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Dive into the research topics where Jens Völker is active.

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Featured researches published by Jens Völker.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Conformational energetics of stable and metastable states formed by DNA triplet repeat oligonucleotides: implications for triplet expansion diseases.

Jens Völker; N. Makube; Plum Ge; Horst H. Klump; Kenneth J. Breslauer

We have embedded the hexameric triplet repeats (CAG)6 and (CTG)6 between two (GC)3 domains to produce two 30-mer hairpins with the sequences d[(GC)3(CAG)6(GC)3] and d[(GC)3(CTG)6(GC)3]. This construct reduces the conformational space available to these repetitive DNA sequences. We find that the (CAG)6 and (CTG)6 repeats form stable, ordered, single-stranded structures. These structures are stabilized at 62°C by an average enthalpy per base of 1.38 kcal·mol−1 for the CAG triplet and 2.87 kcal·mol−1 for the CTG triplet, while being entropically destabilized by 3.50 cal·K−1·mol−1 for the CAG triplet and 7.6 cal·K−1·mol−1 for the CTG triplet. Remarkably, these values correspond, respectively, to 1/3 (for CAG) and 2/3 (for CTG) of the enthalpy and entropy per base values associated with Watson–Crick base pairs. We show that the presence of the loop structure kinetically inhibits duplex formation from the two complementary 30-mer hairpins, even though the duplex is the thermodynamically more stable state. Duplex formation, however, does occur at elevated temperatures. We propose that this thermally induced formation of a more stable duplex results from thermal disruption of the single-stranded order, thereby allowing the complementary domains to associate (perhaps via “kissing hairpins”). Our melting profiles show that, once duplex formation has occurred, the hairpin intermediate state cannot be reformed, consistent with our interpretation of kinetically trapped hairpin structures. The duplex formed by the two complementary oligonucleotides does not have any unusual optical or thermodynamic properties. By contrast, the very stable structures formed by the individual single-stranded triplet repeat sequences are thermally and thermodynamically unusual. We discuss this stable, triplet repeat, single-stranded structure and its interconversion with duplex in terms of triplet expansion diseases.


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

Universal constant for heat production in protists

Matthew D. Johnson; Jens Völker; Holly V. Moeller; Edward R. Laws; Kenneth J. Breslauer; Paul G. Falkowski

Using a high sensitivity differential scanning calorimeter in isothermal mode, we directly measured heat production in eukaryotic protists from 5 phyla spanning over 5 orders of magnitude in carbon biomass and 8 orders of magnitude in cell volume. Our results reveal that metabolic heat production normalized to cell mass is virtually constant in these organisms, with a median of 0.037 pW pg C−1 (95% confidence interval = 0.022–0.061 pW pg C−1) at 5 °C. Contrary to allometric models, the relationship between heat production and cell carbon content or surface area is isometric (scaling exponents, 1.056 and 1.057, respectively). That heat production per unit cell surface area is constant suggests that heat flux through the cell surface is effectively instantaneous, and hence that cells are isothermal with their environment. The results further suggest that allometric models of metabolism based on metazoans are not applicable to protists, and that the underlying metabolic processes in the latter polyphyletic group are highly constrained by evolutionary selection. We propose that the evolutionary constraint leading to a universally constant heat production in single-celled eukaryotes is related to cytoplasmic packaging of organelles and surface area to volume relationships controlling diffusion of resources to these organelles.


Biopolymers | 1999

High-resolution calorimetric and optical melting profiles of DNA plasmids: Resolving contributions from intrinsic melting domains and specifically designed inserts

Jens Völker; R. D. Blake; Scott G. Delcourt; Kenneth J. Breslauer

We demonstrate that differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) can be used to yield high-resolution melting profiles for DNA plasmids that agree in all major features with the corresponding plasmid melting profiles derived using more traditional optical techniques. We further demonstrate that by combining information derived from both calorimetric and optical melting profiles one can glean insights that are unavailable from either melting curve alone. By using both optical and calorimetric observables, we show how one can resolve, identify, and measure the thermodynamic properties of particular sequences/domains of interest within a plasmid. We also show that complementary DSC and optical melting studies on plasmids with and without specifically designed inserts can provide fundamental advantages over the corresponding melting studies on other model system constructs for thermodynamically characterizing nucleic acid sequences/structures.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

DNA repair and DNA triplet repeat expansion: the impact of abasic lesions on triplet repeat DNA energetics.

