Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Y. Whitney Yin is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Y. Whitney Yin.


Cell | 2004

The structural mechanism of translocation and helicase activity in T7 RNA polymerase.

Y. Whitney Yin; Thomas A. Steitz

RNA polymerase functions like a molecular motor that can convert chemical energy into the work of strand separation and translocation along the DNA during transcription. The structures of phage T7 RNA polymerase in an elongation phase substrate complex that includes the incoming nucleoside triphosphate and a pretranslocation product complex that includes the product pyrophosphate (PPi) are described here. These structures and the previously determined posttranslocation elongation complex demonstrate that two enzyme conformations exist during a cycle of single nucleotide addition. One orientation of a five-helix subdomain is stabilized by the phosphates of either the incoming NTP or by the product PPi. A second orientation of this subdomain is stable in their absence and is associated with translocation of the heteroduplex product as well as strand separation of the downstream DNA. We propose that the dissociation of the product PPi after nucleotide addition produces the protein conformational change resulting in translocation and strand separation.


The EMBO Journal | 2007

Drosophila Omi, a mitochondrial-localized IAP antagonist and proapoptotic serine protease

Madhavi Challa; Srinivas Malladi; Brett Pellock; Douglas Dresnek; Shankar Varadarajan; Y. Whitney Yin; Kristin White; Shawn B. Bratton

Although essential in mammals, in flies the importance of mitochondrial outer membrane permeabilization for apoptosis remains highly controversial. Herein, we demonstrate that Drosophila Omi (dOmi), a fly homologue of the serine protease Omi/HtrA2, is a developmentally regulated mitochondrial intermembrane space protein that undergoes processive cleavage, in situ, to generate two distinct inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) binding motifs. Depending upon the proapoptotic stimulus, mature dOmi is then differentially released into the cytosol, where it binds selectively to the baculovirus IAP repeat 2 (BIR2) domain in Drosophila IAP1 (DIAP1) and displaces the initiator caspase DRONC. This interaction alone, however, is insufficient to promote apoptosis, as dOmi fails to displace the effector caspase DrICE from the BIR1 domain in DIAP1. Rather, dOmi alleviates DIAP1 inhibition of all caspases by proteolytically degrading DIAP1 and induces apoptosis both in cultured cells and in the developing fly eye. In summary, we demonstrate for the first time in flies that mitochondrial permeabilization not only occurs during apoptosis but also results in the release of a bona fide proapoptotic protein.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Each Monomer of the Dimeric Accessory Protein for Human Mitochondrial DNA Polymerase Has a Distinct Role in Conferring Processivity

Young Sam Lee; Sujin Lee; Borries Demeler; Ian J. Molineux; Kenneth A. Johnson; Y. Whitney Yin

The accessory protein polymerase (pol) γB of the human mitochondrial DNA polymerase stimulates the synthetic activity of the catalytic subunit. pol γB functions by both accelerating the polymerization rate and enhancing polymerase-DNA interaction, thereby distinguishing itself from the accessory subunits of other DNA polymerases. The molecular basis for the unique functions of human pol γB lies in its dimeric structure, where the pol γB monomer proximal to pol γA in the holoenzyme strengthens the interaction with DNA, and the distal pol γB monomer accelerates the reaction rate. We further show that human pol γB exhibits a catalytic subunit- and substrate DNA-dependent dimerization. By duplicating the monomeric pol γB of lower eukaryotes, the dimeric mammalian proteins confer additional processivity to the holoenzyme polymerase.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

A Single Mutation in Human Mitochondrial DNA Polymerase Pol γA Affects Both Polymerization and Proofreading Activities of Only the Holoenzyme

Young Sam Lee; Kenneth A. Johnson; Ian J. Molineux; Y. Whitney Yin

Common causes of human mitochondrial diseases are mutations affecting DNA polymerase (Pol) γ, the sole polymerase responsible for DNA synthesis in mitochondria. Although the polymerase and exonuclease active sites are located on the catalytic subunit Pol γA, in holoenzyme both activities are regulated by the accessory subunit Pol γB. Several patients with severe neurological and muscular disorders were reported to carry the Pol γA substitutions R232G or R232H, which lie outside of either active site. We report that Arg232 substitutions have no effect on independent Pol γA activities but show major defects in the Pol γA-Pol γB holoenzyme, including decreased polymerase and increased exonuclease activities, the latter with decreased selectivity for mismatches. We show that Pol γB facilitates distinguishing mismatched from base-paired primer termini and that Pol γA Arg232 is essential for mediating this regulatory function of the accessory subunit. This study provides a molecular basis for the disease symptoms exhibited by patients carrying those substitutions.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

Transcription yield of fully 2′-modified RNA can be increased by the addition of thermostabilizing mutations to T7 RNA polymerase mutants

Adam J. Meyer; Daniel J. Garry; Bradley Hall; Michelle Byrom; Hannah G. McDonald; Xu Yang; Y. Whitney Yin; Andrew D. Ellington

