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Dive into the research topics where Sandip Kumar is active.

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Featured researches published by Sandip Kumar.


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

Quantitation of the DNA tethering effect in long-range DNA looping in vivo and in vitro using the Lac and λ repressors.

David G. Priest; Lun Cui; Sandip Kumar; David Dunlap; Ian B. Dodd; Keith E. Shearwin

Significance Proteins bound to DNA often interact with proteins bound elsewhere on the same DNA to regulate gene expression. The intervening DNA tethers the proteins near each other, making their interaction efficient and specific, but the importance of this tethering effect is poorly understood at large DNA separations. We quantitated tethering inside bacterial cells, using two different proteins at separations up to 10,000 bp, to show that tethering is strong enough to drive efficient interactions over these distances. The same interactions were ∼10-fold weaker outside cells, implying that cellular factors enhance tethering. However, tethering was lost at a DNA separation of 500,000 bp inside bacteria, indicating special mechanisms inside eukaryotic cells to provide efficient and specific interactions over such distances. Efficient and specific interactions between proteins bound to the same DNA molecule can be dependent on the length of the DNA tether that connects them. Measurement of the strength of this DNA tethering effect has been largely confined to short separations between sites, and it is not clear how it contributes to long-range DNA looping interactions, such as occur over separations of tens to hundreds of kilobase pairs in vivo. Here, gene regulation experiments using the LacI and λ CI repressors, combined with mathematical modeling, were used to quantitate DNA tethering inside Escherichia coli cells over the 250- to 10,000-bp range. Although LacI and CI loop DNA in distinct ways, measurements of the tethering effect were very similar for both proteins. Tethering strength decreased with increasing separation, but even at 5- to 10-kb distances, was able to increase contact probability 10- to 20-fold and drive efficient looping. Tethering in vitro with the Lac repressor was measured for the same 600-to 3,200-bp DNAs using tethered particle motion, a single molecule technique, and was 5- to 45-fold weaker than in vivo over this range. Thus, the enhancement of looping seen previously in vivo at separations below 500 bp extends to large separations, underlining the need to understand how in vivo factors aid DNA looping. Our analysis also suggests how efficient and specific looping could be achieved over very long DNA separations, such as what occurs between enhancers and promoters in eukaryotic cells.


ACS Nano | 2017

Direct Imaging of Protein Organization in an Intact Bacterial Organelle Using High-Resolution Atomic Force Microscopy

Sandip Kumar; Michaël L. Cartron; Nic Mullin; Pu Qian; Graham J. Leggett; C. Neil Hunter; Jamie K. Hobbs

The function of bioenergetic membranes is strongly influenced by the spatial arrangement of their constituent membrane proteins. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) can be used to probe protein organization at high resolution, allowing individual proteins to be identified. However, previous AFM studies of biological membranes have typically required that curved membranes are ruptured and flattened during sample preparation, with the possibility of disruption of the native protein arrangement or loss of proteins. Imaging native, curved membranes requires minimal tip–sample interaction in both lateral and vertical directions. Here, long-range tip–sample interactions are reduced by optimizing the imaging buffer. Tapping mode AFM with high-resonance-frequency small and soft cantilevers, in combination with a high-speed AFM, reduces the forces due to feedback error and enables application of an average imaging force of tens of piconewtons. Using this approach, we have imaged the membrane organization of intact vesicular bacterial photosynthetic “organelles”, chromatophores. Despite the highly curved nature of the chromatophore membrane and lack of direct support, the resolution was sufficient to identify the photosystem complexes and quantify their arrangement in the native state. Successive imaging showed the proteins remain surprisingly static, with minimal rotation or translation over several-minute time scales. High-order assemblies of RC-LH1-PufX complexes are observed, and intact ATPases are successfully imaged. The methods developed here are likely to be applicable to a broad range of protein-rich vesicles or curved membrane systems, which are an almost ubiquitous feature of native organelles.


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

Quantitation of interactions between two DNA loops demonstrates loop domain insulation in E. coli cells.

David G. Priest; Sandip Kumar; Yan Yan; David Dunlap; Ian B. Dodd; Keith E. Shearwin

