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Dive into the research topics where Na Zhang is active.

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Featured researches published by Na Zhang.


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

Photochemically driven redox chemistry induces protocell membrane pearling and division

Ting F. Zhu; Katarzyna Adamala; Na Zhang; Jack W. Szostak

Prior to the evolution of complex biochemical machinery, the growth and division of simple primitive cells (protocells) must have been driven by environmental factors. We have previously demonstrated two pathways for fatty acid vesicle growth in which initially spherical vesicles grow into long filamentous vesicles; division is then mediated by fluid shear forces. Here we describe a different pathway for division that is independent of external mechanical forces. We show that the illumination of filamentous fatty acid vesicles containing either a fluorescent dye in the encapsulated aqueous phase, or hydroxypyrene in the membrane, rapidly induces pearling and subsequent division in the presence of thiols. The mechanism of this photochemically driven pathway most likely involves the generation of reactive oxygen species, which oxidize thiols to disulfide-containing compounds that associate with fatty acid membranes, inducing a change in surface tension and causing pearling and subsequent division. This vesicle division pathway provides an alternative route for the emergence of early self-replicating cell-like structures, particularly in thiol-rich surface environments where UV-absorbing polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) could have facilitated protocell division. The subsequent evolution of cellular metabolic processes controlling the thiol:disulfide redox state would have enabled autonomous cellular control of the timing of cell division, a major step in the origin of cellular life.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Evolution of functional nucleic acids in the presence of nonheritable backbone heterogeneity

Simon G. Trevino; Na Zhang; Mark P. Elenko; Andrej Lupták; Jack W. Szostak

Multiple lines of evidence support the hypothesis that the early evolution of life was dominated by RNA, which can both transfer information from generation to generation through replication directed by base-pairing, and carry out biochemical activities by folding into functional structures. To understand how life emerged from prebiotic chemistry we must therefore explain the steps that led to the emergence of the RNA world, and in particular, the synthesis of RNA. The generation of pools of highly pure ribonucleotides on the early Earth seems unlikely, but the presence of alternative nucleotides would support the assembly of nucleic acid polymers containing nonheritable backbone heterogeneity. We suggest that homogeneous monomers might not have been necessary if populations of heterogeneous nucleic acid molecules could evolve reproducible function. For such evolution to be possible, function would have to be maintained despite the repeated scrambling of backbone chemistry from generation to generation. We have tested this possibility in a simplified model system, by using a T7 RNA polymerase variant capable of transcribing nucleic acids that contain an approximately 1∶1 mixture of deoxy- and ribonucleotides. We readily isolated nucleotide-binding aptamers by utilizing an in vitro selection process that shuffles the order of deoxy- and ribonucleotides in each round. We describe two such RNA/DNA mosaic nucleic acid aptamers that specifically bind ATP and GTP, respectively. We conclude that nonheritable variations in nucleic acid backbone structure may not have posed an insurmountable barrier to the emergence of functionality in early nucleic acids.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Activated ribonucleotides undergo a sugar pucker switch upon binding to a single-stranded RNA template.

Na Zhang; Shenglong Zhang; Jack W. Szostak

Template-directed polymerization of chemically activated ribonucleotide monomers, such as nucleotide 5′-phosphorimidazolides, has been studied as a model for nonenzymatic RNA replication during the origin of life. Kinetic studies of the polymerization of various nucleotide monomers on oligonucleotide templates have suggested that the A-form (C3′-endo sugar pucker) conformation is optimal for both monomers and templates for efficient copying. However, RNA monomers are predominantly in the C2′-endo conformation when free in solution, except for cytidine, which is approximately equally distributed between the C2′-endo and C3′-endo conformations. We hypothesized that ribonucleotides undergo a switch in sugar pucker upon binding to an A-type template and that this conformational switch allows or enhances subsequent polymerization. We used transferred nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy (TrNOESY), which can be used for specific detection of the bound conformation of small-molecule ligands with relatively weak affinity to receptors, to study the interactions between nucleotide 5′-phosphorimidazolides and single-stranded oligonucleotide templates. We found that the sugar pucker of activated ribonucleotides switches from C2′-endo in the free state to C3′-endo upon binding to an RNA template. This switch occurs only on RNA and not on DNA templates. Furthermore, activated 2′-deoxyribonucleotides maintain a C2′-endo sugar pucker in both the free and template-bound states. Our results provide a structural explanation for the observations that activated ribonucleotides are superior to activated deoxyribonucleotides and that RNA templates are superior to DNA templates in template-directed nonenzymatic primer-extension reactions.


