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Dive into the research topics where Eric Alm is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric Alm.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 1999

Experiment and theory highlight role of native state topology in SH3 folding

David S. Riddle; Viara P. Grantcharova; Jed V. Santiago; Eric Alm; Ingo Ruczinski; David Baker

We use a combination of experiments, computer simulations and simple model calculations to characterize, first, the folding transition state ensemble of the src SH3 domain, and second, the features of the protein that determine its folding mechanism. Kinetic analysis of mutations at 52 of the 57 residues in the src SH3 domain revealed that the transition state ensemble is even more polarized than suspected earlier: no single alanine substitution in the N-terminal 15 residues or the C-terminal 9 residues has more than a two-fold effect on the folding rate, while such substitutions at 15 sites in the central three-stranded β-sheet cause significant decreases in the folding rate. Molecular dynamics (MD) unfolding simulations and ab initio folding simulations on the src SH3 domain exhibit a hierarchy of folding similar to that observed in the experiments. The similarity in folding mechanism of different SH3 domains and the similar hierarchy of structure formation observed in the experiments and the simulations can be largely accounted for by a simple native state topology-based model of protein folding energy landscapes.


Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 2001

Mechanisms of protein folding

Viara P. Grantcharova; Eric Alm; David Baker; Arthur L. Horwich

The strong correlation between protein folding rates and the contact order suggests that folding rates are largely determined by the topology of the native structure. However, for a given topology, there may be several possible low free energy paths to the native state and the path that is chosen (the lowest free energy path) may depend on differences in interaction energies and local free energies of ordering in different parts of the structure. For larger proteins whose folding is assisted by chaperones, such as the Escherichia coli chaperonin GroEL, advances have been made in understanding both the aspects of an unfolded protein that GroEL recognizes and the mode of binding to the chaperonin. The possibility that GroEL can remove non-native proteins from kinetic traps by unfolding them either during polypeptide binding to the chaperonin or during the subsequent ATP-dependent formation of folding-active complexes with the co-chaperonin GroES has also been explored.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

MicrobesOnline: an integrated portal for comparative and functional genomics

Paramvir Dehal; Marcin P. Joachimiak; Morgan N. Price; John T. Bates; Jason K. Baumohl; Dylan Chivian; Greg D. Friedland; Katherine H. Huang; Keith Keller; Pavel S. Novichkov; Inna Dubchak; Eric Alm; Adam P. Arkin

Since 2003, MicrobesOnline (http://www.microbesonline.org) has been providing a community resource for comparative and functional genome analysis. The portal includes over 1000 complete genomes of bacteria, archaea and fungi and thousands of expression microarrays from diverse organisms ranging from model organisms such as Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae to environmental microbes such as Desulfovibrio vulgaris and Shewanella oneidensis. To assist in annotating genes and in reconstructing their evolutionary history, MicrobesOnline includes a comparative genome browser based on phylogenetic trees for every gene family as well as a species tree. To identify co-regulated genes, MicrobesOnline can search for genes based on their expression profile, and provides tools for identifying regulatory motifs and seeing if they are conserved. MicrobesOnline also includes fast phylogenetic profile searches, comparative views of metabolic pathways, operon predictions, a workbench for sequence analysis and integration with RegTransBase and other microbial genome resources. The next update of MicrobesOnline will contain significant new functionality, including comparative analysis of metagenomic sequence data. Programmatic access to the database, along with source code and documentation, is available at http://microbesonline.org/programmers.html.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2000

Critical role of β-hairpin formation in protein G folding

Erika L. McCallister; Eric Alm; David Baker

Comparison of the folding mechanisms of proteins with similar structures but very different sequences can provide fundamental insights into the determinants of protein folding mechanisms. Despite very little sequence similarity, the ∼60 residue IgG binding domains of protein G and protein L both consist of a single helix packed against a four-stranded sheet formed by two symmetrically disposed β-hairpins. We demonstrate that, as in the case of protein L, one of the two β-turns of protein G is formed and the other disrupted in the folding transition state. Unlike protein L, however, in protein G it is the second β-turn that is formed in the folding transition state ensemble. Substitution of an Asp residue by Ala in protein G that eliminates an i,i+2 side chain–main chain hydrogen bond in the second β-turn slows the folding rate ∼20-fold but has virtually no effect on the unfolding rate. Taken together with previous results, these findings suggest that the presence of an intact β-turn in the folding transition state is a consequence of the overall topology of protein L and protein G, but the particular hairpin that is formed is determined by the detailed interatomic interactions that determine the free energies of formation of the isolated β-hairpins.


