Tianbing Xia
California Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by Tianbing Xia.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003
Samir Kumar Pal; Liang Zhao; Tianbing Xia; Ahmed H. Zewail
Water molecules in the DNA grooves are critical for maintaining structural integrity, conformational changes, and molecular recognition. Here we report studies of site- and sequence-specific hydration dynamics, using 2-aminopurine (Ap) as the intrinsic fluorescence probe and with femtosecond resolution. The dodecamer d[CGCA(Ap)ATTTGCG]2 was investigated, and we also examined the effect of a specific minor groove-binding drug, pentamidine, on hydration dynamics. Two time scales were observed: ≈1 ps (bulk-like) and 10–12 ps (weakly bound type), consistent with layer hydration observed in proteins and DNA. However, for denatured DNA, the cosolvent condition of 40% formamide hydration is very different: it becomes that of bulk (in the presence of formamide). Well known electron transfer between Ap and nearby bases in stacked assemblies becomes inefficient in the single-stranded state. The rigidity of Ap in the single strands is significantly higher than that in bulk water and that attached to deoxyribose, suggesting a unique role for the dynamics of the phosphate-sugar-base in helix formation. The disparity in minor and major groove hydration is evident because of the site selection of Ap and in the time scale observed here (in the presence and absence of the drug), which is different by a factor of 2 from that observed in the minor groove–drug recognition.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001
Jeffrey E. Barrick; Terry T. Takahashi; Jinsong Ren; Tianbing Xia; Richard W. Roberts
RNA loops that adopt a characteristic GNRA “tetraloop” fold are common in natural RNAs. Here, we have used in vitro selection by means of mRNA-peptide fusions to select peptides that bind an example of this RNA loop motif. Starting with the RNA recognition domain from the λ N protein, we have constructed libraries containing 150, 1,600, and 9 trillion different peptide sequences as mRNA-peptide fusions and isolated those capable of high-affinity RNA binding. These selections have resulted in more than 80 different peptides that bind the same RNA loop. The highest affinity peptides exhibit low nanomolar dissociation constants as well as the ability to discriminate RNA hairpins differing by a single loop nucleotide. Thus, our work demonstrates that numerous, chemically distinct solutions exist for a particular RNA recognition problem.
Current Opinion in Chemical Biology | 2008
Tianbing Xia
RNA conformational dynamics have been a subject of extensive biophysical studies by spectroscopic and computational techniques. Application of femtosecond time-resolved spectroscopy is a new addition to this field, where the technique is specifically designed to probe the ruggedness of RNA conformational landscape and recognition modes. Such technique allows resolution of heterogeneous conformations within a complex ensemble. Recent applications on GNRA tetraloops, dangling ends, and RNA-peptide complexes produced more quantitative and dynamic pictures for these motifs and interactions, including detection of alternative structures that have been overlooked. Integration of the ultrafast dynamics approach with other biophysical techniques promises to be a more powerful approach for providing unique insights for addressing the challenging task of decoding RNA conformational dynamics and the understanding of the mechanisms of molecular recognition of RNA.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003
Tianbing Xia; Hans-Christian Becker; Chaozhi Wan; Adam Frankel; Richard W. Roberts; Ahmed H. Zewail
The N protein from bacteriophage λ is a key regulator of transcription antitermination. It specifically recognizes a nascent mRNA stem loop termed boxB, enabling RNA polymerase to read through downstream terminators processively. The stacking interaction between Trp-18 of WT N protein and A7 of boxB RNA is crucial for efficient antitermination. Here, we report on the direct probing of the dynamics for this interfacial binding and the correlation of the dynamics with biological functions. Specifically, we examined the influence of structural changes in four peptides on the femtosecond dynamics of boxB RNA (2-aminopurine labeled in different positions), through mutations of critical residues of N peptide (residues 1–22). We then compare their in vivo (Escherichia coli) transcription antitermination activities with the dynamics. The results demonstrate that the RNA–peptide complexes adopt essentially two dynamical conformations with the time scale for interfacial interaction in the two structures being vastly different, 1 ps for the stacked structure and nanosecond for the unstacked one; only the weighted average of the two is detected in NMR by nuclear Overhauser effect experiments. Strikingly, the amplitude of the observed ultrafast dynamics depends on the identity of the amino acid residues that are one helical turn away from Trp-18 in the peptides and is correlated with the level of biological function of their respective full-length proteins.
Biochemistry | 2011
Jia Lu; Beena M. Kadakkuzha; Liang Zhao; Martin Fan; Xin Qi; Tianbing Xia
RNA conformational dynamics and the resulting structural heterogeneity play an important role in RNA functions, e.g., recognition. Recognition of HIV-1 TAR RNA has been proposed to occur via a conformational capture mechanism. Here, using ultrafast time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy, we have probed the complexity of the conformational landscape of HIV-1 TAR RNA and monitored the position-dependent changes in the landscape upon binding of a Tat protein-derived peptide and neomycin B. In the ligand-free state, the TAR RNA samples multiple families of conformations with various degrees of base stacking around the three-nucleotide bulge region. Some subpopulations partially resemble those ligand-bound states, but the coaxially stacked state is below the detection limit. When Tat or neomycin B binds, the bulge region as an ensemble undergoes a conformational transition in a position-dependent manner. Tat and neomycin B induce mutually exclusive changes in the TAR RNA underlying the mechanism of allosteric inhibition at an ensemble level with residue-specific details. Time-resolved anisotropy decay measurements revealed picosecond motions of bases in both ligand-free and ligand-bound states. Mutation of a base pair at the bulge--stem junction has differential effects on the conformational distributions of the bulge bases. A dynamic model of the ensemble view of the conformational landscape for HIV-1 TAR RNA is proposed, and the implication of the general mechanism of RNA recognition and its impact on RNA-based therapeutics are discussed.
Biochemistry | 2010
Sang Won Lee; Liang Zhao; Arthur Pardi; Tianbing Xia
RNAs often exhibit a high degree of conformational dynamics and heterogeneity, leading to a rugged energy landscape. However, the roles of conformational heterogeneity and rapid dynamics in molecular recognition or RNA function have not been extensively elucidated. Ultrafast time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopic experiments were used here to probe picosecond dynamics of the theophylline-binding RNA aptamer. These studies showed that multiple conformations are populated in the free RNA, indicating that this aptamer employs a conformational capture mechanism for ligand binding. The base on residue 27 in an internal loop exists in at least three conformational states in the free RNA, including binding competent and incompetent states that have distinct fluorescence decay signatures indicating different base stacking interactions. Picosecond dynamics were also detected by anisotropy experiments, where these motions indicate additional dynamics for base 27. The picosecond data show that theophylline binding shifts the equilibrium for conformations of base 27 from primarily stacked in the free RNA to mostly unstacked in the RNA-theophylline complex, as observed in the previous NMR structure. In contrast, base 10 in a second internal loop is mostly preorganized in the free RNA, consistent with it being stacked between G11 and G25, as is observed in the bound state. Picosecond dynamics were also measured on a modified aptamer that binds with higher affinity to 3-methylxanthine than theophylline. The modified aptamer shows less heterogeneity in the aptamer-3-methylxanthine complex than what is observed in the theophylline aptamer-theophylline complex.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004
Yuhong Wang; J. Spencer Baskin; Tianbing Xia; Ahmed H. Zewail
Femtosecond to nanosecond dynamics of O2 rebinding to human WT myoglobin and its mutants, V68F and I107F, have been studied by using transient absorption. The results are compared with NO rebinding. Even though the immediate environment around the heme binding site is changed by the mutations, the picosecond geminate rebinding of oxygen is at most minimally affected. On the other hand, the V68F (E11) mutation causes drastic differences in rebinding on the nanosecond time scale, whereas the effect of the I107F (G8) mutation remains relatively small within our 10-ns time window. Unlike traditional homogeneous kinetics and molecular dynamics collisional simulations, we propose a “bifurcation model” for populations of directed and undirected dynamics on the ultrafast time scale, reflecting the distribution of initial protein conformations. The major mutation effect occurs on the time scale on which global protein conformational change is possible, consistent with transitions between the conformations of directed and undirected population playing a role in the O2 binding. We discuss the relevance of these findings to the bimolecular function of the protein.
Biochemistry | 2010
Niyati Jain; Liang Zhao; John D. Liu; Tianbing Xia
High-resolution crystal structures and biophysical analyses of purine-sensing riboswitches have revealed that a network of hydrogen bonding interactions appear to be largey responsible for discrimination of cognate ligands against structurally related compounds. Here we report that by using femtosecond time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy to capture the ultrafast decay dynamics of the 2-aminopurine base as the ligand, we have detected the presence of multiple conformations of the ligand within the binding pockets of one guanine-sensing and two adenine-sensing riboswitches. All three riboswitches have similar conformational distributions of the ligand-bound state. The known crystal structures represent the global minimum that accounts for 50-60% of the population, where there is no significant stacking interaction between the ligand and bases of the binding pocket, but the hydrogen-bonding cage collectively provides an electronic environment that promotes an ultrafast ( approximately 1 ps) charge transfer pathway. The ligand also samples multiple conformations in which it significantly stacks with either the adenine or the uracil bases of the A21-U75 and A52-U22 base pairs that form the ceiling and floor of the binding pocket, respectively, but favors the larger adenine bases. These alternative conformations with well-defined base stacking interactions are approximately 1-1.5 kcal/mol higher in DeltaG degrees than the global minimum and have distinct charge transfer dynamics within the picosecond to nanosecond time regime. Inside the pocket, the purine ligand undergoes dynamic motion on the low nanosecond time scale, sampling the multiple conformations based on time-resolved anisotropy decay dynamics. These results allowed a description of the energy landscape of the bound ligand with intricate details and demonstrated the elastic nature of the ligand recognition mode by the purine-sensing riboswitches, where there is a dynamic balance between hydrogen bonding and base stacking interactions, yielding the high affinity and specificity by the aptamer domain.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2003
Tianbing Xia; Adam Frankel; Terry T. Takahashi; Jinsong Ren; Richard W. Roberts
In bacteriophage l, transcription elongation is regulated by the N protein, which binds a nascent mRNA hairpin (termed boxB) and enables RNA polymerase to read through distal terminators. We have examined the structure, energetics and in vivo function of a number of N–boxB complexes derived from in vitro protein selection. Trp18 fully stacks on the RNA loop in the wild-type structure, and can become partially or completely unstacked when the sequence context is changed three or four residues away, resulting in a recognition interface in which the best binding residues depend on the sequence context. Notably, in vivo antitermination activity correlates with the presence of a stacked aromatic residue at position 18, but not with N–boxB binding affinity. Our work demonstrates that RNA polymerase responds to subtle conformational changes in cis-acting regulatory complexes and that approximation of components is not sufficient to generate a fully functional transcription switch.
Methods | 2009
Liang Zhao; Tianbing Xia
RNA structures are very dynamic and the dynamic motions result in a heterogeneous conformational ensemble. It is crucial to illustrate the role of conformational dynamics in RNA function. A variety of spectroscopic methods have been used to investigate the dynamic aspects of RNA structures. Recently, ultrafast time-resolved spectroscopy, a well-established technique, has been introduced as a new tool in this field. With femtosecond time-resolution, one can resolve the heterogeneous nature of RNA conformational ensemble quantitatively, detect and characterize minor unusual conformations, and capture folding events that may occur on a fast timescale. Here, we review the technical aspects of using an ultrafast fluorescence up-conversion technique to probe the heterogeneous base stacking patterns in RNA motifs and dynamic base motions that allow sampling of multiple states.