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Dive into the research topics where Yifan Cheng is active.

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Featured researches published by Yifan Cheng.


Nature Methods | 2013

Electron counting and beam-induced motion correction enable near-atomic-resolution single-particle cryo-EM

Xueming Li; Paul Mooney; Shawn Q. Zheng; Christopher R Booth; Michael B. Braunfeld; Sander Gubbens; David A. Agard; Yifan Cheng

In recent work with large high-symmetry viruses, single-particle electron cryomicroscopy (cryo-EM) has achieved the determination of near-atomic-resolution structures by allowing direct fitting of atomic models into experimental density maps. However, achieving this goal with smaller particles of lower symmetry remains challenging. Using a newly developed single electron–counting detector, we confirmed that electron beam–induced motion substantially degrades resolution, and we showed that the combination of rapid readout and nearly noiseless electron counting allow image blurring to be corrected to subpixel accuracy, restoring intrinsic image information to high resolution (Thon rings visible to ∼3 Å). Using this approach, we determined a 3.3-Å-resolution structure of an ∼700-kDa protein with D7 symmetry, the Thermoplasma acidophilum 20S proteasome, showing clear side-chain density. Our method greatly enhances image quality and data acquisition efficiency—key bottlenecks in applying near-atomic-resolution cryo-EM to a broad range of protein samples.


Nature | 2013

Structure of the TRPV1 ion channel determined by electron cryo-microscopy.

Maofu Liao; Erhu Cao; David Julius; Yifan Cheng

Transient receptor potential (TRP) channels are sensors for a wide range of cellular and environmental signals, but elucidating how these channels respond to physical and chemical stimuli has been hampered by a lack of detailed structural information. Here we exploit advances in electron cryo-microscopy to determine the structure of a mammalian TRP channel, TRPV1, at 3.4 Å resolution, breaking the side-chain resolution barrier for membrane proteins without crystallization. Like voltage-gated channels, TRPV1 exhibits four-fold symmetry around a central ion pathway formed by transmembrane segments 5–6 (S5–S6) and the intervening pore loop, which is flanked by S1–S4 voltage-sensor-like domains. TRPV1 has a wide extracellular ‘mouth’ with a short selectivity filter. The conserved ‘TRP domain’ interacts with the S4–S5 linker, consistent with its contribution to allosteric modulation. Subunit organization is facilitated by interactions among cytoplasmic domains, including amino-terminal ankyrin repeats. These observations provide a structural blueprint for understanding unique aspects of TRP channel function.


Nature | 2005

Lipid-protein interactions in double-layered two-dimensional AQP0 crystals.

Tamir Gonen; Yifan Cheng; Piotr Sliz; Yoko Hiroaki; Yoshinori Fujiyoshi; Stephen C. Harrison; Thomas Walz

Lens-specific aquaporin-0 (AQP0) functions as a specific water pore and forms the thin junctions between fibre cells. Here we describe a 1.9 Å resolution structure of junctional AQP0, determined by electron crystallography of double-layered two-dimensional crystals. Comparison of junctional and non-junctional AQP0 structures shows that junction formation depends on a conformational switch in an extracellular loop, which may result from cleavage of the cytoplasmic amino and carboxy termini. In the centre of the water pathway, the closed pore in junctional AQP0 retains only three water molecules, which are too widely spaced to form hydrogen bonds with each other. Packing interactions between AQP0 tetramers in the crystalline array are mediated by lipid molecules, which assume preferred conformations. We were therefore able to build an atomic model for the lipid bilayer surrounding the AQP0 tetramers, and we describe lipid–protein interactions.Membrane organizationAquaporin-0 (AQP0) is the most abundant protein in the membranes of fibre cells in the lens of the mammalian eye, acting both as a water-conducting channel and as an adhesion molecule at cell junctions. The structure of AQP0 unbound (shown on the cover), and together with the lipids that surround it in the membrane, has now been determined at high resolution by electron microscopy — high enough to resolve single water molecules. The structure gives us the first close look at how a membrane protein is embedded in a lipid bilayer. When junctions form between lens fibre cells, the associated lipids, already partly immobilized by interaction with AQP0, mediate the lattice contacts. AQP0 mutations are known to cause cataracts; these mutations may be interfering with AQP0s interaction with the lipids, preventing the integration of AQP0 into a bilayerLens-specific aquaporin-0 (AQP0) functions as a specific water pore and forms the thin junctions between fibre cells. Here we describe a 1.9 Å resolution structure of junctional AQP0, determined by electron crystallography of double-layered two-dimensional crystals. Comparison of junctional and non-junctional AQP0 structures shows that junction formation depends on a conformational switch in an extracellular loop, which may result from cleavage of the cytoplasmic amino and carboxy termini. In the centre of the water pathway, the closed pore in junctional AQP0 retains only three water molecules, which are too widely spaced to form hydrogen bonds with each other. Packing interactions between AQP0 tetramers in the crystalline array are mediated by lipid molecules, which assume preferred conformations. We were therefore able to build an atomic model for the lipid bilayer surrounding the AQP0 tetramers, and we describe lipid–protein interactions.


