Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ellina Mikhailova is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ellina Mikhailova.


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

Single-nucleotide discrimination in immobilized DNA oligonucleotides with a biological nanopore

David Stoddart; Andrew J. Heron; Ellina Mikhailova; Giovanni Maglia; Hagan Bayley

The sequencing of individual DNA strands with nanopores is under investigation as a rapid, low-cost platform in which bases are identified in order as the DNA strand is transported through a pore under an electrical potential. Although the preparation of solid-state nanopores is improving, biological nanopores, such as α-hemolysin (αHL), are advantageous because they can be precisely manipulated by genetic modification. Here, we show that the transmembrane β-barrel of an engineered αHL pore contains 3 recognition sites that can be used to identify all 4 DNA bases in an immobilized single-stranded DNA molecule, whether they are located in an otherwise homopolymeric DNA strand or in a heteropolymeric strand. The additional steps required to enable nanopore DNA sequencing are outlined.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Enhanced translocation of single DNA molecules through alpha-hemolysin nanopores by manipulation of internal charge.

Giovanni Maglia; Marcela Rincon Restrepo; Ellina Mikhailova; Hagan Bayley

Both protein and solid-state nanopores are under intense investigation for the analysis of nucleic acids. A crucial advantage of protein nanopores is that site-directed mutagenesis permits precise tuning of their properties. Here, by augmenting the internal positive charge within the α-hemolysin pore and varying its distribution, we increase the frequency of translocation of a 92-nt single-stranded DNA through the pore at +120 mV by ≈10-fold over the wild-type protein and dramatically lower the voltage threshold at which translocation occurs, e.g., by 50 mV for 1 event·s−1·μM−1. Further, events in which DNA enters the pore, but is not immediately translocated, are almost eliminated. These experiments provide a basis for improved nucleic acid analysis with protein nanopores, which might be translated to solid-state nanopores by using chemical surface modification.


Chemical Communications | 2010

Identification of epigenetic DNA modifications with a protein nanopore.

Emma V. B. Wallace; David Stoddart; Andrew J. Heron; Ellina Mikhailova; Giovanni Maglia; Timothy J. Donohoe; Hagan Bayley

Two DNA bases, 5-methylcytosine (5mC) and 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (hmC), marks of epigenetic modification, are recognized in immobilized DNA strands and distinguished from G, A, T and C by nanopore current recording. Therefore, if further aspects of nanopore sequencing can be addressed, the approach will provide a means to locate epigenetic modifications in unamplified genomic DNA.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2009

Droplet networks with incorporated protein diodes show collective properties

Giovanni Maglia; Andrew J. Heron; William L. Hwang; Matthew A. Holden; Ellina Mikhailova; Qiuhong Li; Stephen Cheley; Hagan Bayley

Recently, we demonstrated that submicrolitre aqueous droplets submerged in an apolar liquid containing lipid can be tightly connected by means of lipid bilayers to form networks. Droplet interface bilayers have been used for rapid screening of membrane proteins and to form asymmetric bilayers with which to examine the fundamental properties of channels and pores. Networks, meanwhile, have been used to form microscale batteries and to detect light. Here, we develop an engineered protein pore with diode-like properties that can be incorporated into droplet interface bilayers in droplet networks to form devices with electrical properties including those of a current limiter, a half-wave rectifier and a full-wave rectifier. The droplet approach, which uses unsophisticated components (oil, lipid, salt water and a simple pore), can therefore be used to create multidroplet networks with collective properties that cannot be produced by droplet pairs.


Nano Letters | 2011

Controlled Translocation of Individual DNA Molecules through Protein Nanopores with Engineered Molecular Brakes

Marcela Rincon-Restrepo; Ellina Mikhailova; Hagan Bayley; Giovanni Maglia

Protein nanopores may provide a cheap and fast technology to sequence individual DNA molecules. However, the electrophoretic translocation of ssDNA molecules through protein nanopores has been too rapid for base identification. Here, we show that the translocation of DNA molecules through the α-hemolysin protein nanopore can be slowed controllably by introducing positive charges into the lumen of the pore by site directed mutagenesis. Although the residual ionic current during DNA translocation is insufficient for direct base identification, we propose that the engineered pores might be used to slow down DNA in hybrid systems, for example, in combination with solid-state nanopores.


