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Dive into the research topics where Tivoli J. Olsen is active.

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Featured researches published by Tivoli J. Olsen.


Nano Letters | 2013

Dissecting Single-Molecule Signal Transduction in Carbon Nanotube Circuits with Protein Engineering

Yongki Choi; Tivoli J. Olsen; Patrick C. Sims; Issa S. Moody; Brad L. Corso; Mytrang N. Dang; Gregory A. Weiss; Philip G. Collins

Single-molecule experimental methods have provided new insights into biomolecular function, dynamic disorder, and transient states that are all invisible to conventional measurements. A novel, nonfluorescent single-molecule technique involves attaching single molecules to single-walled carbon nanotube field-effective transistors (SWNT FETs). These ultrasensitive electronic devices provide long-duration, label-free monitoring of biomolecules and their dynamic motions. However, generalization of the SWNT FET technique first requires design rules that can predict the success and applicability of these devices. Here, we report on the transduction mechanism linking enzymatic processivity to electrical signal generation by a SWNT FET. The interaction between SWNT FETs and the enzyme lysozyme was systematically dissected using eight different lysozyme variants synthesized by protein engineering. The data prove that effective signal generation can be accomplished using a single charged amino acid, when appropriately located, providing a foundation to widely apply SWNT FET sensitivity to other biomolecular systems.


ChemBioChem | 2015

Shear‐Stress‐Mediated Refolding of Proteins from Aggregates and Inclusion Bodies

Tom Z. Yuan; Callum F. G. Ormonde; Stephan T. Kudlacek; Sameeran Kunche; Joshua N. Smith; William Brown; Kaitlin M. Pugliese; Tivoli J. Olsen; Mariam Iftikhar; Colin L. Raston; Gregory A. Weiss

Recombinant protein overexpression of large proteins in bacteria often results in insoluble and misfolded proteins directed to inclusion bodies. We report the application of shear stress in micrometer‐wide, thin fluid films to refold boiled hen egg white lysozyme, recombinant hen egg white lysozyme, and recombinant caveolin‐1. Furthermore, the approach allowed refolding of a much larger protein, cAMP‐dependent protein kinase A (PKA). The reported methods require only minutes, which is more than 100 times faster than conventional overnight dialysis. This rapid refolding technique could significantly shorten times, lower costs, and reduce waste streams associated with protein expression for a wide range of industrial and research applications.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Electronic measurements of single-molecule processing by DNA polymerase I (Klenow fragment).

Tivoli J. Olsen; Yongki Choi; Patrick C. Sims; O. Tolga Gul; Brad L. Corso; Chengjun Dong; William Brown; Philip G. Collins; Gregory A. Weiss

Bioconjugating single molecules of the Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase I into electronic nanocircuits allowed electrical recordings of enzymatic function and dynamic variability with the resolution of individual nucleotide incorporation events. Continuous recordings of DNA polymerase processing multiple homopolymeric DNA templates extended over 600 s and through >10,000 bond-forming events. An enzymatic processivity of 42 nucleotides for a template of the same length was directly observed. Statistical analysis determined key kinetic parameters for the enzymes open and closed conformations. Consistent with these nanocircuit-based observations, the enzymes closed complex forms a phosphodiester bond in a highly efficient process >99.8% of the time, with a mean duration of only 0.3 ms for all four dNTPs. The rate-limiting step for catalysis occurs during the enzymes open state, but with a nearly 2-fold longer duration for dATP or dTTP incorporation than for dCTP or dGTP into complementary, homopolymeric DNA templates. Taken together, the results provide a wealth of new information complementing prior work on the mechanism and dynamics of DNA polymerase I.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

In vitro Evolution of Ligands to the Membrane Protein Caveolin

Sudipta Majumdar; Agnes Hajduczki; Rosemarie Vithayathil; Tivoli J. Olsen; Ryan Spitler; Aaron S. Mendez; Travis D. Thompson; Gregory A. Weiss

Membrane proteins comprise a third of the human genome, yet present challenging targets for reverse chemical genetics. For example, although implicated in numerous diseases including multiple myeloma, the membrane protein caveolin-1 appears to offer a poor target for the discovery of synthetic ligands due to its largely unknown structure and insolubility. To break this impasse and identify new classes of caveolae controlling lead compounds, we applied phage-based, reverse chemical genetics for the discovery of caveolin-1 ligands derived from the anti-HIV therapeutic T20. Substitution of homologous residues into the T20 sequence used a process analogous to medicinal chemistry for the affinity maturation to bind caveolin. The resultant caveolin-1 ligands bound with >1000-fold higher affinity than wild-type T20. Two types of ELISAs and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) measurements demonstrated high affinity binding to caveolin by the T20 variants with K(d) values in the 150 nM range. Microscopy experiments with the highest affinity caveolin ligands confirmed colocalization of the ligands with endogenous caveolin in NIH 3T3 cells. The results establish the foundation for targeting caveolin and caveolae formation in living cells.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2015

