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Featured researches published by Gregory J. Gemmen.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2006

DNA looping by two-site restriction endonucleases: heterogeneous probability distributions for loop size and unbinding force

Gregory J. Gemmen; Rachel Millin; Douglas E. Smith

Proteins interacting at multiple sites on DNA via looping play an important role in many fundamental biochemical processes. Restriction endonucleases that must bind at two recognition sites for efficient activity are a useful model system for studying such interactions. Here we used single DNA manipulation to study sixteen known or suspected two-site endonucleases. In eleven cases (BpmI, BsgI, BspMI, Cfr10I, Eco57I, EcoRII, FokI, HpaII, NarI, Sau3AI and SgrAI) we found that substitution of Ca2+ for Mg2+ blocked cleavage and enabled us to observe stable DNA looping. Forced disruption of these loops allowed us to measure the frequency of looping and probability distributions for loop size and unbinding force for each enzyme. In four cases we observed bimodal unbinding force distributions, indicating conformational heterogeneity and/or complex binding energy landscapes. Measured unlooping events ranged in size from 7 to 7500 bp and the most probable size ranged from less than 75 bp to nearly 500 bp, depending on the enzyme. In most cases the size distributions were in much closer agreement with theoretical models that postulate sharp DNA kinking than with classical models of DNA elasticity. Our findings indicate that DNA looping is highly variable depending on the specific protein and does not depend solely on the mechanical properties of DNA.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2005

A general method for manipulating DNA sequences from any organism with optical tweezers

Derek N. Fuller; Gregory J. Gemmen; John Peter Rickgauer; Aurelie Dupont; Rachel Millin; Pierre Recouvreux; Allen L. Schweitzer; Douglas E. Smith

Here we describe and characterize a method for manipulating desired DNA sequences from any organism with optical tweezers. Molecules are produced from either genomic or cloned DNA by PCR using labeled primers and are tethered between two optically trapped microspheres. We demonstrate that human, insect, plant, bacterial, and viral sequences ranging from ~10 to 40 kbp can be manipulated. Force-extension measurements show that these constructs exhibit uniform elastic properties in accord with the expected contour lengths for the targeted sequences. Detailed protocols for preparing and manipulating these molecules are presented, and tethering efficiency is characterized as a function of DNA concentration, ionic strength, and pH. Attachment strength is characterized by measuring the unbinding time distribution as a function of applied force.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2006

DNA looping and cleavage by restriction enzymes studied by manipulation of single DNA molecules with optical tweezers

Douglas E. Smith; Gregory J. Gemmen; Rachel Millin

Looping and cleavage of single DNA molecules by the two-site restriction endonuclease Sau3AI were measured with optical tweezers. A DNA template containing many recognition sites was used, permitting loop sizes from ~10 to 10,000 basepairs. At high enzyme concentration cleavage events were detected within 5 seconds and nearly all molecules were cleaved within 5 minutes. Activity decreased ~10-fold as the DNA tension was increased from 0.03 to 0.7 pN. Substituting Ca2+ for Mg2+ blocked cleavage, permitting measurement of stable loops. At low tension, the initial rates of cleavage and looping were similar (~0.025 s-1 at 0.1 pN), suggesting that looping is rate limiting. Short loops formed more rapidly than long loops. The optimum size decreased from ~250 to 45 bp and the average number of loops (in 1 minute) from 4.2 to 0.75 as tension was increased from 0.03 to 0.7 pN. No looping was detected at 5 pN. These findings are in qualitative agreement with recent theoretical predictions considering only DNA mechanics, but we observed weaker suppression with tension and smaller loop sizes. Our results suggest that the span and elasticity of the protein complex and protein-induced DNA bending and wrapping play an important role.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2005

Forced unraveling of nucleosomes assembled on heterogeneous DNA using core histones, NAP-1, and ACF.

Gregory J. Gemmen; Ronald Sim; Karl A. Haushalter; Pu-Chun Ke; James T. Kadonaga; Douglas E. Smith


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Tension-dependent DNA cleavage by restriction endonucleases: Two-site enzymes are “switched off” at low force

Gregory J. Gemmen; Rachel Millin; Douglas E. Smith


Electrochemistry Communications | 2009

Interaction of nanoparticles at the DEP microelectrode interface under high conductance conditions

Rajaram Krishnan; Dietrich A. Dehlinger; Gregory J. Gemmen; Robert L. Mifflin; Sadik C. Esener; Michael J. Heller


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Tension-dependent DNA cleavage by restriction endonucleases: Two-site enzymes are

Gregory J. Gemmen; Rachel Millin; Douglas E. Smith


Biophysical Journal | 2006

Dynamics of Single DNA Looping and Cleavage by Sau3AI and Effect of Tension Applied to the DNA

Gregory J. Gemmen; Rachel Millin; Douglas E. Smith


Archive | 2012

Continuous-Scanning Image Acquisition in Automated Microscopy Using Reflective Autofocus

Derek N. Fuller; Behrad Azimi; Gregory J. Gemmen


Proceedings of SPIE | 2005

Using optical tweezers to study protein-DNA interactions

Douglas E. Smith; Gregory J. Gemmen; Rachel Millin; John Peter Rickgauer; Allan L. Schweitzer; Derek N. Fuller

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Rachel Millin

University of California

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Aurelie Dupont

University of California

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Pu-Chun Ke

University of California

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Ronald Sim

University of California

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