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Dive into the research topics where Wan-Chen Lin is active.

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Featured researches published by Wan-Chen Lin.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2009

AFM for structure and dynamics of biomembranes.

Emel I. Goksu; Juan M. Vanegas; Craig D. Blanchette; Wan-Chen Lin; Marjorie L. Longo

We review structure and dynamic measurements of biomembranes by atomic force microscopy (AFM). We focus mainly on studies involving supported lipid bilayers (SLBs), particularly formation by vesicle rupture on flat and corrugated surfaces, nucleation and growth of domains in phase-separated systems, anesthetic-lipid interactions, and protein/peptide interactions in multicomponent systems. We show that carefully designed experiments along with real-time AFM imaging with superior lateral and z resolution (0.1 nm) have revealed quantitative details of the mechanisms and factors controlling vesicle rupture, domain shape and size, phase transformations, and some model biological interactions. The AFM tip can also be used as a mechanical transducer and incorporated in electrochemical measurements of membrane components; therefore, we touch on these important applications in both model and cell membranes.


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

H-Ras forms dimers on membrane surfaces via a protein–protein interface

Wan-Chen Lin; Lars Iversen; Hsiung-Lin Tu; Christopher J. Rhodes; Sune M. Christensen; Jeffrey S. Iwig; Scott D. Hansen; William C. Huang; Jay T. Groves

Significance Ras is a key signaling molecule in living cells, and mutations in Ras are involved in 30% of human cancers. It is becoming progressively more clear that the spatial arrangement of proteins within a cell, not just their chemical structure, is an important aspect of their function. In this work, we use a series of quantitative physical techniques to map out the tendency of two Ras molecules to bind together to form a dimer on membrane surfaces. Insights from this work, as well as the technical assays developed, may help to discover new therapeutic drugs capable of modulating the errant behavior of Ras in cancer. The lipid-anchored small GTPase Ras is an important signaling node in mammalian cells. A number of observations suggest that Ras is laterally organized within the cell membrane, and this may play a regulatory role in its activation. Lipid anchors composed of palmitoyl and farnesyl moieties in H-, N-, and K-Ras are widely suspected to be responsible for guiding protein organization in membranes. Here, we report that H-Ras forms a dimer on membrane surfaces through a protein–protein binding interface. A Y64A point mutation in the switch II region, known to prevent Son of sevenless and PI3K effector interactions, abolishes dimer formation. This suggests that the switch II region, near the nucleotide binding cleft, is either part of, or allosterically coupled to, the dimer interface. By tethering H-Ras to bilayers via a membrane-miscible lipid tail, we show that dimer formation is mediated by protein interactions and does not require lipid anchor clustering. We quantitatively characterize H-Ras dimerization in supported membranes using a combination of fluorescence correlation spectroscopy, photon counting histogram analysis, time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy, single-molecule tracking, and step photobleaching analysis. The 2D dimerization Kd is measured to be ∼1 × 103 molecules/µm2, and no higher-order oligomers were observed. Dimerization only occurs on the membrane surface; H-Ras is strictly monomeric at comparable densities in solution. Analysis of a number of H-Ras constructs, including key changes to the lipidation pattern of the hypervariable region, suggest that dimerization is a general property of native H-Ras on membrane surfaces.


Nature Methods | 2012

Membrane-protein binding measured with solution-phase plasmonic nanocube sensors

Hung-Jen Wu; Joel Henzie; Wan-Chen Lin; Christopher Rhodes; Zhu Li; Elodie Sartorel; Jeremy Thorner; Peidong Yang; Jay T. Groves

We describe a solution-phase sensor of lipid-protein binding based on localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) of silver nanocubes. When silica-coated nanocubes are mixed in a suspension of lipid vesicles, supported membranes spontaneously assemble on their surfaces. Using a standard laboratory spectrophotometer, we calibrated the LSPR peak shift due to protein binding to the membrane surface and then characterized the lipid-binding specificity of a pleckstrin homology domain protein.


Science | 2014

Ras activation by SOS: Allosteric regulation by altered fluctuation dynamics

Lars Iversen; Hsiung-Lin Tu; Wan-Chen Lin; Sune M. Christensen; Steven M. Abel; Jeffrey S. Iwig; Hung-Jen Wu; Jodi Gureasko; Christopher Rhodes; Rebecca S. Petit; Scott D. Hansen; Peter Daniel Thill; Cheng-han Yu; Dimitrios Stamou; Arup K. Chakraborty; John Kuriyan; Jay T. Groves