Jens Völker; G. Eric Plum; Horst H. Klump; Kenneth J. Breslauer

Enhanced levels of DNA triplet expansion are observed when base excision repair (BER) of oxidative DNA base damage (e.g., 8-oxo-dG) occurs at or near CAG repeat sequences. This observation suggests an interplay between processing mechanisms required for DNA repair and expansion pathways that yield genotypes associated with many neurological/developmental disorders. It has been proposed that DNA expansion involves the transient formation within the triplet repeat domains of non-native slipped DNA structures that are incorrectly processed by the BER machinery of repair during DNA synthesis. We show here that replacement within a triplet repeat bulge loop domain of a guanosine residue by an abasic site, the universal BER intermediate, increases the population of slipped/looped DNA structures relative to the corresponding lesion-free construct. Such abasic lesion-induced energetic enhancement of slipped/looped structures provides a linkage between BER and DNA expansion. We discuss how the BER machinery of repair may be influenced by abasic-induced energetic alterations in the properties of regions proximal to and/or within triplet repeat domains, thereby potentially modulating levels of DNA expansion.


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

DNA energy landscapes via calorimetric detection of microstate ensembles of metastable macrostates and triplet repeat diseases

Jens Völker; Horst H. Klump; Kenneth J. Breslauer

Biopolymers exhibit rough energy landscapes, thereby allowing biological processes to access a broad range of kinetic and thermodynamic states. In contrast to proteins, the energy landscapes of nucleic acids have been the subject of relatively few experimental investigations. In this study, we use calorimetric and spectroscopic observables to detect, resolve, and selectively enrich energetically discrete ensembles of microstates within metastable DNA structures. Our results are consistent with metastable, “native” DNA states being composed of an ensemble of discrete and kinetically stable microstates of differential stabilities, rather than exclusively being a single, discrete thermodynamic species. This conceptual construct is important for understanding the linkage between biopolymer conformational/configurational space and biological function, such as in protein folding, allosteric control of enzyme activity, RNA and DNA folding and function, DNA structure and biological regulation, etc. For the specific DNA sequences and structures studied here, the demonstration of discrete, kinetically stable microstates potentially has biological consequences for understanding the development and onset of DNA expansion and triplet repeat diseases.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Energy Landscapes of Dynamic Ensembles of Rolling Triplet Repeat Bulge Loops: Implications for DNA Expansion Associated with Disease States

Jens Völker; Vera Gindikin; Horst H. Klump; G. Eric Plum; Kenneth J. Breslauer

DNA repeat domains can form ensembles of canonical and noncanonical states, including stable and metastable DNA secondary structures. Such sequence-induced structural diversity creates complex conformational landscapes for DNA processing pathways, including those triplet expansion events that accompany replication, recombination, and/or repair. Here we demonstrate further levels of conformational complexity within repeat domains. Specifically, we show that bulge loop structures within an extended repeat domain can form dynamic ensembles containing a distribution of loop positions, thereby yielding families of positional loop isomers, which we designate as “rollamers”. Our fluorescence, absorbance, and calorimetric data are consistent with loop migration/translocation between sites within the repeat domain (“rollamerization”). We demonstrate that such “rollameric” migration of bulge loops within repeat sequences can invade and disrupt previously formed base-paired domains via an isoenthalpic, entropy-driven process. We further demonstrate that destabilizing abasic lesions alter the loop distributions so as to favor “rollamers” with the lesion positioned at the duplex/loop junction, sites where the flexibility of the abasic “universal hinge” relaxes unfavorable interactions and/or facilitates topological accommodation. Another strategic siting of an abasic site induces directed loop migration toward denaturing domains, a phenomenon that merges destabilizing domains. In the aggregate, our data reveal that dynamic ensembles within repeat domains profoundly impact the overall energetics of such DNA constructs as well as the distribution of states by which they denature/renature. These static and dynamic influences within triplet repeat domains expand the conformational space available for selection and targeting by the DNA processing machinery. We propose that such dynamic ensembles and their associated impact on DNA properties influence pathways that lead to DNA expansion.


Biophysical Chemistry | 2001

Acid- and base-induced conformational transitions of equinatoxin II.