Protein Science | 2003

Contact order revisited: influence of protein size on the folding rate.

Dmitry N. Ivankov; Sergiy O. Garbuzynskiy; Eric Alm; Kevin W. Plaxco; David Baker; Alexei V. Finkelstein

Guided by the recent success of empirical model predicting the folding rates of small two‐state folding proteins from the relative contact order (CO) of their native structures, by a theoretical model of protein folding that predicts that logarithm of the folding rate decreases with the protein chain length L as L2/3, and by the finding that the folding rates of multistate folding proteins strongly correlate with their sizes and have very bad correlation with CO, we reexamined the dependence of folding rate on CO and L in attempt to find a structural parameter that determines folding rates for the totality of proteins. We show that the Abs_CO = CO × L, is able to predict rather accurately folding rates for both two‐state and multistate folding proteins, as well as short peptides, and that this Abs_CO scales with the protein chain length as L0.70 ± 0.07 for the totality of studied single‐domain proteins and peptides.


Science | 2008

Environmental genomics reveals a single-species ecosystem deep within earth

Dylan Chivian; Eoin L. Brodie; Eric Alm; David E. Culley; Paramvir Dehal; Todd Z. DeSantis; Thomas M. Gihring; Alla Lapidus; Li-Hung Lin; Stephen Lowry; Duane P. Moser; Paul M. Richardson; Gordon Southam; Greg Wanger; Lisa M. Pratt; Gary L. Andersen; Terry C. Hazen; Fred J. Brockman; Adam P. Arkin; T. C. Onstott

DNA from low-biodiversity fracture water collected at 2.8-kilometer depth in a South African gold mine was sequenced and assembled into a single, complete genome. This bacterium, Candidatus Desulforudis audaxviator, composes >99.9% of the microorganisms inhabiting the fluid phase of this particular fracture. Its genome indicates a motile, sporulating, sulfate-reducing, chemoautotrophic thermophile that can fix its own nitrogen and carbon by using machinery shared with archaea. Candidatus Desulforudis audaxviator is capable of an independent life-style well suited to long-term isolation from the photosphere deep within Earths crust and offers an example of a natural ecosystem that appears to have its biological component entirely encoded within a single genome.


PLOS Computational Biology | 2005

Dissimilatory Metabolism of Nitrogen Oxides in Bacteria: Comparative Reconstruction of Transcriptional Networks

Dmitry A. Rodionov; Inna Dubchak; Adam P. Arkin; Eric Alm; Mikhail Gelfand

Bacterial response to nitric oxide (NO) is of major importance since NO is an obligatory intermediate of the nitrogen cycle. Transcriptional regulation of the dissimilatory nitric oxides metabolism in bacteria is diverse and involves FNR-like transcription factors HcpR, DNR, and NnrR; two-component systems NarXL and NarQP; NO-responsive activator NorR; and nitrite-sensitive repressor NsrR. Using comparative genomics approaches, we predict DNA-binding motifs for these transcriptional factors and describe corresponding regulons in available bacterial genomes. Within the FNR family of regulators, we observed a correlation of two specificity-determining amino acids and contacting bases in corresponding DNA recognition motif. Highly conserved regulon HcpR for the hybrid cluster protein and some other redox enzymes is present in diverse anaerobic bacteria, including Clostridia, Thermotogales, and delta-proteobacteria. NnrR and DNR control denitrification in alpha- and beta-proteobacteria, respectively. Sigma-54-dependent NorR regulon found in some gamma- and beta-proteobacteria contains various enzymes involved in the NO detoxification. Repressor NsrR, which was previously known to control only nitrite reductase operon in Nitrosomonas spp., appears to be the master regulator of the nitric oxides metabolism, not only in most gamma- and beta-proteobacteria (including well-studied species such as Escherichia coli), but also in Gram-positive Bacillus and Streptomyces species. Positional analysis and comparison of regulatory regions of NO detoxification genes allows us to propose the candidate NsrR-binding motif. The most conserved member of the predicted NsrR regulon is the NO-detoxifying flavohemoglobin Hmp. In enterobacteria, the regulon also includes two nitrite-responsive loci, nipAB (hcp-hcr) and nipC (dnrN), thus confirming the identity of the effector, i.e. nitrite. The proposed NsrR regulons in Neisseria and some other species are extended to include denitrification genes. As the result, we demonstrate considerable interconnection between various nitrogen-oxides-responsive regulatory systems for the denitrification and NO detoxification genes and evolutionary plasticity of this transcriptional network.


Genome Biology | 2004

Reconstruction of regulatory and metabolic pathways in metal-reducing δ-proteobacteria

Dmitry A. Rodionov; Inna Dubchak; Adam P. Arkin; Eric Alm; Mikhail S. Gelfand

BackgroundRelatively little is known about the genetic basis for the unique physiology of metal-reducing genera in the delta subgroup of the proteobacteria. The recent availability of complete finished or draft-quality genome sequences for seven representatives allowed us to investigate the genetic and regulatory factors in a number of key pathways involved in the biosynthesis of building blocks and cofactors, metal-ion homeostasis, stress response, and energy metabolism using a combination of regulatory sequence detection and analysis of genomic context.ResultsIn the genomes of δ-proteobacteria, we identified candidate binding sites for four regulators of known specificity (BirA, CooA, HrcA, sigma-32), four types of metabolite-binding riboswitches (RFN-, THI-, B12-elements and S-box), and new binding sites for the FUR, ModE, NikR, PerR, and ZUR transcription factors, as well as for the previously uncharacterized factors HcpR and LysX. After reconstruction of the corresponding metabolic pathways and regulatory interactions, we identified possible functions for a large number of previously uncharacterized genes covering a wide range of cellular functions.ConclusionsPhylogenetically diverse δ-proteobacteria appear to have homologous regulatory components. This study for the first time demonstrates the adaptability of the comparative genomic approach to de novo reconstruction of a regulatory network in a poorly studied taxonomic group of bacteria. Recent efforts in large-scale functional genomic characterization of Desulfovibrio species will provide a unique opportunity to test and expand our predictions.


Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 1999

Matching theory and experiment in protein folding

Eric Alm; David Baker

There has been considerable progress made over the past year in linking experimental and theoretical approaches to protein folding. Recent results from several independent lines of investigation suggest that protein folding mechanisms and landscapes are largely determined by the topology of the native state and are relatively insensitive to details of the interatomic interactions. This dependence on low-resolution structural features, rather than high-resolution detail, suggests that it should be possible to describe the fundamental physics of the folding process using relatively low-resolution models. Recent experiments have set benchmarks for testing new models and progress has been made in developing theoretical models for interpreting and predicting experimental results.


PLOS Genetics | 2006

The Life-cycle of Operons

Morgan N. Price; Adam P. Arkin; Eric Alm

Operons are a major feature of all prokaryotic genomes, but how and why operon structures vary is not well understood. To elucidate the life-cycle of operons, we compared gene order between Escherichia coli K12 and its relatives and identified the recently formed and destroyed operons in E. coli. This allowed us to determine how operons form, how they become closely spaced, and how they die. Our findings suggest that operon evolution may be driven by selection on gene expression patterns. First, both operon creation and operon destruction lead to large changes in gene expression patterns. For example, the removal of lysA and ruvA from ancestral operons that contained essential genes allowed their expression to respond to lysine levels and DNA damage, respectively. Second, some operons have undergone accelerated evolution, with multiple new genes being added during a brief period. Third, although genes within operons are usually closely spaced because of a neutral bias toward deletion and because of selection against large overlaps, genes in highly expressed operons tend to be widely spaced because of regulatory fine-tuning by intervening sequences. Although operon evolution may be adaptive, it need not be optimal: new operons often comprise functionally unrelated genes that were already in proximity before the operon formed.

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Adam P. Arkin

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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David Baker

University of Washington

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Judy D. Wall

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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J. Zhou

University of Missouri

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Qiang He

University of Tennessee

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Zhili He

University of Oklahoma

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Morgan N. Price

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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