Nature | 2013

TRPV1 structures in distinct conformations reveal activation mechanisms

Erhu Cao; Maofu Liao; Yifan Cheng; David Julius

Transient receptor potential (TRP) channels are polymodal signal detectors that respond to a wide range of physical and chemical stimuli. Elucidating how these channels integrate and convert physiological signals into channel opening is essential to understanding how they regulate cell excitability under normal and pathophysiological conditions. Here we exploit pharmacological probes (a peptide toxin and small vanilloid agonists) to determine structures of two activated states of the capsaicin receptor, TRPV1. A domain (consisting of transmembrane segments 1–4) that moves during activation of voltage-gated channels remains stationary in TRPV1, highlighting differences in gating mechanisms for these structurally related channel superfamilies. TRPV1 opening is associated with major structural rearrangements in the outer pore, including the pore helix and selectivity filter, as well as pronounced dilation of a hydrophobic constriction at the lower gate, suggesting a dual gating mechanism. Allosteric coupling between upper and lower gates may account for rich physiological modulation exhibited by TRPV1 and other TRP channels.


Biological Procedures Online | 2004

Negative Staining and Image Classification - Powerful Tools in Modern Electron Microscopy

Melanie D. Ohi; Ying Li; Yifan Cheng; Thomas Walz

Vitrification is the state-of-the-art specimen preparation technique for molecular electron microscopy (EM) and therefore negative staining may appear to be an outdated approach. In this paper we illustrate the specific advantages of negative staining, ensuring that this technique will remain an important tool for the study of biological macromolecules. Due to the higher image contrast, much smaller molecules can be visualized by negative staining. Also, while molecules prepared by vitrification usually adopt random orientations in the amorphous ice layer, negative staining tends to induce preferred orientations of the molecules on the carbon support film. Combining negative staining with image classification techniques makes it possible to work with very heterogeneous molecule populations, which are difficult or even impossible to analyze using vitrified specimens.


Nature | 2004

Molecular model for a complete clathrin lattice from electron cryomicroscopy

Alexander Fotin; Yifan Cheng; Piotr Sliz; Nikolaus Grigorieff; Stephen C. Harrison; Tomas Kirchhausen; Thomas Walz

Clathrin-coated vesicles are important vehicles of membrane traffic in cells. We report the structure of a clathrin lattice at subnanometre resolution, obtained from electron cryomicroscopy of coats assembled in vitro. We trace most of the 1,675-residue clathrin heavy chain by fitting known crystal structures of two segments, and homology models of the rest, into the electron microscopy density map. We also define the position of the central helical segment of the light chain. A helical tripod, the carboxy-terminal parts of three heavy chains, projects inward from the vertex of each three-legged clathrin triskelion, linking that vertex to ‘ankles’ of triskelions centred two vertices away. Analysis of coats with distinct diameters shows an invariant pattern of contacts in the neighbourhood of each vertex, with more variable interactions along the extended parts of the triskelion ‘legs’. These invariant local interactions appear to stabilize the lattice, allowing assembly and uncoating to be controlled by events at a few specific sites.


Nature Methods | 2017

MotionCor2: anisotropic correction of beam-induced motion for improved cryo-electron microscopy

Shawn Q. Zheng; Eugene Palovcak; Jean-Paul Armache; Kliment A. Verba; Yifan Cheng; David A. Agard

MotionCor2 software corrects for beam-induced sample motion, improving the resolution of cryo-EM reconstructions.


Cell | 2004

Structure of the Human Transferrin Receptor-Transferrin Complex

Yifan Cheng; Olga Zak; Philip Aisen; Stephen C. Harrison; Thomas Walz

Iron, insoluble as free Fe(3+) and toxic as free Fe(2+), is distributed through the body as Fe(3+) bound to transferrin (Tf) for delivery to cells by endocytosis of its complex with transferrin receptor (TfR). Although much is understood of the transferrin endocytotic cycle, little has been uncovered of the molecular details underlying the formation of the receptor-transferrin complex. Using cryo-electron microscopy, we have produced a density map of the TfR-Tf complex at subnanometer resolution. An atomic model, obtained by fitting crystal structures of diferric Tf and the receptor ectodomain into the map, shows that the Tf N-lobe is sandwiched between the membrane and the TfR ectodomain and that the C-lobe abuts the receptor helical domain. When Tf binds receptor, its N-lobe moves by about 9 A with respect to its C-lobe. The structure of TfR-Tf complex helps account for known differences in the iron-release properties of free and receptor bound Tf.


Nature | 2004

Aquaporin-0 membrane junctions reveal the structure of a closed water pore.

Tamir Gonen; Piotr Sliz; Joerg Kistler; Yifan Cheng; Thomas Walz

The lens-specific water pore aquaporin-0 (AQP0) is the only aquaporin known to form membrane junctions in vivo. We show here that AQP0 from the lens core, containing some carboxy-terminally cleaved AQP0, forms double-layered crystals that recapitulate in vivo junctions. We present the structure of the AQP0 membrane junction as determined by electron crystallography. The junction is formed by three localized interactions between AQP0 molecules in adjoining membranes, mainly mediated by proline residues conserved in AQP0s from different species but not present in most other aquaporins. Whereas all previously determined aquaporin structures show the pore in an open conformation, the water pore is closed in AQP0 junctions. The water pathway in AQP0 also contains an additional pore constriction, not seen in other known aquaporin structures, which may be responsible for pore gating.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Direct Membrane Association Drives Mitochondrial Fission by the Parkinson Disease-associated Protein α-Synuclein

Ken Nakamura; Venu M. Nemani; Farnaz Azarbal; Gaia Skibinski; Jon M. Levy; Kiyoshi Egami; Larissa A. Munishkina; Jue Zhang; Brooke M. Gardner; Junko Wakabayashi; Hiromi Sesaki; Yifan Cheng; Steven Finkbeiner; Robert L. Nussbaum; Eliezer Masliah; Robert H. Edwards

The protein α-synuclein has a central role in Parkinson disease, but the mechanism by which it contributes to neural degeneration remains unknown. We now show that the expression of α-synuclein in mammalian cells, including neurons in vitro and in vivo, causes the fragmentation of mitochondria. The effect is specific for synuclein, with more fragmentation by α- than β- or γ-isoforms, and it is not accompanied by changes in the morphology of other organelles or in mitochondrial membrane potential. However, mitochondrial fragmentation is eventually followed by a decline in respiration and neuronal death. The fragmentation does not require the mitochondrial fission protein Drp1 and involves a direct interaction of synuclein with mitochondrial membranes. In vitro, synuclein fragments artificial membranes containing the mitochondrial lipid cardiolipin, and this effect is specific for the small oligomeric forms of synuclein. α-Synuclein thus exerts a primary and direct effect on the morphology of an organelle long implicated in the pathogenesis of Parkinson disease.

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Shenping Wu

University of California

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Xueming Li

University of California

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David A. Agard

University of California

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Stephen C. Harrison

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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David Julius

University of California

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Shawn Q. Zheng

University of California

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David Bulkley

University of California

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