Nataša Poklar; Jens Völker; Gregor Anderluh; Peter Maček; Tigran V. Chalikian

We have investigated the acid- and base-induced conformational transitions of equinatoxin II (EqTxII), a pore-forming protein, by a combination of CD-spectroscopy, ultrasonic velocimetry, high precision densimetry, viscometry, gel electrophoresis, and hemolytic activity assays. Between pH 7 and 2, EqTxII does not exhibit any significant structural changes. Below pH 2, EqTxII undergoes a native-to-partially unfolded transition with a concomitant loss of its rigid tertiary structure and the formation of a non-native secondary structure containing additional alpha-helix. The acid-induced denatured state of EqTxII exhibits a higher intrinsic viscosity and a lower adiabatic compressibility than the native state. Above 50 degrees C, the acid-induced denatured state of EqTxII reversibly denatures to a more unfolded state as judged by the far UV CD spectrum of the protein. At alkaline pH, EqTxII undergoes two base-induced conformational transitions. The first transition occurs between pH 7 and 10 and results in a partial disruption of tertiary structure, while the secondary structure remains largely preserved. The second transition occurs between pH II and 13 and results in the complete loss of tertiary structure and the formation of a non-native, more alpha-helical secondary structure. The acid- and base-induced partially unfolded states of EqTxII form water-soluble oligomers at low salt, while at high salt (> 350 mM NaCl), the acid-induced denatured state precipitates. The hemolytic activity assay shows that the acid- and base-induced denatured states of EqTxII exhibit significantly reduced activity compared to the native state.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2014

APE1 Incision Activity at Abasic Sites in Tandem Repeat Sequences

Mengxia Li; Jens Völker; Kenneth J. Breslauer; David M. Wilson

Repetitive DNA sequences, such as those present in microsatellites and minisatellites, telomeres, and trinucleotide repeats (linked to fragile X syndrome, Huntington disease, etc.), account for nearly 30% of the human genome. These domains exhibit enhanced susceptibility to oxidative attack to yield base modifications, strand breaks, and abasic sites; have a propensity to adopt non-canonical DNA forms modulated by the positions of the lesions; and, when not properly processed, can contribute to genome instability that underlies aging and disease development. Knowledge on the repair efficiencies of DNA damage within such repetitive sequences is therefore crucial for understanding the impact of such domains on genomic integrity. In the present study, using strategically designed oligonucleotide substrates, we determined the ability of human apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease 1 (APE1) to cleave at apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites in a collection of tandem DNA repeat landscapes involving telomeric and CAG/CTG repeat sequences. Our studies reveal the differential influence of domain sequence, conformation, and AP site location/relative positioning on the efficiency of APE1 binding and strand incision. Intriguingly, our data demonstrate that APE1 endonuclease efficiency correlates with the thermodynamic stability of the DNA substrate. We discuss how these results have both predictive and mechanistic consequences for understanding the success and failure of repair protein activity associated with such oxidatively sensitive, conformationally plastic/dynamic repetitive DNA domains.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Energy crosstalk between DNA lesions: implications for allosteric coupling of DNA repair and triplet repeat expansion pathways.

Jens Völker; G. Eric Plum; Horst H. Klump; Kenneth J. Breslauer

Energy coupling between distal DNA domains may have profound regulatory consequences for biological processes, allowing for allosteric control of nucleic acid function. Repair of oxidative lesions at or near triplet repeat domains can enhance DNA expansion events that result in debilitating disease states. We report here position, distance, and lesion-dependent energy crosstalk between pairs of lesions in a triplet repeat bulge loop and an adjacent duplex domain. We discuss the implications of such coupled communication between lesions in distal loop and duplex domains for lesion repair and DNA expansion associated with diseases.


Biopolymers | 2010

Energetic coupling between clustered lesions modulated by intervening triplet repeat bulge loops: Allosteric implications for DNA repair and triplet repeat expansion

Jens Völker; G. Eric Plum; Horst H. Klump; Kenneth J. Breslauer

Clusters of closely spaced oxidative DNA lesions present challenges to the cellular repair machinery. When located in opposing strands, base excision repair (BER) of such lesions can lead to double strand DNA breaks (DSB). Activation of BER and DSB repair pathways has been implicated in inducing enhanced expansion of triplet repeat sequences. We show here that energy coupling between distal lesions (8oxodG and/or abasic sites) in opposing DNA strands can be modulated by a triplet repeat bulge loop located between the lesion sites. We find this modulation to be dependent on the identity of the lesions (8oxodG vs. abasic site) and the positions of the lesions (upstream vs. downstream) relative to the intervening bulge loop domain. We discuss how such bulge loop-mediated lesion crosstalk might influence repair processes, while favoring DNA expansion, the genotype of triplet repeat diseases.

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