Significance Genes are frequently regulated by interactions between proteins that bind to the DNA near the gene and proteins that bind to DNA sites located far away, with the intervening DNA looped out. In eukaryotic genomes, genes and their distant sites are intermingled in complex ways and it is not understood how the correct connections are formed. Using two pairs of DNA-looping sites in bacterial cells, we tested the idea that one DNA loop can either assist or interfere with the formation of another DNA loop. By measuring the strength of these interactions between loops, we showed that this mechanism is capable of directing a distant site to the correct gene and preventing it contacting the wrong gene. Eukaryotic gene regulation involves complex patterns of long-range DNA-looping interactions between enhancers and promoters, but how these specific interactions are achieved is poorly understood. Models that posit other DNA loops—that aid or inhibit enhancer–promoter contact—are difficult to test or quantitate rigorously in eukaryotic cells. Here, we use the well-characterized DNA-looping proteins Lac repressor and phage λ CI to measure interactions between pairs of long DNA loops in E. coli cells in the three possible topological arrangements. We find that side-by-side loops do not affect each other. Nested loops assist each other’s formation consistent with their distance-shortening effect. In contrast, alternating loops, where one looping element is placed within the other DNA loop, inhibit each other’s formation, thus providing clear support for the loop domain model for insulation. Modeling shows that combining loop assistance and loop interference can provide strong specificity in long-range interactions.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Lac Repressor Mediated DNA Looping: Monte Carlo Simulation of Constrained DNA Molecules Complemented with Current Experimental Results

Yoav Y. Biton; Sandip Kumar; David Dunlap; David Swigon

Tethered particle motion (TPM) experiments can be used to detect time-resolved loop formation in a single DNA molecule by measuring changes in the length of a DNA tether. Interpretation of such experiments is greatly aided by computer simulations of DNA looping which allow one to analyze the structure of the looped DNA and estimate DNA-protein binding constants specific for the loop formation process. We here present a new Monte Carlo scheme for accurate simulation of DNA configurations subject to geometric constraints and apply this method to Lac repressor mediated DNA looping, comparing the simulation results with new experimental data obtained by the TPM technique. Our simulations, taking into account the details of attachment of DNA ends and fluctuations of the looped subsegment of the DNA, reveal the origin of the double-peaked distribution of RMS values observed by TPM experiments by showing that the average RMS value for anti-parallel loop types is smaller than that of parallel loop types. The simulations also reveal that the looping probabilities for the anti-parallel loop types are significantly higher than those of the parallel loop types, even for loops of length 600 and 900 base pairs, and that the correct proportion between the heights of the peaks in the distribution can only be attained when loops with flexible Lac repressor conformation are taken into account. Comparison of the in silico and in vitro results yields estimates for the dissociation constants characterizing the binding affinity between O1 and Oid DNA operators and the dimeric arms of the Lac repressor.


DNA Repair | 2011

Heterology tolerance and recognition of mismatched base pairs by human Rad51 protein.

Yu-Cheng Tsai; Yuzhen Wang; Damian E. Urena; Sandip Kumar; Junghuei Chen

Human Rad51 (hRad51) promoted homology recognition and subsequent strand exchange are the key steps in human homologous recombination mediated repair of DNA double-strand breaks. However, it is still not clear how hRad51 deals with sequence heterology between the two homologous chromosomes in eukaryotic cells, which would lead to mismatched base pairs after strand exchange. Excessive tolerance of sequence heterology may compromise the fidelity of repair of DNA double-strand breaks. In this study, fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) was used to monitor the heterology tolerance of human Rad51 mediated strand exchange reactions, in real time, by introducing either G-T or I-C mismatched base pairs between the two homologous DNA strands. The strand exchange reactions were much more sensitive to G-T than to I-C base pairs. These results imply that the recognition of homology and the tolerance of heterology by hRad51 may depend on the local structural motif adopted by the base pairs participating in strand exchange. AnhRad51 mutant protein (hRad51K133R), deficient in ATP hydrolysis, showed greater heterology tolerance to both types of mismatch base pairing, suggesting that ATPase activity may be important for maintenance of high fidelity homologous recombination DNA repair.


Surface Science | 2009

Covalent attachment of shape-restricted DNA molecules on amine-functionalized Si(111) surface

Xiaochun Zhang; Sandip Kumar; Junghuei Chen; Andrew V. Teplyakov


Biophysical Journal | 2014

Enhanced Tethered-Particle Motion Analysis Reveals Viscous Effects

Sandip Kumar; Carlo Manzo; Chiara Zurla; Suleyman Ucuncuoglu; Laura Finzi; David Dunlap


Applied Surface Science | 2009

Tuning the geometry of shape-restricted DNA molecules on the functionalized Si( 1 1 1)

Xiaochun Zhang; Ioanna H. Antonopoulos; Sandip Kumar; Junghuei Chen; Andrew V. Teplyakov


Biophysical Journal | 2015

Estimation of DNA Loop Interactions Supports the Loop Domain Model of Insulator Action

Sandip Kumar; David G. Priest; Yan Yan; Ian B. Dodd; Keith E. Shearwin; David Dunlap


Biophysical Journal | 2015

The Effect of HU Protein on Lac-Repressor-Mediated DNA Looping

Yan Yan; Sandip Kumar; Laura Finzi; David Dunlap

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Ian B. Dodd

University of Adelaide

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Chiara Zurla

Georgia Institute of Technology

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David Swigon

University of Pittsburgh

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