Max Narovlyansky
Harvard University
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Featured researches published by Max Narovlyansky.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011
Bryan F. Shaw; Grégory F. Schneider; Haribabu Arthanari; Max Narovlyansky; Demetri T. Moustakas; Armando Durazo; Gerhard Wagner; George M. Whitesides
A previous study, using capillary electrophoresis (CE) [J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2008, 130, 17384-17393], reported that six discrete complexes of ubiquitin (UBI) and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) form at different concentrations of SDS along the pathway to unfolding of UBI in solutions of SDS. One complex (which formed between 0.8 and 1.8 mM SDS) consisted of native UBI associated with approximately 11 molecules of SDS. The current study used CE and (15)N/(13)C-(1)H heteronuclear single quantum coherence (HSQC) NMR spectroscopy to identify residues in folded UBI that associate specifically with SDS at 0.8-1.8 mM SDS, and to correlate these associations with established biophysical and structural properties of this well-characterized protein. The ability of the surface charge and hydrophobicity of folded UBI to affect the association with SDS (at concentrations below the CMC) was studied, using CE, by converting lys-ε-NH(3)(+) to lys-ε-NHCOCH(3) groups. According to CE, the acetylation of lysine residues inhibited the binding of 11 SDS ([SDS] < 2 mM) and decreased the number of complexes of composition UBI-(NHAc)(8)·SDS(n) that formed on the pathway of unfolding of UBI-(NHAc)(8) in SDS. A comparison of (15)N-(1)H HSQC spectra at 0 mM and 1 mM SDS with calculated electrostatic surface potentials of folded UBI (e.g., solutions to the nonlinear Poisson-Boltzmann (PB) equation) suggested, however, that SDS binds preferentially to native UBI at hydrophobic residues that are formally neutral (i.e., Leu and Ile), but that have positive electrostatic surface potential (as predicted from solutions to nonlinear PB equations); SDS did not uniformly interact with residues that have formal positive charge (e.g., Lys or Arg). Cationic functional groups, therefore, promote the binding of SDS to folded UBI because these groups exert long-range effects on the positive electrostatic surface potential (which extend beyond their own van der Waals radii, as predicted from PB theory), and not because cationic groups are necessarily the site of ionic interactions with sulfate groups. Moreover, SDS associated with residues in native UBI without regard to their location in α-helix or β-sheet structure (although residues in hydrogen-bonded loops did not bind SDS). No correlation was observed between the association of an amino acid with SDS and the solvent accessibility of the residue or its rate of amide H/D exchange. This study establishes a few (of perhaps several) factors that control the simultaneous molecular recognition of multiple anionic amphiphiles by a folded cytosolic protein.
Soft Matter | 2007
Adam Winkleman; Raquel Perez-Castillejos; Michal Lahav; Max Narovlyansky; Leonard N. J. Rodriguez; George M. Whitesides
This paper describes a photolithographic method to create sub-micron-scale patterns of cation-cross-linked poly(acrylic acid) (CCL-PAA). PAA can be cross-linked with a wide range of metal cations-including, but not limited to, Ag, Ca, Pd, Al, La, and Ti. Upon patterning a positive photoresist (diazonaphthoquinone-novolac resin) on a film of CCL-PAA, the exposed regions of CCL-PAA were etched by either an aqueous NaOH or EDTA solution. The initial cross-linking cation could be exchanged for a second cation that could not be patterned photolithographically. We used these patterned films of CCL-PAA i) to host and template the reduction of metallic cations to metallic nanoparticles, and ii) to fabricate porous, low- dielectric substrates.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010
Bryan F. Shaw; Haribabu Arthanari; Max Narovlyansky; Armando Durazo; Dominique P. Frueh; Andrew Lee; Basar Bilgicer; Steven P. Gygi; Gerhard Wagner; George M. Whitesides
This paper combines two techniques--mass spectrometry and protein charge ladders--to examine the relationship between the surface charge and hydrophobicity of a representative globular protein (bovine carbonic anhydrase II; BCA II) and its rate of amide hydrogen-deuterium (H/D) exchange. Mass spectrometric analysis indicated that the sequential acetylation of surface lysine-ε-NH3(+) groups--a type of modification that increases the net negative charge and hydrophobicity of the surface of BCA II without affecting its secondary or tertiary structure--resulted in a linear decrease in the aggregate rate of amide H/D exchange at pD 7.4, 15 °C. According to analysis with MS, the acetylation of each additional lysine generated between 1.4 and 0.9 additional hydrogens that are protected from H/D exchange during the 2 h exchange experiment at 15 °C, pD 7.4. NMR spectroscopy demonstrated that none of the hydrogen atoms which became protected upon acetylation were located on the side chain of the acetylated lysine residues (i.e., lys-ε-NHCOCH3) but were instead located on amide NHCO moieties in the backbone. The decrease in rate of exchange associated with acetylation paralleled a decrease in thermostability: the most slowly exchanging rungs of the charge ladder were the least thermostable (as measured by differential scanning calorimetry). This observation--that faster rates of exchange are associated with slower rates of denaturation--is contrary to the usual assumptions in protein chemistry. The fact that the rates of H/D exchange were similar for perbutyrated BCA II (e.g., [lys-ε-NHCO(CH2)2CH3]18) and peracetylated BCA II (e.g., [lys-ε-NHCOCH3]18) suggests that the electrostatic charge is more important than the hydrophobicity of surface groups in determining the rate of H/D exchange. These electrostatic effects on the kinetics of H/D exchange could complicate (or aid) the interpretation of experiments in which H/D exchange methods are used to probe the structural effects of non-isoelectric perturbations to proteins (i.e., phosphorylation, acetylation, or the binding of the protein to an oligonucleotide or to another charged ligand or protein).
Applied Physics Letters | 2007
Max Narovlyansky; George M. Whitesides; Todd M. Squires
We describe a general and versatile method to sculpt low-dispersion, high-fidelity sample zones in microfluidic devices for high resolution electrokinetic separations. In a simple channel intersection, microfabricated partitions reduce each channel’s permittivity to transverse electric fields, yet maintain their permeability to parallel fields. The resulting anisotropy effectively confines fields to the intersection, thus sculpting the injected plug. We demonstrate by injecting narrow yet symmetric sample zones in a poly(dimethylsiloxane) microfluidic device. This simple geometric strategy for sculpting the field and flow lines does not depend on the device material or analyte/electrolyte properties, and is limited in scale only by fabrication capabilities.
Lab on a Chip | 2010
Zhihong Nie; Christian A. Nijhuis; Jinlong Gong; Xin Chen; Alexander Kumachev; Andres W. Martinez; Max Narovlyansky; George M. Whitesides
Archive | 2006
Vincent Linder; Samuel K. Sia; George M. Whitesides; Max Narovlyansky; Adam C. Siegel
Archive | 2006
Todd M. Squires; Max Narovlyansky
Archive | 2010
George M. Whitesides; Zhihong Nie; Christian A. Nijhuis; Xin Chen; Andres W. Martinez; Max Narovlyansky
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005
Samuel K. Sia; Vincent Linder; Max Narovlyansky; George M. Whitesides
Archive | 2010
Zhihong Nei; Christian A. Nijhuis; Xin Chen; Andres W. Martinez; Max Narovlyansky; George M. Whitesides