Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Mikhail Pavlenok is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Mikhail Pavlenok.


Nature Biotechnology | 2012

Reading DNA at single-nucleotide resolution with a mutant MspA nanopore and phi29 DNA polymerase

Elizabeth A. Manrao; Ian M. Derrington; Andrew H. Laszlo; Kyle W. Langford; Matthew K Hopper; Nathaniel Gillgren; Mikhail Pavlenok; Michael Niederweis; Jens H. Gundlach

Nanopore technologies are being developed for fast and direct sequencing of single DNA molecules through detection of ionic current modulations as DNA passes through a pores constriction. Here we demonstrate the ability to resolve changes in current that correspond to a known DNA sequence by combining the high sensitivity of a mutated form of the protein pore Mycobacterium smegmatis porin A (MspA) with phi29 DNA polymerase (DNAP), which controls the rate of DNA translocation through the pore. As phi29 DNAP synthesizes DNA and functions like a motor to pull a single-stranded template through MspA, we observe well-resolved and reproducible ionic current levels with median durations of ∼28 ms and ionic current differences of up to 40 pA. Using six different DNA sequences with readable regions 42–53 nucleotides long, we record current traces that map to the known DNA sequences. With single-nucleotide resolution and DNA translocation control, this system integrates solutions to two long-standing hurdles to nanopore sequencing.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Nanopore DNA sequencing with MspA

Ian M. Derrington; Thomas Z. Butler; Marcus D. Collins; Elizabeth A. Manrao; Mikhail Pavlenok; Michael Niederweis; Jens H. Gundlach

Nanopore sequencing has the potential to become a direct, fast, and inexpensive DNA sequencing technology. The simplest form of nanopore DNA sequencing utilizes the hypothesis that individual nucleotides of single-stranded DNA passing through a nanopore will uniquely modulate an ionic current flowing through the pore, allowing the record of the current to yield the DNA sequence. We demonstrate that the ionic current through the engineered Mycobacterium smegmatis porin A, MspA, has the ability to distinguish all four DNA nucleotides and resolve single-nucleotides in single-stranded DNA when double-stranded DNA temporarily holds the nucleotides in the pore constriction. Passing DNA with a series of double-stranded sections through MspA provides proof of principle of a simple DNA sequencing method using a nanopore. These findings highlight the importance of MspA in the future of nanopore sequencing.


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

Single-molecule DNA detection with an engineered MspA protein nanopore

Thomas Z. Butler; Mikhail Pavlenok; Ian M. Derrington; Michael Niederweis; Jens H. Gundlach

Nanopores hold great promise as single-molecule analytical devices and biophysical model systems because the ionic current blockades they produce contain information about the identity, concentration, structure, and dynamics of target molecules. The porin MspA of Mycobacterium smegmatis has remarkable stability against environmental stresses and can be rationally modified based on its crystal structure. Further, MspA has a short and narrow channel constriction that is promising for DNA sequencing because it may enable improved characterization of short segments of a ssDNA molecule that is threaded through the pore. By eliminating the negative charge in the channel constriction, we designed and constructed an MspA mutant capable of electronically detecting and characterizing single molecules of ssDNA as they are electrophoretically driven through the pore. A second mutant with additional exchanges of negatively-charged residues for positively-charged residues in the vestibule region exhibited a factor of ≈20 higher interaction rates, required only half as much voltage to observe interaction, and allowed ssDNA to reside in the vestibule ≈100 times longer than the first mutant. Our results introduce MspA as a nanopore for nucleic acid analysis and highlight its potential as an engineerable platform for single-molecule detection and characterization applications.


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

Detection and mapping of 5-methylcytosine and 5-hydroxymethylcytosine with nanopore MspA.

Andrew H. Laszlo; Ian M. Derrington; Henry Brinkerhoff; Kyle W. Langford; Ian C. Nova; Jenny Mae Samson; Joshua J. Bartlett; Mikhail Pavlenok; Jens H. Gundlach

Significance Cells attach a methyl group (—CH3) to certain cytosines in DNA to control gene expression. These methylation patterns change over time and can be related to cell differentiation and diseases such as cancer. Existing methylation detection techniques are not ideal for clinical use. We pulled single-stranded DNA molecules through the biological pore MspA and found that ion currents passing through the pore reveal the methylation sites with high confidence. Hydroxymethylation, which differs from methylation by only one oxygen atom, also produces distinct signals. This technique can be developed into a research tool and may ultimately lead to clinical tests. Precise and efficient mapping of epigenetic markers on DNA may become an important clinical tool for prediction and identification of ailments. Methylated CpG sites are involved in gene expression and are biomarkers for diseases such as cancer. Here, we use the engineered biological protein pore Mycobacterium smegmatis porin A (MspA) to detect and map 5-methylcytosine and 5-hydroxymethylcytosine within single strands of DNA. In this unique single-molecule tool, a phi29 DNA polymerase draws ssDNA through the pore in single-nucleotide steps, and the ion current through the pore is recorded. Comparing current levels generated with DNA containing methylated CpG sites to current levels obtained with unmethylated copies of the DNA reveals the precise location of methylated CpG sites. Hydroxymethylation is distinct from methylation and can also be mapped. With a single read, the detection efficiency in a quasirandom DNA strand is 97.5 ± 0.7% for methylation and 97 ± 0.9% for hydroxymethylation.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Nucleotide Discrimination with DNA Immobilized in the MspA Nanopore

