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Dive into the research topics where Noah Ribeck is active.

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Featured researches published by Noah Ribeck.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2008

Multiplexed single-molecule measurements with magnetic tweezers

Noah Ribeck; Omar A. Saleh

We present a method for performing multiple single-molecule manipulation experiments in parallel with magnetic tweezers. We use a microscope with a low magnification, and thus a wide field of view, to visualize multiple DNA-tethered paramagnetic beads and apply an optimized image analysis routine to track the three-dimensional position of each bead simultaneously in real time. Force is applied to each bead using an externally applied magnetic field. Since variations in the field parameters are negligible across the field of view, nearly identical manipulation of all visible beads is possible. However, we find that the error in the position measurement is inversely proportional to the microscopes magnification. To mitigate the increased error caused by demagnification, we have developed a strategy based on tracking multiple fixed beads. Our system is capable of simultaneously manipulating and tracking up to 34 DNA-tethered beads at 60 Hz with approximately 1.5 nm resolution and with approximately 10% variation in applied force.


Biophysical Journal | 2010

DnaB Helicase Activity Is Modulated by DNA Geometry and Force

Noah Ribeck; Daniel L. Kaplan; Irina Bruck; Omar A. Saleh

The replicative helicase for Escherichia coli is DnaB, a hexameric, ring-shaped motor protein that encircles and translocates along ssDNA, unwinding dsDNA in advance of its motion. The microscopic mechanisms of DnaB are unknown; further, prior work has found that DnaBs activity is modified by other replication proteins, indicating some mechanistic flexibility. To investigate these issues, we quantified translocation and unwinding by single DnaB molecules in three tethered DNA geometries held under tension. Our data support the following conclusions: 1), Unwinding by DnaB is enhanced by force-induced destabilization of dsDNA. 2), The magnitude of this stimulation varies with the geometry of the tension applied to the DNA substrate, possibly due to interactions between the helicase and the occluded ssDNA strand. 3), DnaB unwinding and (to a lesser extent) translocation are interrupted by pauses, which are also dependent on force and DNA geometry. 4), DnaB moves slower when a large tension is applied to the helicase-bound strand, indicating that it must perform mechanical work to compact the strand against the applied force. Our results have implications for the molecular mechanisms of translocation and unwinding by DnaB and for the means of modulating DnaB activity.


PLOS ONE | 2013

DNA unwinding by ring-shaped T4 helicase gp41 is hindered by tension on the occluded strand.

Noah Ribeck; Omar A. Saleh

The replicative helicase for bacteriophage T4 is gp41, which is a ring-shaped hexameric motor protein that achieves unwinding of dsDNA by translocating along one strand of ssDNA while forcing the opposite strand to the outside of the ring. While much study has been dedicated to the mechanism of binding and translocation along the ssDNA strand encircled by ring-shaped helicases, relatively little is known about the nature of the interaction with the opposite, ‘occluded’ strand. Here, we investigate the interplay between the bacteriophage T4 helicase gp41 and the ss/dsDNA fork by measuring, at the single-molecule level, DNA unwinding events on stretched DNA tethers in multiple geometries. We find that gp41 activity is significantly dependent on the geometry and tension of the occluded strand, suggesting an interaction between gp41 and the occluded strand that stimulates the helicase. However, the geometry dependence of gp41 activity is the opposite of that found previously for the E. coli hexameric helicase DnaB. Namely, tension applied between the occluded strand and dsDNA stem inhibits unwinding activity by gp41, while tension pulling apart the two ssDNA tails does not hinder its activity. This implies a distinct variation in helicase-occluded strand interactions among superfamily IV helicases, and we propose a speculative model for this interaction that is consistent with both the data presented here on gp41 and the data that had been previously reported for DnaB.


Frontiers in Bioscience | 2013

Single-molecule and bulk approaches to the DnaB replication fork helicase.

Daniel L. Kaplan; Omar A. Saleh; Noah Ribeck

Motor proteins are enzymes that accomplish mechanical work in a wide variety of biological processes. In this review we focus on bulk and single molecule methods to study how motor proteins function. We discuss in detail the analysis of the motor protein DnaB, a hexameric helicase that unwinds DNA at a replication fork in Gram-negative bacteria. Bulk and single-molecule studies have complemented one another to arrive at a comprehensive mechanistic view of how DnaB unwinds double-stranded DNA.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Nonlinear Low-Force Elasticity of Single-Stranded DNA Molecules

Omar A. Saleh; Dustin B. McIntosh; P. Pincus; Noah Ribeck


Physical Review E | 2009

Detailed scaling analysis of low-force polyelectrolyte elasticity.

Dustin B. McIntosh; Noah Ribeck; Omar A. Saleh


Archive | 2018

Freezer Full of Fossils v2.0

Louise S. Mead; Michael J. Wiser; Noah Ribeck; Fred Hingst; Richard Schultz; Richard E. Lenski


Biophysical Journal | 2011

Investigating hexameric helicases: Single-molecule studies of DnaB and T4 gp41

Noah Ribeck; John P. Berezney; Omar A. Saleh


Biophysical Journal | 2010

DNA Unwinding By DnaB and the DnaB/TAU Complex

Noah Ribeck; Omar A. Saleh


Biophysical Journal | 2009

Non-ideal Elasticity Of Single Stranded DNA At Low Forces

Dustin B. McIntosh; Omar A. Saleh; P. Pincus; Noah Ribeck

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Omar A. Saleh

University of California

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P. Pincus

University of California

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Irina Bruck

Florida State University

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Louise S. Mead

Michigan State University

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