Outliers dominate signaling at cell membrane SOS enzymes act at cell membranes to activate Ras, a regulatory protein often overactive in cancer cells. Iversen et al. devised a system where they could observe the activity of individual enzymes at work. The single SOS molecules occupied stable states that varied greatly in their catalytic activity. Regulation appeared to occur by altering the time spent in active states. The overall activity of SOS was determined by just a few molecules that achieved the highest catalytic activity. The methods described should allow further detailed kinetic analysis of this and other signaling events that occur at the cell membrane — properties that it is not possible to discern from bulk biochemical measurements. Science, this issue p. 50 Single-molecule measurements reveal insights into regulation of the small GTPase Ras. Activation of the small guanosine triphosphatase H-Ras by the exchange factor Son of Sevenless (SOS) is an important hub for signal transduction. Multiple layers of regulation, through protein and membrane interactions, govern activity of SOS. We characterized the specific activity of individual SOS molecules catalyzing nucleotide exchange in H-Ras. Single-molecule kinetic traces revealed that SOS samples a broad distribution of turnover rates through stochastic fluctuations between distinct, long-lived (more than 100 seconds), functional states. The expected allosteric activation of SOS by Ras–guanosine triphosphate (GTP) was conspicuously absent in the mean rate. However, fluctuations into highly active states were modulated by Ras-GTP. This reveals a mechanism in which functional output may be determined by the dynamical spectrum of rates sampled by a small number of enzymes, rather than the ensemble average.


Nano Letters | 2012

Single molecule tracking on supported membranes with arrays of optical nanoantennas.

Theobald Lohmüller; Lars Iversen; M. Schmidt; Christopher P. Rhodes; Hsiung-Lin Tu; Wan-Chen Lin; Jay T. Groves

Coupling of the localized surface plasmons between two closely apposed gold nanoparticles (nanoantenna) can cause strong enhancements of fluorescence or Raman signal intensity from molecules in the plasmonic “hot-spot”. Harnessing these properties for practical applications is challenging due to the need to fabricate gold particle arrays with well-defined nanometer spacing and a means of delivering functional molecules to the hot-spot. We report fabrication of billions of plasmon-coupled nanostructures on a single substrate by a combination of colloid lithography and plasma processing. Controlled spacing of the nanoantenna gaps is achieved by taking advantage of the fact that polystyrene particles melt together at their contact point during plasma processing. The resulting polymer thread shadows a gap of well-defined spacing between each pair of gold triangles in the final array. Confocal surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy imaging confirms the array is functionally uniform. Furthermore, a fully intact supported membrane can be formed on the intervening substrate by vesicle fusion. Trajectories of freely diffusing individual proteins are traced as they sequentially pass through, and are enhanced by, multiple gaps. The nanoantenna array thus enables enhanced observation of a fluid membrane system without static entrapment of the molecules.


Biophysical Journal | 2011

EphA2 Receptor Activation by Monomeric Ephrin-A1 on Supported Membranes

Qian Xu; Wan-Chen Lin; Rebecca S. Petit; Jay T. Groves

The receptor tyrosine kinase EphA2 interacts with its glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-linked ephrin-A1 ligand in a juxtacrine configuration. The soluble ephrin-A1 protein, without its GPI membrane linker, fails to activate EphA2. However, preclustered ephrin-A1 protein is active in solution and has been frequently used to trigger the EphA2 receptor. Although this approach has yielded insights into EphA2 signaling, preclustered ligands bypass natural receptor clustering processes and thus mask any role of clustering as a signal regulatory mechanism. Here, we present EphA2-expressing cells with a fusion protein of monomeric ephrin-A1 (mEA1) and enhanced monomeric yellow fluorescent protein that is linked to a supported lipid bilayer via a nickel-decahistidine anchor. The mEA1 is homogeneously dispersed, laterally mobile, and monomeric as measured by fluorescence imaging, correlation spectroscopy, and photon counting histogram analysis, respectively. Ephrin-A1 presented in this manner activates EphA2 on the surface of MDA-MB-231 human breast cancer cells, as measured by EphA2 phosphorylation and degradation. Spatial mutation experiments in which nanopatterns on the underlying substrate restrict mEA1 movement in the supported lipid bilayer reveal spatio-mechanical regulation of this signaling pathway, consistent with recently reported observations using a synthetically cross-linked ephrin-A1 dimer.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2014

Engineering a light-regulated GABAA receptor for optical control of neural inhibition.

Wan-Chen Lin; Christopher M. Davenport; Alexandre Mourot; Devaiah Vytla; Caleb M. Smith; Kathryne A. Medeiros; James J. Chambers; Richard H. Kramer

Optogenetics has become an emerging technique for neuroscience investigations owing to the great spatiotemporal precision and the target selectivity it provides. Here we extend the optogenetic strategy to GABAA receptors (GABAARs), the major mediators of inhibitory neurotransmission in the brain. We generated a light-regulated GABAA receptor (LiGABAR) by conjugating a photoswitchable tethered ligand (PTL) onto a mutant receptor containing the cysteine-substituted α1-subunit. The installed PTL can be advanced to or retracted from the GABA-binding pocket with 500 and 380 nm light, respectively, resulting in photoswitchable receptor antagonism. In hippocampal neurons, this LiGABAR enabled a robust photoregulation of inhibitory postsynaptic currents. Moreover, it allowed reversible photocontrol over neuron excitation in response to presynaptic stimulation. LiGABAR thus provides a powerful means for functional and mechanistic investigations of GABAAR-mediated neural inhibition.


