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Dive into the research topics where Lois Pollack is active.

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Featured researches published by Lois Pollack.


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

Rapid compaction during RNA folding

Rick Russell; Ian S. Millett; Mark W. Tate; Lisa W. Kwok; Bradley J. Nakatani; Sol M. Gruner; S. G. J. Mochrie; Vijay S. Pande; Sebastian Doniach; Daniel Herschlag; Lois Pollack

We have used small angle x-ray scattering and computer simulations with a coarse-grained model to provide a time-resolved picture of the global folding process of the Tetrahymena group I RNA over a time window of more than five orders of magnitude. A substantial phase of compaction is observed on the low millisecond timescale, and the overall compaction and global shape changes are largely complete within one second, earlier than any known tertiary contacts are formed. This finding indicates that the RNA forms a nonspecifically collapsed intermediate and then searches for its tertiary contacts within a highly restricted subset of conformational space. The collapsed intermediate early in folding of this RNA is grossly akin to molten globule intermediates in protein folding.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Ionic strength-dependent persistence lengths of single-stranded RNA and DNA

Huimin Chen; Steve P. Meisburger; Suzette A. Pabit; Julie L. Sutton; Watt W. Webb; Lois Pollack

Dynamic RNA molecules carry out essential processes in the cell including translation and splicing. Base-pair interactions stabilize RNA into relatively rigid structures, while flexible non-base-paired regions allow RNA to undergo conformational changes required for function. To advance our understanding of RNA folding and dynamics it is critical to know the flexibility of these un-base-paired regions and how it depends on counterions. Yet, information about nucleic acid polymer properties is mainly derived from studies of ssDNA. Here we measure the persistence lengths (lp) of ssRNA. We observe valence and ionic strength-dependent differences in lp in a direct comparison between 40-mers of deoxythymidylate (dT40) and uridylate (rU40) measured using the powerful combination of SAXS and smFRET. We also show that nucleic acid flexibility is influenced by local environment (an adjoining double helix). Our results illustrate the complex interplay between conformation and ion environment that modulates nucleic acid function in vivo.


Annual Review of Physical Chemistry | 2010

Electrostatics of Strongly Charged Biological Polymers: Ion-Mediated Interactions and Self-Organization in Nucleic Acids and Proteins

Gerard C. L. Wong; Lois Pollack

Charges on biological polymers in physiologically relevant solution conditions are strongly screened by water and salt solutions containing counter-ions. However, the entropy of these counterions can result in surprisingly strong interactions between charged objects in water despite short screening lengths, via coupling between osmotic and electrostatic interactions. Widespread work in theory, experiment, and computation has been carried out to gain a fundamental understanding of the rich, yet sometimes counterintuitive, behavior of these polyelectrolyte systems. Examples of polyelectrolyte association in biology include DNA packaging and RNA folding, as well as aggregation and self-organization phenomena in different disease states.


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

Conformational changes of calmodulin upon Ca2+ binding studied with a microfluidic mixer

Hye Yoon Park; Sally A. Kim; Jonas Korlach; Elizabeth R. Rhoades; Lisa W. Kwok; Warren R. Zipfel; M. Neal Waxham; Watt W. Webb; Lois Pollack

A microfluidic mixer is applied to study the kinetics of calmodulin conformational changes upon Ca2+ binding. The device facilitates rapid, uniform mixing by decoupling hydrodynamic focusing from diffusive mixing and accesses time scales of tens of microseconds. The mixer is used in conjunction with multiphoton microscopy to examine the fast Ca2+-induced transitions of acrylodan-labeled calmodulin. We find that the kinetic rates of the conformational changes in two homologous globular domains differ by more than an order of magnitude. The characteristic time constants are ≈490 μs for the transitions in the C-terminal domain and ≈20 ms for those in the N-terminal domain of the protein. We discuss possible mechanisms for the two distinct events and the biological role of the stable intermediate, half-saturated calmodulin.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2009

Both helix topology and counterion distribution contribute to the more effective charge screening in dsRNA compared with dsDNA

Suzette A. Pabit; Xiangyun Qiu; Jessica S. Lamb; Li Li; Steve P. Meisburger; Lois Pollack