On average, mutations are deleterious to proteins. Mutations conferring new function to a protein often come at the expense of protein folding or stability, reducing overall activity. Over the years, a panel of T7 RNA polymerases have been designed or evolved to accept nucleotides with modified ribose moieties. These modified RNAs have proven useful, especially in vivo, but the transcriptional yields tend to be quite low. Here we show that mutations previously shown to increase the thermal tolerance of T7 RNA polymerase can increase the activity of mutants with expanded substrate range. The resulting polymerase mutants can be used to generate 2′-O-methyl modified RNA with yields much higher than enzymes currently employed.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Probing the structural and molecular basis of nucleotide selectivity by human mitochondrial DNA polymerase γ

Christal D. Sohl; Michal R. Szymanski; Andrea C. Mislak; Christie Shumate; Sheida Amiralaei; Raymond F. Schinazi; Karen S. Anderson; Y. Whitney Yin

Significance Nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) are the cornerstones of treatment for fighting HIV infection. Unfortunately, they also cause drug toxicity by inhibiting human mitochondrial DNA polymerase (Pol γ). Identification of structural differences between the intended target (RT) and adverse reaction target (Pol γ) will provide critical information for designing more potent drugs with lower toxicity. Here, we reveal structural and mechanistic differences between Pol γ and RT by studying NRTIs that have comparable efficacy on RT but significantly different affinities for Pol γ. We identified critical discriminator residues in Pol γ that are fully responsible for its differential response to emtricitabine. More importantly, the topological equivalent residue in RT is essential for activity, thus identifying this region as a hot-spot for inhibitor design. Nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) are the essential components of highly active antiretroviral (HAART) therapy targeting HIV reverse transcriptase (RT). NRTI triphosphates (NRTI-TP), the biologically active forms, act as chain terminators of viral DNA synthesis. Unfortunately, NRTIs also inhibit human mitochondrial DNA polymerase (Pol γ), causing unwanted mitochondrial toxicity. Understanding the structural and mechanistic differences between Pol γ and RT in response to NRTIs will provide invaluable insight to aid in designing more effective drugs with lower toxicity. The NRTIs emtricitabine [(-)-2,3′-dideoxy-5-fluoro-3′-thiacytidine, (-)-FTC] and lamivudine, [(-)-2,3′-dideoxy-3′-thiacytidine, (-)-3TC] are both potent RT inhibitors, but Pol γ discriminates against (-)-FTC-TP by two orders of magnitude better than (-)-3TC-TP. Furthermore, although (-)-FTC-TP is only slightly more potent against HIV RT than its enantiomer (+)-FTC-TP, it is discriminated by human Pol γ four orders of magnitude more efficiently than (+)-FTC-TP. As a result, (-)-FTC is a much less toxic NRTI. Here, we present the structural and kinetic basis for this striking difference by identifying the discriminator residues of drug selectivity in both viral and human enzymes responsible for substrate selection and inhibitor specificity. For the first time, to our knowledge, this work illuminates the mechanism of (-)-FTC-TP differential selectivity and provides a structural scaffold for development of novel NRTIs with lower toxicity.


Biochemistry | 2013

Comparison of the Structural and Dynamic Effects of 5-Methylcytosine and 5-Chlorocytosine in a CpG Dinucleotide Sequence

Jacob A. Theruvathu; Y. Whitney Yin; B. Montgomery Pettitt; Lawrence C. Sowers

Inflammation-mediated reactive molecules can result in an array of oxidized and halogenated DNA-damage products, including 5-chlorocytosine ((Cl)C). Previous studies have shown that (Cl)C can mimic 5-methylcytosine ((m)C) and act as a fraudulent epigenetic signal, promoting the methylation of previously unmethylated DNA sequences. Although the 5-halouracils are good substrates for base-excision repair, no repair activity has yet been identified for (Cl)C. Because of the apparent biochemical similarities of (m)C and (Cl)C, we have investigated the effects of (m)C and (Cl)C substitution on oligonucleotide structure and dynamics. In this study, we have constructed oligonucleotide duplexes containing C, (Cl)C, and (m)C within a CpG dinucleotide. The thermal and thermodynamic stability of these duplexes were found to be experimentally indistinguishable. Crystallographic structures of duplex oligonucleotides containing (m)C or (Cl)C were determined to 1.2 and 1.9 Å resolution, respectively. Both duplexes are B-form and are superimposable on a previously determined structure of a cytosine-containing duplex with a rmsd of approximately 0.25 Å. NMR solution studies indicate that all duplexes containing cytosine or the cytosine analogues are normal B-form and that no structural perturbations are observed surrounding the site of each substitution. The magnitude of the base-stacking-induced upfield shifts for nonexchangeable base proton resonances are similar for each of the duplexes examined, indicating that neither (m)C nor (Cl)C significantly alter base-stacking interactions. The (Cl)C analogue is paired with G in an apparently normal geometry; however, the G-imino proton of the (Cl)C-G base pair resonates to higher field relative to (m)C-G or C-G, indicating a weaker imino hydrogen bond. Using selective ¹⁵N-enrichment and isotope-edited NMR, we observe that the amino group of (Cl)C rotates at roughly half of the rate of the corresponding amino groups of the C-G and (m)C-G base pairs. The altered chemical shifts of hydrogen-bonding proton resonances for the (Cl)C-G base pair as well as the slower rotation of the (Cl)C amino group can be attributed to the electron-withdrawing inductive property of the 5-chloro substituent. The apparent similarity of duplexes containing (m)C and (Cl)C demonstrated here is in accord with results of previous biochemical studies and further suggests that (Cl)C is likely to be an unusually persistent form of DNA damage.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Yeast Mitochondrial Transcription Factor Mtf1 Determines the Precision of Promoter-Directed Initiation of RNA Polymerase Rpo41.