Biochemistry | 2013

Thermodynamic profiles and nuclear magnetic resonance studies of oligonucleotide duplexes containing single diastereomeric spiroiminodihydantoin lesions.

Irine Khutsishvili; Na Zhang; Luis A. Marky; Conor Crean; Dinshaw J. Patel; Nicholas E. Geacintov; Vladimir Shafirovich

The spiroiminodihydantoins (Sp) are highly mutagenic oxidation products of guanine and 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine in DNA. The Sp lesions have recently been detected in the liver and colon of mice infected with Helicobacter hepaticus that induces inflammation and the development of liver and colon cancers in murine model systems [Mangerich, A., et al. (2012) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 109, E1820-E1829]. The impact of Sp lesions on the thermodynamic characteristics and the effects of the diastereomeric Sp-R and Sp-S lesions on the conformational features of double-stranded 11-mer oligonucleotide duplexes have been studied by a combination of microcalorimetric methods, analysis of DNA melting curves, and two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance methods. The nonplanar, propeller-like shapes of the Sp residues strongly diminish the extent of local base stacking interactions that destabilize the DNA duplexes characterized by unfavorable enthalpy contributions. Relative to that of an unmodified duplex, the thermally induced unfolding of the duplexes with centrally positioned Sp-R and Sp-S lesions into single strands is accompanied by a smaller release of cationic counterions (Δn(Na⁺) = 0.6 mol of Na⁺/mol of duplex) and water molecules (Δn(w) = 17 mol of H₂O/mol of duplex). The unfolding parameters are similar for the Sp-R and Sp-S lesions, although their orientations in the duplexes are different. The structural disturbances radiate one base pair beyond the flanking C:G pair, although Watson-Crick hydrogen bonding is maintained at all flanking base pairs. The observed relatively strong destabilization of B-form DNA by the physically small Sp lesions is expected to have a significant impact on the processing of these lesions in biological environments.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Synthesis of N3'-P5'-linked phosphoramidate DNA by nonenzymatic template-directed primer extension.

Shenglong Zhang; Na Zhang; J. Craig Blain; Jack W. Szostak

A fast and accurate pathway for nonenzymatic RNA replication would simplify models for the emergence of the RNA world from the prebiotic chemistry of the early earth. However, numerous difficulties stand in the way of an experimental demonstration of effective nonenzymatic RNA replication. To gain insight into the necessary properties of potentially self-replicating informational polymers, we have studied several model systems based on amino–sugar nucleotides. Here we describe the synthesis of N3′–P5′-linked phosphoramidate DNA (3′-NP-DNA) by the template-directed polymerization of activated 3′-amino-2′,3′-dideoxyribonucleotides. 3′-NP-DNA is an interesting model because of its very RNA-like A-type duplex conformation and because activated 3′-amino-2′,3′-dideoxyribonucleotides are much more reactive than the corresponding activated ribonucleotides. In contrast to our previous studies with 2′-amino-2′,3′-dideoxyribonucleotides (for which G and C but not A and T exhibit efficient template copying), we have found that all four canonical 3′-amino-2′,3′-dideoxyribonucleotides (G, C, A, and T) polymerize efficiently on RNA templates. RNA templates are generally superior to DNA templates, and oligo-ribo-T templates are superior to oligo-ribo-U templates, which are the least efficient of the RNA homopolymer templates. We have also found that activation of 3′-aminonucleotides with 2-methylimidazole results in a ca. 10-fold higher polymerization rate relative to activation with imidazole, an observation that parallels earlier findings with ribonucleotides. We discuss the implications of our experiments for the possibility of self-replication in the 3′-NP-DNA and RNA systems.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Uncovering the Thermodynamics of Monomer Binding for RNA Replication

Enver Cagri Izgu; Albert C. Fahrenbach; Na Zhang; Li Li; Wen Zhang; Aaron T. Larsen; J. Craig Blain; Jack W. Szostak