Current protocols in chemical biology | 2010

Supported membrane formation, characterization, functionalization, and patterning for application in biological science and technology

Wan-Chen Lin; Cheng-han Yu; Sara B. Triffo; Jay T. Groves

Supported membranes, formed as a single continuous lipid bilayer on a solid substrate, such as silica, have been used extensively as a model for protein‐protein and cell‐cell interaction, to study the molecular interactions at interfaces and the heterogeneities of plasma membranes. The advantages of a supported membrane system include the ability to control membrane composition and the compatibility it has with various surface‐sensitive microscopic and spectroscopic techniques. Recent advances in micro‐ and nanotechnology have greatly extended the use of supported membranes to address key questions in cell biology. Although supported membranes can be easily made by vesicle fusion, the samples need careful preparation for this process to be efficient. The protocols in this unit comprehensively describe procedures to prepare, functionalize, and characterize supported membranes. Curr. Protoc. Chem. Biol. 2:235‐269


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2007

Lipid Domains in Supported Lipid Bilayer for Atomic Force Microscopy

Wan-Chen Lin; Craig D. Blanchette; Timothy V. Ratto; Marjorie L. Longo

Phase-separated supported lipid bilayers have been widely used to study the phase behavior of multicomponent lipid mixtures. One of the primary advantages of using supported lipid bilayers is that the two-dimensional platform of this model membrane system readily allows lipid-phase separation to be characterized by high-resolution imaging techniques such as atomic force microscopy (AFM). In addition, when supported lipid bilayers have been functionalized with a specific ligand, protein-membrane interactions can also be imaged and characterized through AFM. It has been recently demonstrated that when the technique of vesicle fusion is used to prepare supported lipid bilayers, the thermal history of the vesicles before deposition and the supported lipid bilayers after formation will have significant effects on the final phase-separated domain structures. In this chapter, three methods of vesicle preparations as well as three deposition conditions will be presented. Also, the techniques and strategies of using AFM to image multicomponent phase-separated supported lipid bilayers and protein binding will be discussed.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Phosphotyrosine-mediated LAT assembly on membranes drives kinetic bifurcation in recruitment dynamics of the Ras activator SOS

William Y.C. Huang; Qingrong Yan; Wan-Chen Lin; Jean K. Chung; Scott D. Hansen; Sune M. Christensen; Hsiung-Lin Tu; John Kuriyan; Jay T. Groves

Significance The assembly of receptors and downstream signaling molecules into extended networks is a commonly observed phenomenon in signal transduction. However, little is known about how such assemblies physically modulate signal propagation. Here, based on single-molecule kinetics studies, we report that phosphotyrosine-mediated assembly of adaptor protein LAT networks yields two distinct kinetic species of the Ras activator SOS. This system regulates the transmission of signal from activated T-cell receptor to Ras. We propose and evaluate how the emergence of a long-dwelling SOS species may serve as a kinetic proofreading mechanism to discriminate stochastic noise from genuinely activated receptors. The assembly of cell surface receptors with downstream signaling molecules is a commonly occurring theme in multiple signaling systems. However, little is known about how these assemblies modulate reaction kinetics and the ultimate propagation of signals. Here, we reconstitute phosphotyrosine-mediated assembly of extended linker for the activation of T cells (LAT):growth factor receptor-bound protein 2 (Grb2):Son of Sevenless (SOS) networks, derived from the T-cell receptor signaling system, on supported membranes. Single-molecule dwell time distributions reveal two, well-differentiated kinetic species for both Grb2 and SOS on the LAT assemblies. The majority fraction of membrane-recruited Grb2 and SOS both exhibit fast kinetics and single exponential dwell time distributions, with average dwell times of hundreds of milliseconds. The minor fraction exhibits much slower kinetics, extending the dwell times to tens of seconds. Considering this result in the context of the multistep process by which the Ras GEF (guanine nucleotide exchange factor) activity of SOS is activated indicates that kinetic stabilization from the LAT assembly may be important. This kinetic proofreading effect would additionally serve as a stochastic noise filter by reducing the relative probability of spontaneous SOS activation in the absence of receptor triggering. The generality of receptor-mediated assembly suggests that such effects may play a role in multiple receptor proximal signaling processes.

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Jay T. Groves

University of California

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Hsiung-Lin Tu

University of California

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Craig D. Blanchette

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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John Kuriyan

University of California

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Timothy V. Ratto

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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