Elizabeth A. Manrao; Ian M. Derrington; Mikhail Pavlenok; Michael Niederweis; Jens H. Gundlach

Nanopore sequencing has the potential to become a fast and low-cost DNA sequencing platform. An ionic current passing through a small pore would directly map the sequence of single stranded DNA (ssDNA) driven through the constriction. The pore protein, MspA, derived from Mycobacterium smegmatis, has a short and narrow channel constriction ideally suited for nanopore sequencing. To study MspAs ability to resolve nucleotides, we held ssDNA within the pore using a biotin-NeutrAvidin complex. We show that homopolymers of adenine, cytosine, thymine, and guanine in MspA exhibit much larger current differences than in α-hemolysin. Additionally, methylated cytosine is distinguishable from unmethylated cytosine. We establish that single nucleotide substitutions within homopolymer ssDNA can be detected when held in MspAs constriction. Using genomic single nucleotide polymorphisms, we demonstrate that single nucleotides within random DNA can be identified. Our results indicate that MspA has high signal-to-noise ratio and the single nucleotide sensitivity desired for nanopore sequencing devices.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2008

Role of Porins for Uptake of Antibiotics by Mycobacterium smegmatis

Olga Danilchanka; Mikhail Pavlenok; Michael Niederweis

ABSTRACT The outer membrane of mycobacteria presents an effective permeability barrier for many antibiotics. Transport pathways across this membrane are unknown for most drugs. Here, we examined which antibiotics utilize the porin pathway across the outer membrane of the model organism Mycobacterium smegmatis. Deletion of the porins MspA and MspC drastically increased the resistance of M. smegmatis ML10 to β-lactam antibiotics, while its β-lactamase activity remained unchanged. These results are consistent with the ninefold-reduced outer membrane permeability of the M. smegmatis porin mutants for cephaloridine and strongly indicate that β-lactam antibiotics rely on the porin pathway. The porin mutant ML10 accumulated less chloramphenicol and norfloxacin and was less susceptible to these antibiotics than wild-type M. smegmatis. These results demonstrated that small and hydrophilic antibiotics use the Msp porins for entering the cell. In contrast to norfloxacin, the hydrophobic moxifloxacin was 32-fold more effective in inhibiting the growth of M. smegmatis, presumably because it was able to diffuse through the lipid membrane. Structural models indicated that erythromycin, kanamycin, and vancomycin are too large to move through the MspA channel. This study presents the first experimental evidence that hydrophilic fluoroquinolones and chloramphenicol diffuse through porins in mycobacteria. Thus, mutations resulting in less efficient porins or lower porin expression levels are likely to represent a mechanism for the opportunistic pathogens M. avium, M. chelonae, and M. fortuitum, which have Msp-like porins, to acquire resistance to fluoroquinolones.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

An outer membrane channel protein of Mycobacterium tuberculosis with exotoxin activity

Olga Danilchanka; Jim Sun; Mikhail Pavlenok; Christian Maueröder; Alexander Speer; Axel Siroy; Joeli Marrero; Carolina Trujillo; David L. Mayhew; Kathryn S. Doornbos; Luis E. Munoz; Martin Herrmann; Sabine Ehrt; Christian Berens; Michael Niederweis

Significance The mechanisms that enable Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of tuberculosis, to resist drug treatment and survive the immune response are poorly understood. In this study we discovered that M. tuberculosis produces the protein channel protein with necrosis-inducing toxin (CpnT), which forms a channel in the outer membrane and releases a toxic domain into the extracellular milieu. This toxin has no similarity to known bacterial toxins and kills eukaryotic cells by necrosis, suggesting that it is required for escape of M. tuberculosis from macrophages and for dissemination. The channel domain of CpnT is used for uptake of nutrients across the outer membrane. Taken together, CpnT is a protein with functions in two fundamental processes in M. tuberculosis physiology: nutrient acquisition and control of host cell death. The ability to control the timing and mode of host cell death plays a pivotal role in microbial infections. Many bacteria use toxins to kill host cells and evade immune responses. Such toxins are unknown in Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Virulent M. tuberculosis strains induce necrotic cell death in macrophages by an obscure molecular mechanism. Here we show that the M. tuberculosis protein Rv3903c (channel protein with necrosis-inducing toxin, CpnT) consists of an N-terminal channel domain that is used for uptake of nutrients across the outer membrane and a secreted toxic C-terminal domain. Infection experiments revealed that CpnT is required for survival and cytotoxicity of M. tuberculosis in macrophages. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the C-terminal domain of CpnT causes necrotic cell death in eukaryotic cells. Thus, CpnT has a dual function in uptake of nutrients and induction of host cell death by M. tuberculosis.


