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Dive into the research topics where Songye Chen is active.

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Featured researches published by Songye Chen.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Universal architecture of bacterial chemoreceptor arrays

Ariane Briegel; Davi R. Ortega; Elitza I. Tocheva; Kristin Wuichet; Zhuo Li; Songye Chen; Axel Müller; Cristina V. Iancu; Gavin E. Murphy; Megan J. Dobro; Igor B. Zhulin; Grant J. Jensen

Chemoreceptors are key components of the high-performance signal transduction system that controls bacterial chemotaxis. Chemoreceptors are typically localized in a cluster at the cell pole, where interactions among the receptors in the cluster are thought to contribute to the high sensitivity, wide dynamic range, and precise adaptation of the signaling system. Previous structural and genomic studies have produced conflicting models, however, for the arrangement of the chemoreceptors in the clusters. Using whole-cell electron cryo-tomography, here we show that chemoreceptors of different classes and in many different species representing several major bacterial phyla are all arranged into a highly conserved, 12-nm hexagonal array consistent with the proposed “trimer of dimers” organization. The various observed lengths of the receptors confirm current models for the methylation, flexible bundle, signaling, and linker sub-domains in vivo. Our results suggest that the basic mechanism and function of receptor clustering is universal among bacterial species and was thus conserved during evolution.


The EMBO Journal | 2011

Structural diversity of bacterial flagellar motors

Songye Chen; Morgan Beeby; Gavin E. Murphy; Jared R. Leadbetter; David R. Hendrixson; Ariane Briegel; Zhuo Li; Jian Shi; Elitza I. Tocheva; Axel Müller; Megan J. Dobro; Grant J. Jensen

The bacterial flagellum is one of natures most amazing and well‐studied nanomachines. Its cell‐wall‐anchored motor uses chemical energy to rotate a microns‐long filament and propel the bacterium towards nutrients and away from toxins. While much is known about flagellar motors from certain model organisms, their diversity across the bacterial kingdom is less well characterized, allowing the occasional misrepresentation of the motor as an invariant, ideal machine. Here, we present an electron cryotomographical survey of flagellar motor architectures throughout the Bacteria. While a conserved structural core was observed in all 11 bacteria imaged, surprisingly novel and divergent structures as well as different symmetries were observed surrounding the core. Correlating the motor structures with the presence and absence of particular motor genes in each organism suggested the locations of five proteins involved in the export apparatus including FliI, whose position below the C‐ring was confirmed by imaging a deletion strain. The combination of conserved and specially‐adapted structures seen here sheds light on how this complex protein nanomachine has evolved to meet the needs of different species.


Nature Methods | 2014

Correlated cryogenic photoactivated localization microscopy and cryo-electron tomography

Yi-Wei Chang; Songye Chen; Elitza I. Tocheva; Anke Treuner-Lange; Stephanie Löbach; Lotte Søgaard-Andersen; Grant J. Jensen

Cryo-electron tomography (CET) produces three-dimensional images of cells in a near-native state at macromolecular resolution, but identifying structures of interest can be challenging. Here we describe a correlated cryo-PALM (photoactivated localization microscopy)-CET method for localizing objects within cryo-tomograms to beyond the diffraction limit of the light microscope. Using cryo-PALM-CET, we identified multiple and new conformations of the dynamic type VI secretion system in the crowded interior of Myxococcus xanthus.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2011

Long helical filaments are not seen encircling cells in electron cryotomograms of rod-shaped bacteria

Matthew T. Swulius; Songye Chen; H. Jane Ding; Zhuo Li; Ariane Briegel; Martin Pilhofer; Elitza I. Tocheva; Suzanne R. Lybarger; Tanya L. Johnson; Maria Sandkvist; Grant J. Jensen

How rod-shaped bacteria form and maintain their shape is an important question in bacterial cell biology. Results from fluorescent light microscopy have led many to believe that the actin homolog MreB and a number of other proteins form long helical filaments along the inner membrane of the cell. Here we show using electron cryotomography of six different rod-shaped bacterial species, at macromolecular resolution, that no long (> 80 nm) helical filaments exist near or along either surface of the inner membrane. We also use correlated cryo-fluorescent light microscopy (cryo-fLM) and electron cryo-tomography (ECT) to identify cytoplasmic bundles of MreB, showing that MreB filaments are detectable by ECT. In light of these results, the structure and function of MreB must be reconsidered: instead of acting as a large, rigid scaffold that localizes cell-wall synthetic machinery, moving MreB complexes may apply tension to growing peptidoglycan strands to ensure their orderly, linear insertion.