The nonenzymatic replication of primordial RNA is thought to have been a critical step in the origin of life. However, despite decades of effort, the poor rate and fidelity of model template copying reactions have thus far prevented an experimental demonstration of nonenzymatic RNA replication. The overall rate and fidelity of template copying depend, in part, on the affinity of free ribonucleotides to the RNA primer–template complex. We have now used 1H NMR spectroscopy to directly measure the thermodynamic association constants, Kas, of the standard ribonucleotide monophosphates (rNMPs) to native RNA primer–template complexes. The binding affinities of rNMPs to duplexes with a complementary single-nucleotide overhang follow the order C > G > A > U. Notably, these monomers bind more strongly to RNA primer–template complexes than to the analogous DNA complexes. The relative binding affinities of the rNMPs for complementary RNA primer–template complexes are in good quantitative agreement with the predictions of a nearest-neighbor analysis. With respect to G:U wobble base-pairing, we find that the binding of rGMP to a primer–template complex with a 5′-U overhang is approximately 10-fold weaker than to the complementary 5′-C overhang. We also find that the binding of rGMP is only about 2-fold weaker than the binding of rAMP to 5′-U, consistent with the poor fidelity observed in the nonenzymatic copying of U residues in RNA templates. The accurate Ka measurements for ribonucleotides obtained in this study will be useful for designing higher fidelity, more effective RNA replication systems.


Biochemistry | 2009

NMR and Computational Studies of Stereoisomeric Equine Estrogen-Derived DNA Cytidine Adducts in Oligonucleotide Duplexes: Opposite Orientations of Diastereomeric Forms

Na Zhang; Shuang Ding; Alexander Kolbanovskiy; Anant Shastry; Vladimir A. Kuzmin; Judy L. Bolton; Dinshaw J. Patel; Suse Broyde; Nicholas E. Geacintov

The equine estrogens equilin (EQ) and equilenin (EN) are the active components in the widely prescribed hormone replacement therapy formulation Premarin. Metabolic activation of EQ and EN generates the catechol 4-hydroxyequilenin (4-OHEN) that autoxidizes to the reactive o-quinone form in aerated aqueous solutions. The o-quinones react predominantly with C, and to a lesser extent with A and G, to form premutagenic cyclic covalent DNA adducts in vitro and in vivo. To obtain insights into the structural properties of these biologically important DNA lesions, we have synthesized site-specifically modified oligonucleotides containing the stereoisomeric 1S,2R,3R-4-OHEN-C3 and 1R,2S,3S-4-OHEN-C4 adducts derived from the reaction of 4-OHEN with the C in the oligonucleotide 5-GGTAGCGATGG in aqueous solution. A combined NMR and computational approach was utilized to determine the conformational characteristics of the two major 4-OHEN-C3 and 4-OHEN-C4 stereoisomeric adducts formed in this oligonucleotide hybridized with its complementary strand. In both cases, the modified C adopts an anti glycosidic bond conformation; the equilenin distal ring protrudes into the minor groove while its two proximal hydroxyl groups are exposed on the major groove side of the DNA duplex. The bulky 4-OHEN-C adduct distorts the duplex within the central GC*G portion, but Watson-Crick pairing is maintained adjacent to C* in both stereoisomeric adducts. For the 4-OHEN-C3 adduct, the equilenin rings are oriented toward the 5-end of the modified strand, while in 4-OHEN-C4 the equilenin is 3-directed. Correspondingly, the distortions of the double-helical structures are more pronounced on the 5- or the 3-side of the lesion, respectively. These differences in stereoisomeric adduct conformations may play a role in the processing of these lesions in cellular environments.


Chemical Communications | 2006

Spirocyclic helical compounds as binding agents for bulged RNA, including HIV-2 TAR

Ziwei Xiao; Na Zhang; Yiqing Lin; Graham B. Jones; Irving H. Goldberg

Based on fluorescence binding studies and 1D 1H NMR studies, designed synthetic analogues of NCSi-gb bind specifically with two-base bulged RNA, including HIV-2 TAR RNA, making them potential lead compounds for antiviral drug development.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2005

(3 + 1) Assembly of Three Human Telomeric Repeats into an Asymmetric Dimeric G-Quadruplex

Na Zhang; and Anh Tuân Phan; Dinshaw J. Patel


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2001

Dimeric DNA quadruplex containing major groove-aligned A-T-A-T and G-C-G-C tetrads stabilized by inter-subunit Watson-Crick A-T and G-C pairs.

Na Zhang; Andrey Gorin; Ananya Majumdar; Abdelali Kettani; Natalya Chernichenko; Eugene Skripkin; Dinshaw J. Patel

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Dinshaw J. Patel

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Abdelali Kettani

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Andrey Gorin

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Eugene Skripkin

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Natalya Chernichenko

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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J. Craig Blain

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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