Nano Letters | 2010

Nucleobase recognition in ssDNA at the central constriction of the alpha-hemolysin pore.

David Stoddart; Andrew J. Heron; Jochen W. Klingelhoefer; Ellina Mikhailova; Giovanni Maglia; Hagan Bayley

Nanopores are under investigation for single-molecule DNA sequencing. The alpha-hemolysin (alphaHL) protein nanopore contains three recognition points capable of nucleobase discrimination in individual immobilized ssDNA molecules. We have modified the recognition point R(1) by extensive mutagenesis of residue 113. Amino acids that provide an energy barrier to ion flow (e.g., bulky or hydrophobic residues) strengthen base identification, while amino acids that lower the barrier weaken it. Amino acids with related side chains produce similar patterns of nucleobase recognition providing a rationale for the redesign of recognition points.


Angewandte Chemie | 2010

Multiple Base‐Recognition Sites in a Biological Nanopore: Two Heads are Better than One

David Stoddart; Giovanni Maglia; Ellina Mikhailova; Andrew J. Heron; Hagan Bayley

Ultra-rapid sequencing of DNA strands with nanopores is under intense investigation. The αHL protein nanopore is a leading candidate sensor for this approach. Multiple base-recognition sites have been identified in engineered αHL pores. By using immobilized synthetic oligonucleotides, we show here that additional sequence information can be gained when two recognition sites, rather than one, are employed within a single nanopore.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Molecular bases of cyclodextrin adapter interactions with engineered protein nanopores

Arijit Banerjee; Ellina Mikhailova; Stephen Cheley; Li-Qun Gu; Michelle Montoya; Yasuo Nagaoka; Eric Gouaux; Hagan Bayley

Engineered protein pores have several potential applications in biotechnology: as sensor elements in stochastic detection and ultrarapid DNA sequencing, as nanoreactors to observe single-molecule chemistry, and in the construction of nano- and micro-devices. One important class of pores contains molecular adapters, which provide internal binding sites for small molecules. Mutants of the α-hemolysin (αHL) pore that bind the adapter β-cyclodextrin (βCD) ∼104 times more tightly than the wild type have been obtained. We now use single-channel electrical recording, protein engineering including unnatural amino acid mutagenesis, and high-resolution x-ray crystallography to provide definitive structural information on these engineered protein nanopores in unparalleled detail.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2015

Continuous observation of the stochastic motion of an individual small-molecule walker

Gökçe Su Pulcu; Ellina Mikhailova; Lai-Sheung Choi; Hagan Bayley

Motion - be it the ability to change shape, rotate or translate - is an important potential asset for functional nanostructures. For translational motion, a variety of DNA-based and small-molecule walkers have been created, but observing the translational motion of individual molecules in real time remains a significant challenge. Here, we show that the movement of a small-molecule walker along a 5-foothold track can be monitored continuously within a protein nanoreactor. The walker is an organoarsenic(III) molecule with exchangeable thiol ligands, and the track a line of cysteine residues 6Å apart within an α-haemolysin protein pore that acts as the nanoreactor. Changes in the flow of ionic current through the pore reflect the individual steps of a single walker, which require the making and breaking of As-S bonds, and occur in aqueous solution at neutral pH and room temperature. The walker moves considerably faster (~0.7 s per step) than previous walkers based on covalent chemistry and is weakly processive (6 ± 1 steps per outing). It shows weak net directional movement, which can be described by a thermodynamic sink arising from the different environments of the cysteines that constitute the track.


Chemical Communications | 2012

Nucleobase recognition at alkaline pH and apparent pKa of single DNA bases immobilised within a biological nanopore

Lorenzo Franceschini; Ellina Mikhailova; Hagan Bayley; Giovanni Maglia

The four DNA bases are recognized in immobilized DNA strands at high alkaline pH by nanopore current recordings. Ionic currents through the biological nanopores are also employed to measure the apparent pK(a) values of single nucleobases within the immobilised DNA strands.

Collaboration


Dive into the Ellina Mikhailova's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Shaohua Ma

University of Cambridge

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Matthew A. Holden

University of Massachusetts Amherst

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge