length and 3.5 to 7 nm in diameter, with aspect ratios varying between 3 to 12, were investigated. Both size-selective optical spectroscopy and tunneling spectra on single rods show that the level structure depends primarily on the rod diameter and not on length. With increasing diameter, the band gap and the excited state level spacings shift to the red. The level structure is assigned using a multi-band effective-mass model. We shall also discuss the effect of single electron charging on the tunneling spectra, possibly reflecting the quantum rod level degeneracy, and its dependence on the tunneling junction parameters.