Xu Yang; Hae Ryung Chang; Y. Whitney Yin

Despite their clear T7-bacteriophage origin, mitochondrial RNA polymerases have evolved to require transcription factors. All mitochondrial polymerases contain an extra N-terminal domain that has no counterpart in the self-proficient phage enzyme, which is therefore hypothesized to interact with transcription factors. We studied a series of N-terminal deletion mutants of yeast mitochondrial RNA polymerase, Rpo41, and have found that the N-terminal region does not abolish the effects of Mtf1; rather it contributes directly to enzyme catalysis. Mtf1 can rescue the defective Rpo41 enzymes resulted from N-terminal domain deletions. Although Rpo41 appears to have retained all promoter recognition elements found in T7 RNAP, the elements are not independently functional, and Mtf1 is necessary and sufficient for holoenzyme promoter-directed transcription activity.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016

The yeast mitochondrial RNA polymerase and transcription factor complex catalyzes efficient priming of DNA synthesis on single-stranded DNA

Divya Nandakumar; Aishwarya P. Deshpande; Thomas P. Lucas; Ramanagouda R-Bhojappa; Guo Qing Tang; Kevin D. Raney; Y. Whitney Yin; Smita S. Patel

Primases use single-stranded (ss) DNAs as templates to synthesize short oligoribonucleotide primers that initiate lagging strand DNA synthesis or reprime DNA synthesis after replication fork collapse, but the origin of this activity in the mitochondria remains unclear. Herein, we show that the Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondrial RNA polymerase (Rpo41) and its transcription factor (Mtf1) is an efficient primase that initiates DNA synthesis on ssDNA coated with the yeast mitochondrial ssDNA-binding protein, Rim1. Both Rpo41 and Rpo41-Mtf1 can synthesize short and long RNAs on ssDNA template and prime DNA synthesis by the yeast mitochondrial DNA polymerase Mip1. However, the ssDNA-binding protein Rim1 severely inhibits the RNA synthesis activity of Rpo41, but not the Rpo41-Mtf1 complex, which continues to prime DNA synthesis efficiently in the presence of Rim1. We show that RNAs as short as 10–12 nt serve as primers for DNA synthesis. Characterization of the RNA-DNA products shows that Rpo41 and Rpo41-Mtf1 have slightly different priming specificity. However, both prefer to initiate with ATP from short priming sequences such as 3′-TCC, TTC, and TTT, and the consensus sequence is 3′-Pu(Py)2–3. Based on our studies, we propose that Rpo41-Mtf1 is an attractive candidate for serving as the primase to initiate lagging strand DNA synthesis during normal replication and/or to restart stalled replication from downstream ssDNA.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2016

The DNA Polymerase Gamma R953C Mutant Is Associated with Antiretroviral Therapy-Induced Mitochondrial Toxicity

Min Li; Andrea C. Mislak; Yram Foli; Esinam Agbosu; Vivek Bose; Shreya Bhandari; Michal R. Szymanski; Christie Shumate; Y. Whitney Yin; Karen S. Anderson; Elijah Paintsil

ABSTRACT We found a heterozygous C2857T mutation (R953C) in polymerase gamma (Pol-γ) in an HIV-infected patient with mitochondrial toxicity. The R953C Pol-γ mutant binding affinity for dCTP is 8-fold less than that of the wild type. The R953C mutant shows a 4-fold decrease in discrimination of analog nucleotides relative to the wild type. R953 is located on the “O-helix” that forms the substrate deoxynucleoside triphosphate (dNTP) binding site; the interactions of R953 with E1056 and Y986 may stabilize the O-helix and affect polymerase activity.

Collaboration


Dive into the Y. Whitney Yin's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Christie Shumate

University of Texas Medical Branch

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ian J. Molineux

University of Texas at Austin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michal R. Szymanski

University of Texas Medical Branch

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Young Sam Lee

University of Texas at Austin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kenneth A. Johnson

University of Texas at Austin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mark A. White

University of Texas Medical Branch

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge