Guogang Dong
University of California, San Diego
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Featured researches published by Guogang Dong.
Current Opinion in Microbiology | 2008
Guogang Dong; Susan S. Golden
The cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus builds a circadian clock on an oscillator composed of three proteins, KaiA, KaiB, and KaiC, which can recapitulate a circadian rhythm of KaiC phosphorylation in vitro. The molecular structures of all three proteins are known, and the phosphorylation steps of KaiC, the interaction dynamics among the three Kai proteins, and a weak ATPase activity of KaiC have all been characterized. An input pathway of redox-sensitive proteins uses photosynthetic function to relay light/dark information to the oscillator, and signal transduction proteins of well-known families broadcast temporal information to the genome, where global changes in transcription and a compaction of the chromosome are clock regulated.
Science | 2010
Qiong Yang; Bernardo F. Pando; Guogang Dong; Susan S. Golden; Alexander van Oudenaarden
Cycle Entrainment Cells manage many cyclic processes that must coordinate with each other for best cellular performance. Yang et al. (p. 1522) present a general theoretical framework that quantitatively describes coupled cyclic processes and then apply this to the interaction between the circadian and cell-division cycles in single cyanobacteria. Simultaneously tracking individual cell divisions and circadian phases and fitting the data with the model suggest that cell-cycle progression slows down dramatically during a specific circadian interval, whereas cell-cycle progression is independent of the cell-cycle phase. Modeling and observation of cyanobacteria show entrainment of the cell cycle by their biological clock. Although major progress has been made in uncovering the machinery that underlies individual biological clocks, much less is known about how multiple clocks coordinate their oscillations. We simultaneously tracked cell division events and circadian phases of individual cells of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus and fit the data to a model to determine when cell cycle progression slows as a function of circadian and cell cycle phases. We infer that cell cycle progression in cyanobacteria slows during a specific circadian interval but is uniform across cell cycle phases. Our model is applicable to the quantification of the coupling between biological oscillators in other organisms.
Cell | 2010
Guogang Dong; Qiong Yang; Qiang Wang; Yong-Ick Kim; Thammajun L. Wood; Katherine W. Osteryoung; Alexander van Oudenaarden; Susan S. Golden
A circadian clock coordinates physiology and behavior in diverse groups of living organisms. Another major cyclic cellular event, the cell cycle, is regulated by the circadian clock in the few cases where linkage of these cycles has been studied. In the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus, the circadian clock gates cell division by an unknown mechanism. Using timelapse microscopy, we confirm the gating of cell division in the wild-type and demonstrate the regulation of cytokinesis by key clock components. Specifically, a state of the oscillator protein KaiC that is associated with elevated ATPase activity closes the gate by acting through a known clock output pathway to inhibit FtsZ ring formation at the division site. An activity that stimulates KaiC phosphorylation independently of the KaiA protein was also uncovered. We propose a model that separates the functions of KaiC ATPase and phosphorylation in cell division gating and other circadian behaviors.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Yong-Ick Kim; Guogang Dong; Carl W. Carruthers; Susan S. Golden; Andy LiWang
The circadian oscillator of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus is composed of only three proteins, KaiA, KaiB, and KaiC, which, together with ATP, can generate a self-sustained ≈24 h oscillation of KaiC phosphorylation for several days. KaiA induces KaiC to autophosphorylate, whereas KaiB blocks the stimulation of KaiC by KaiA, which allows KaiC to autodephosphorylate. We propose and support a model in which the C-terminal loops of KaiC, the “A-loops”, are the master switch that determines overall KaiC activity. When the A-loops are in their buried state, KaiC is an autophosphatase. When the A-loops are exposed, however, KaiC is an autokinase. A dynamic equilibrium likely exists between the buried and exposed states, which determines the steady-state level of phosphorylation of KaiC. The data suggest that KaiA stabilizes the exposed state of the A-loops through direct binding. We also show evidence that if KaiA cannot stabilize the exposed state, KaiC remains hypophosphorylated. We propose that KaiB inactivates KaiA by preventing it from stabilizing the exposed state of the A-loops. Thus, KaiA and KaiB likely act by shifting the dynamic equilibrium of the A-loops between exposed and buried states, which shifts the balance of autokinase and autophosphatase activities of KaiC. A-loop exposure likely moves the ATP closer to the sites of phosphorylation, and we show evidence in support of how this movement may be accomplished.
Molecular Microbiology | 2006
Xiaofan Zhang; Guogang Dong; Susan S. Golden
CikA (circadian input kinase) is a component of the cyanobacterial circadian clock that aids in synchronizing the endogenous oscillator with the external environment. cikA mutants of the prokaryotic circadian model organism Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942 fail to reset the phase of the circadian rhythm of gene expression after an environmental time cue, and also exhibit reduced amplitude and shortened period of circadian oscillation. CikA has histidine protein kinase (HPK) activity that is modulated in vitro by GAF and pseudo‐receiver (PsR) domains. Here we show that the PsR domain negatively regulates HPK activity in vivo and also serves as an interaction module to dock CikA at a specific subcellular location. Phenotypes conferred by alleles that encode CikA variants showed that all domains except the featureless N‐terminus are required for CikA function. Overexpression of all alleles that encode the PsR domain, whether or not the HPK is functional, caused a dominant arrhythmic phenotype, whereas overexpressed variants that lack PsR did not. Subcellular localization of intact CikA identified a polar focus whereas a variant without PsR showed uniform distribution in the cell, consistent with a model in which PsR mediates interaction with other input pathway components.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Arnaud Taton; Ewa Lis; Dawn M. Adin; Guogang Dong; Scott Cookson; Steve A. Kay; Susan S. Golden; James W. Golden
Current cyanobacterial model organisms were not selected for their growth traits or potential for the production of renewable biomass, biofuels, or other products. The cyanobacterium strain BL0902 emerged from a search for strains with superior growth traits. Morphology and 16S rRNA sequence placed strain BL0902 in the genus Leptolyngbya. Leptolyngbya sp. strain BL0902 (hereafter Leptolyngbya BL0902) showed robust growth at temperatures from 22°C to 40°C and tolerated up to 0.5 M NaCl, 32 mM urea, high pH, and high solar irradiance. Its growth rate under outdoor conditions rivaled Arthrospira (“pirulina” strains. Leptolyngbya BL0902 accumulated higher lipid content and a higher proportion of monounsaturated fatty acids than Arthrospira strains. In addition to these desirable qualities, Leptolyngbya BL0902 is amenable to genetic engineering that is reliable, efficient, and stable. We demonstrated conjugal transfer from Escherichia coli of a plasmid based on RSF1010 and expression of spectinomycin/streptomycin resistance and yemGFP reporter transgenes. Conjugation efficiency was investigated in biparental and triparental matings with and without a “elper”plasmid that carries DNA methyltransferase genes, and with two different conjugal plasmids. We also showed that Leptolyngbya BL0902 is amenable to transposon mutagenesis with a Tn5 derivative. To facilitate genetic manipulation of Leptolyngbya BL0902, a conjugal plasmid vector was engineered to carry a trc promoter upstream of a Gateway recombination cassette. These growth properties and genetic tools position Leptolyngbya BL0902 as a model cyanobacterial production strain.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2008
Shannon R. Mackey; Jong Soon Choi; Yohko Kitayama; Hideo Iwasaki; Guogang Dong; Susan S. Golden
Diverse organisms time their cellular activities to occur at distinct phases of Earths solar day, not through the direct regulation of these processes by light and darkness but rather through the use of an internal biological (circadian) clock that is synchronized with the external cycle. Input pathways serve as mechanisms to transduce external cues to a circadian oscillator to maintain synchrony between this internal oscillation and the environment. The circadian input pathway in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942 requires the kinase CikA. A cikA null mutant exhibits a short circadian period, the inability to reset its clock in response to pulses of darkness, and a defect in cell division. Although CikA is copurified with the Kai proteins that constitute the circadian central oscillator, no direct interaction between CikA and either KaiA, KaiB, or KaiC has been demonstrated. Here, we identify four proteins that may help connect CikA with the oscillator. Phenotypic analyses of null and overexpression alleles demonstrate that these proteins are involved in at least one of the functions--circadian period regulation, phase resetting, and cell division--attributed to CikA. Predictions based on sequence similarity suggest that these proteins function through protein phosphorylation, iron-sulfur cluster biosynthesis, and redox regulation. Collectively, these results suggest a model for circadian input that incorporates proteins that link the circadian clock, metabolism, and cell division.
Current Biology | 2014
Susan E. Cohen; Marcella L. Erb; Jangir Selimkhanov; Guogang Dong; Jeff Hasty; Joe Pogliano; Susan S. Golden
BACKGROUND The cyanobacterial circadian clock system has been extensively studied, and the structures, interactions, and biochemical activities of the central oscillator proteins (KaiA, KaiB, and KaiC) have been well elucidated. Despite this rich repository of information, little is known about the distribution of these proteins within the cell. RESULTS Here we report that KaiA and KaiC localize as discrete foci near a single pole of cells in a clock-dependent fashion, with enhanced polar localization observed at night. KaiA localization is dependent on KaiC; consistent with this notion, KaiA and KaiC colocalize with each other, as well as with CikA, a key input and output factor previously reported to display unipolar localization. The molecular mechanism that localizes KaiC to the poles is conserved in Escherichia coli, another Gram-negative rod-shaped bacterium, suggesting that KaiC localization is not dependent on other clock- or cyanobacterial-specific factors. Moreover, expression of CikA mutant variants that distribute diffusely results in the striking delocalization of KaiC. CONCLUSIONS This work shows that the cyanobacterial circadian system undergoes a circadian orchestration of subcellular organization. We propose that the observed spatiotemporal localization pattern represents a novel layer of regulation that contributes to the robustness of the clock by facilitating protein complex formation and synchronizing the clock with environmental stimuli.
Archive | 2014
Susan E. Cohen; Marcella L. Erb; Jangir Selimkhanov; Guogang Dong; Jeff Hasty; Joe Pogliano; Susan S. Golden
PubMed Central | 2010
Qiong Yang; Bernardo F. Pando; Guogang Dong; Susan S. Golden; Alexander van Oudenaarden