The recent discovery of the RNA interference mechanism emphasizes the biological importance of short, isolated, double-stranded (ds) RNA helices and calls for a complete understanding of the biophysical properties of dsRNA. However, most previous studies of the electrostatics of nucleic acid duplexes have focused on DNA. Here, we present a comparative investigation of electrostatic effects in RNA and DNA. Using resonant (anomalous) and non-resonant small-angle X-ray scattering, we characterized the charge screening efficiency and counterion distribution around short (25 bp) dsDNA and RNA molecules of comparable sequence. Consistent with theoretical predictions, we find counterion mediated screening to be more efficient for dsRNA than dsDNA. Furthermore, the topology of the RNA A-form helix alters the spatial distribution of counterions relative to B-form DNA. The experimental results reported here agree well with ion-size-corrected non-linear Poisson–Boltzmann calculations. We propose that differences in electrostatic properties aid in selective recognition of different types of short nucleic acid helices by target binding partners.


Biophysical Journal | 2012

RNA and Its Ionic Cloud: Solution Scattering Experiments and Atomically Detailed Simulations

Serdal Kirmizialtin; Suzette A. Pabit; Steve P. Meisburger; Lois Pollack; Ron Elber

RNA molecules play critical roles in many cellular processes. Traditionally viewed as genetic messengers, RNA molecules were recently discovered to have diverse functions related to gene regulation and expression. RNA also has great potential as a therapeutic and a tool for further investigation of gene regulation. Metal ions are an integral part of RNA structure and should be considered in any experimental or theoretical study of RNA. Here, we report a multidisciplinary approach that combines anomalous small-angle x-ray scattering and molecular-dynamics (MD) simulations with explicit solvent and ions around RNA. From experiment and simulation results, we find excellent agreement in the number and distribution of excess monovalent and divalent ions around a short RNA duplex. Although similar agreement can be obtained from a continuum description of the solvent and mobile ions (by solving the Poisson-Boltzmann equation and accounting for finite ion size), the use of MD is easily extended to flexible RNA systems with thermal fluctuations. Therefore, we also model a short RNA pseudoknot and find good agreement between the MD results and the experimentally derived solution structures. Surprisingly, both deviate from crystal structure predictions. These favorable comparisons of experiment and simulations encourage work on RNA in all-atom dynamic models.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

T box RNA decodes both the information content and geometry of tRNA to affect gene expression

Jason C. Grigg; Yujie Chen; Frank J. Grundy; Tina M. Henkin; Lois Pollack; Ailong Ke

The T box leader sequence is an RNA element that controls gene expression by binding directly to a specific tRNA and sensing its aminoacylation state. This interaction controls expression of amino acid-related genes in a negative feedback loop. The T box RNA structure is highly conserved, but its tRNA binding mechanism is only partially understood. Known sequence elements are the specifier sequence, which recognizes the tRNA anticodon, and the antiterminator bulge, which base pairs with the tRNA acceptor end. Here, we reveal the crucial function of the highly conserved stem I distal region in tRNA recognition and report its 2.65-Å crystal structure. The apex of this region contains an intricately woven loop–loop interaction between two conserved motifs, the Adenine-guanine (AG) bulge and the distal loop. This loop–loop structure presents a base triple on its surface that is optimally positioned for base-stacking interactions. Mutagenesis, cross-linking, and small-angle X-ray scattering data demonstrate that the apical base triple serves as a binding platform to dock the tRNA D- and T-loops. Strikingly, the binding platform strongly resembles the D- and T-loop binding elements from RNase P and the ribosome exit site, suggesting that this loop–loop structure may represent a widespread tRNA recognition platform. We propose a two-checkpoint molecular ruler model for tRNA decoding in which the information content of tRNA is first examined through specifier sequence–anticodon interaction, and the length of the tRNA anticodon arm is then measured by the distal loop–loop platform. When both conditions are met, tRNA is secured, and its aminoacylation state is sensed.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Flavin reduction activates Drosophila cryptochrome

Anand T. Vaidya; Deniz Top; Craig C. Manahan; Joshua M. Tokuda; Sheng Zhang; Lois Pollack; Michael W. Young; Brian R. Crane

Significance Cryptochromes (CRYs) are photosensors that play central roles in the circadian rhythms of plants and animals. CRYs are related to photolyase DNA-repair enzymes, but instead of binding DNA, insect CRYs bind a C-terminal tail (CTT) α-helix in the pocket that holds the light-sensing flavin molecule. There is no consensus on how light activates Drosophila CRY (dCRY). We show that reduction of the flavin to the anionic semiquinone by light or chemicals releases the CTT to activate dCRY. The target of dCRY, the protein Timeless, contains a sequence similar to the CTT, and dCRY recognizes this sequence selectively in the light. This study supports a model for CRY signaling in which flavin reduction is the critical step performed by light. Entrainment of circadian rhythms in higher organisms relies on light-sensing proteins that communicate to cellular oscillators composed of delayed transcriptional feedback loops. The principal photoreceptor of the fly circadian clock, Drosophila cryptochrome (dCRY), contains a C-terminal tail (CTT) helix that binds beside a FAD cofactor and is essential for light signaling. Light reduces the dCRY FAD to an anionic semiquinone (ASQ) radical and increases CTT proteolytic susceptibility but does not lead to CTT chemical modification. Additional changes in proteolytic sensitivity and small-angle X-ray scattering define a conformational response of the protein to light that centers at the CTT but also involves regions remote from the flavin center. Reduction of the flavin is kinetically coupled to CTT rearrangement. Chemical reduction to either the ASQ or the fully reduced hydroquinone state produces the same conformational response as does light. The oscillator protein Timeless (TIM) contains a sequence similar to the CTT; the corresponding peptide binds dCRY in light and protects the flavin from oxidation. However, TIM mutants therein still undergo dCRY-mediated degradation. Thus, photoreduction to the ASQ releases the dCRY CTT and promotes binding to at least one region of TIM. Flavin reduction by either light or cellular reductants may be a general mechanism of CRY activation.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2009

Illuminating solution responses of a LOV domain protein with photocoupled small-angle X-ray scattering.

Jessica S. Lamb; Brian D. Zoltowski; Suzette A. Pabit; Li Li; Brian R. Crane; Lois Pollack

The PAS-LOV domain is a signal-transducing component found in a large variety of proteins that is responsible for sensing different stimuli such as light, oxygen, and voltage. The LOV protein VVD regulates blue light responses in the filamentous fungi Neurospora crassa. Using photocoupled, time-resolved small-angle X-ray scattering, we extract the solution protein structure in both dark-adapted and light-activated states. Two distinct dark-adapted conformations are detected in the wild-type protein: a compact structure that corresponds to the crystal structure of the dark-state monomer as well as an extended structure that is well modeled by introducing conformational disorder at the N-terminus of the protein. These conformations are accentuated in carefully selected variants, in which a key residue for propagating structural transitions, Cys71, has been mutated or oxidized. Despite different dark-state conformations, all proteins form a common dimer in response to illumination. Taken together, these data support a reaction scheme that describes the mechanism for light-induced dimerization of VVD. Envelope reconstructions of the transient light-state dimer reveal structures that are best described by a parallel arrangement of subunits that have significantly changed conformation compared to the crystal structure.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2008

Hinge stiffness is a barrier to RNA folding

Jörg C. Schlatterer; Lisa W. Kwok; Jessica S. Lamb; Hye Yoon Park; Kurt Andresen; Michael Brenowitz; Lois Pollack

Cation-mediated RNA folding from extended to compact, biologically active conformations relies on a temporal balance of forces. The Mg2 +-mediated folding of the Tetrahymena thermophila ribozyme is characterized by rapid nonspecific collapse followed by tertiary-contact-induced compaction. This article focuses on an autonomously folding portion of the Tetrahymena ribozyme, its P4-P6 domain, in order to probe one facet of the rapid collapse: chain flexibility. The time evolution of P4-P6 folding was followed by global and local measures as a function of Mg2 + concentration. While all concentrations of Mg2 + studied are sufficient to screen the charge on the helices, the rates of compaction and tertiary contact formation diverge as the concentration of Mg2 + increases; collapse is greatly accelerated by Mg2 +, while tertiary contact formation is not. These studies highlight the importance of chain stiffness to RNA folding; at 10 mM Mg2 +, a stiff hinge limits the rate of P4-P6 folding. At higher magnesium concentrations, the rate-limiting step shifts from hinge bending to tertiary contact formati

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Li Li

Cornell University

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Hye Yoon Park

Seoul National University

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