Observing Lysozyme’s Closing and Opening Motions by High-Resolution Single-Molecule Enzymology

Maxim V. Akhterov; Yongki Choi; Tivoli J. Olsen; Patrick C. Sims; Mariam Iftikhar; O. Tolga Gul; Brad L. Corso; Gregory A. Weiss; Philip G. Collins

Single-molecule techniques can monitor the kinetics of transitions between enzyme open and closed conformations, but such methods usually lack the resolution to observe the underlying transition pathway or intermediate conformational dynamics. We have used a 1 MHz bandwidth carbon nanotube transistor to electronically monitor single molecules of the enzyme T4 lysozyme as it processes substrate. An experimental resolution of 2 μs allowed the direct recording of lysozymes opening and closing transitions. Unexpectedly, both motions required 37 μs, on average. The distribution of transition durations was also independent of the enzymes state: either catalytic or nonproductive. The observation of smooth, continuous transitions suggests a concerted mechanism for glycoside hydrolysis with lysozymes two domains closing upon the polysaccharide substrate in its active site. We distinguish these smooth motions from a nonconcerted mechanism, observed in approximately 10% of lysozyme openings and closings, in which the enzyme pauses for an additional 40-140 μs in an intermediate, partially closed conformation. During intermediate forming events, the number of rate-limiting steps observed increases to four, consistent with four steps required in the stepwise, arrow-pushing mechanism. The formation of such intermediate conformations was again independent of the enzymes state. Taken together, the results suggest lysozyme operates as a Brownian motor. In this model, the enzyme traces a single pathway for closing and the reverse pathway for enzyme opening, regardless of its instantaneous catalytic productivity. The observed symmetry in enzyme opening and closing thus suggests that substrate translocation occurs while the enzyme is closed.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2013

Single molecule sensing with carbon nanotube devices

Yongki Choi; Patrick C. Sims; Tivoli J. Olsen; Mariam Iftikhar; Brad L. Corso; O. Tolga Gul; Gregory A. Weiss; Philip G. Collins

Nanoscale electronic devices like field-effect transistors have long promised to provide sensitive, label-free detection of biomolecules. In particular, single-walled carbon nanotubes have the requisite sensitivity to detect single molecule events and sufficient bandwidth to directly monitor single molecule dynamics in real time. Recent measurements have demonstrated this premise by monitoring the dynamic, single-molecule processivity of three different enzymes: lysozyme, protein Kinase A, and the Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase I. In each case, recordings resolved detailed trajectories of tens of thousands of individual chemical events and provided excellent statistics for single-molecule events. This electronic technique has a temporal resolution approaching 1 microsecond, which provides a new window for observing brief, intermediate transition states. In addition, the devices are indefinitely stable, so that the same molecule can be observed for minutes and hours. The extended recordings provide new insights into rare events like transitions to chemically-inactive conformations.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Processive incorporation of deoxynucleoside triphosphate analogs by single-molecule DNA polymerase i (Klenow Fragment) nanocircuits

Kaitlin M. Pugliese; O. Tolga Gul; Yongki Choi; Tivoli J. Olsen; Patrick C. Sims; Philip G. Collins; Gregory A. Weiss


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2018

Directed evolution and biophysical characterization of a full-length, soluble, human caveolin-1 variant

Joshua N. Smith; Joshua M. Edgar; J. Mark Balk; Mariam Iftikhar; Jessica C. Fong; Tivoli J. Olsen; Dmitry A. Fishman; Sudipta Majumdar; Gregory A. Weiss


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016

Single-Molecule Electronic Monitoring of DNA Polymerase Activity

Denys O. Marushchak; Kaitlin M. Pugliese; Mackenzie W. Turvey; Yongki Choi; O. Tolga Gul; Tivoli J. Olsen; Arith J. Rajapakse; Gregory A. Weiss; Philip G. Collins


Archive | 2015

DETECTION OF NUCLEIC ACID POLYMERASE CONFORMATIONAL CHANGES USING A NANOTUBE

Philip G. Collins; Gregory A. Weiss; Yongki Choi; Tivoli J. Olsen

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Yongki Choi

North Dakota State University

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Brad L. Corso

University of California

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O. Tolga Gul

University of California

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Issa S. Moody

University of California

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