Methods in Enzymology | 2010

CORRELATED LIGHT AND ELECTRON CRYO-MICROSCOPY

Ariane Briegel; Songye Chen; Abraham J. Koster; Jürgen M. Plitzko; Cindi L. Schwartz; Grant J. Jensen

Light and electron cryo-microscopy have each proven to be powerful tools to study biological structures in a near-native state. Light microscopy provides important localization information, while electron microscopy provides the resolution necessary to resolve fine structural details. Imaging the same sample by both light and electron cryo-microscopy is a powerful new approach that combines the strengths of both techniques to provide novel insights into cellular ultrastructure. In this chapter, the methods and instrumentation currently used to correlate light and electron cryo-microscopy are described in detail.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2017

Best practices for managing large CryoEM facilities

Bart Alewijnse; Alun W. Ashton; Melissa G. Chambers; Songye Chen; Anchi Cheng; Mark Ebrahim; Edward T. Eng; Wim J. H. Hagen; Abraham J. Koster; Claudia S. López; Natalya Lukoyanova; Joaquin Ortega; Ludovic Renault; Steve Reyntjens; William J Rice; Giovanna Scapin; Raymond Schrijver; Alistair Siebert; Scott M. Stagg; Valerie Grum-Tokars; Elizabeth R. Wright; Shenping Wu; Zhiheng Yu; Z. Hong Zhou; Bridget Carragher; Clinton S. Potter

This paper provides an overview of the discussion and presentations from the Workshop on the Management of Large CryoEM Facilities held at the New York Structural Biology Center, New York, NY on February 6-7, 2017. A major objective of the workshop was to discuss best practices for managing cryoEM facilities. The discussions were largely focused on supporting single-particle methods for cryoEM and topics included: user access, assessing projects, workflow, sample handling, microscopy, data management and processing, and user training.


Molecular Microbiology | 2018

Electron cryotomography of Mycoplasma pneumoniae mutants correlates terminal organelle architectural features and function: M. pneumoniae terminal organelle architecture

Duncan C. Krause; Songye Chen; Jian Shi; Ashley J. Jensen; Edward S. Sheppard; Grant J. Jensen

The Mycoplasma pneumoniae terminal organelle functions in adherence and gliding motility and is comprised of at least eleven substructures. We used electron cryotomography to correlate impaired gliding and adherence function with changes in architecture in diverse terminal organelle mutants. All eleven substructures were accounted for in the prkC, prpC and P200 mutants, and variably so for the HMW3 mutant. Conversely, no terminal organelle substructures were evident in HMW1 and HMW2 mutants. The P41 mutant exhibits a terminal organelle detachment phenotype and lacked the bowl element normally present at the terminal organelle base. Complementation restored this substructure, establishing P41 as either a component of the bowl element or required for its assembly or stability, and that this bowl element is essential to anchor the terminal organelle but not for leverage in gliding. Mutants II‐3, III‐4 and topJ exhibited a visibly lower density of protein knobs on the terminal organelle surface. Mutants II‐3 and III‐4 lack accessory proteins required for a functional adhesin complex, while the topJ mutant lacks a DnaJ‐like co‐chaperone essential for its assembly. Taken together, these observations expand our understanding of the roles of certain terminal organelle proteins in the architecture and function of this complex structure.


bioRxiv | 2018

Rapid Tilt-Series Acquisition for Electron Cryotomography

Georges Chreifi; Songye Chen; Lauren Ann Metskas; Mohammed Kaplan; Grant J. Jensen

Using a new Titan Krios stage equipped with a single-axis holder, we developed two methods to accelerate the collection of tilt-series. We demonstrate a continuous-tilting method that can record a tilt-series in seconds (about 100x faster than current methods), but with loss of details finer than ∼4 nm. We also demonstrate a fast-incremental method that can record a tilt-series about 10x faster than current methods and with similar resolution. We characterize the utility of both methods in real biological electron cryotomography workflows. We identify opportunities for further improvements in hardware and software and speculate on the impact such advances could have on structural biology.


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

Molecular organization of Gram-negative peptidoglycan

Lu Gan; Songye Chen; Grant J. Jensen


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2010

Electron cryotomography of bacterial cells.

Songye Chen; Alasdair W. McDowall; Megan J. Dobro; Ariane Briegel; Mark S. Ladinsky; Jian Shi; Elitza I. Tocheva; Morgan Beeby; Martin Pilhofer; H. Jane Ding; Zhuo Li; Lu Gan; Dylan M. Morris; Grant J. Jensen

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Grant J. Jensen

California Institute of Technology

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Elitza I. Tocheva

California Institute of Technology

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Zhuo Li

California Institute of Technology

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Jian Shi

National University of Singapore

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Martin Pilhofer

California Institute of Technology

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Alasdair W. McDowall

California Institute of Technology

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Ashley J. Jensen

California Institute of Technology

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Axel Müller

California Institute of Technology

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