ACS Nano | 2012

Molecular dynamics study of MspA arginine mutants predicts slow DNA translocations and ion current blockades indicative of DNA sequence.

Swati Bhattacharya; Ian M. Derrington; Mikhail Pavlenok; Michael Niederweis; Jens H. Gundlach; Aleksei Aksimentiev

The protein nanopore Mycobacteria smegmatis porin A (MspA), can be used to sense individual nucleotides within DNA, potentially enabling a technique known as nanopore sequencing. In this technique, single-stranded DNA electrophoretically moves through the nanopore and results in an ionic current that is nucleotide-specific. However, with a high transport velocity of the DNA within the nanopore, the ionic current cannot be used to distinguish signals within noise. Through extensive (~100 μs in total) all-atom molecular dynamics simulations, we examine the effect of positively charged residues on DNA translocation rate and the ionic current blockades in MspA. Simulation of several arginine mutations show a ~10-30 fold reduction of DNA translocation speed without eliminating the nucleotide induced current blockages. Comparison of our results with similar engineering efforts on a different nanopore (α-hemolysin) reveals a nontrivial effect of nanopore geometry on the ionic current blockades in mutant nanopores.


Molecular Microbiology | 2015

Surface hydrolysis of sphingomyelin by the outer membrane protein Rv0888 supports replication of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in macrophages

Alexander Speer; Jim Sun; Olga Danilchanka; Virginia Meikle; Jennifer L. Rowland; Kerstin Walter; Bradford R. Buck; Mikhail Pavlenok; Christoph Hölscher; Sabine Ehrt; Michael Niederweis

Sphingomyelinases secreted by pathogenic bacteria play important roles in host–pathogen interactions ranging from interfering with phagocytosis and oxidative burst to iron acquisition. This study shows that the Mtb protein Rv0888 possesses potent sphingomyelinase activity cleaving sphingomyelin, a major lipid in eukaryotic cells, into ceramide and phosphocholine, which are then utilized by Mtb as carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus sources, respectively. An Mtb rv0888 deletion mutant did not grow on sphingomyelin as a sole carbon source anymore and replicated poorly in macrophages indicating that Mtb utilizes sphingomyelin during infection. Rv0888 is an unusual membrane protein with a surface‐exposed C‐terminal sphingomyelinase domain and a putative N‐terminal channel domain that mediated glucose and phosphocholine uptake across the outer membrane in an M. smegmatis porin mutant. Hence, we propose to name Rv0888 as SpmT (sphingomyelinase of Mycobacterium tuberculosis). Erythrocyte membranes contain up to 27% sphingomyelin. The finding that Rv0888 accounts for half of Mtbs hemolytic activity is consistent with its sphingomyelinase activity and the observation that Rv0888 levels are increased in the presence of erythrocytes and sphingomyelin by 5‐ and 100‐fold, respectively. Thus, Rv0888 is a novel outer membrane protein that enables Mtb to utilize sphingomyelin as a source of several essential nutrients during intracellular growth.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Functions of the Periplasmic Loop of the Porin MspA from Mycobacterium smegmatis

Jason Huff; Mikhail Pavlenok; Suja Sukumaran; Michael Niederweis

MspA is the major porin of Mycobacterium smegmatis and mediates diffusion of small and hydrophilic solutes across the outer membrane. The octameric structure of MspA, its sharply defined constriction zone, and a large periplasmic loop L6 represent novel structural features. L6 consists of 13 amino acids and is directly adjacent to the constriction zone. Deletion of 3, 5, 7, 9, and 11 amino acids of the L6 loop resulted in functional pores that restored glucose uptake and growth of a porin mutant of M. smegmatis. Lipid bilayer experiments revealed that all mutant channels were noisier than wild type (wt) MspA, indicating that L6 is required for pore stability in vitro. Voltage gating of the Escherichia coli porin OmpF was attributed to loops that collapse into the channel in response to a strong electrical field. Here, we show that deletion mutants Δ7, Δ9, and Δ11 had critical voltages similar to wt MspA. This demonstrated that the L6 loop is not the primary voltage-dependent gating mechanism of MspA. Surprisingly, large deletions in L6 resulted in 3-6-fold less extractable pores, whereas small deletions did not alter expression levels of MspA. Pores with large deletions in L6 were more permissive for glucose than smaller deletion mutants, whereas their single channel conductance was similar to that of wt MspA. These results indicate that translocation of ions through the MspA pore is governed by different mechanisms than that of neutral solutes. This is the first study identifying a molecular determinant of solute translocation in a mycobacterial porin.

Collaboration


Dive into the Mikhail Pavlenok's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mark A. Troll

University of Washington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Suja Sukumaran

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Olga Danilchanka

University of Alabama at Birmingham

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge