Zach Hensel
Johns Hopkins University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Zach Hensel.
PLOS ONE | 2010
Guo Fu; Tao Huang; Jackson Buss; Carla Coltharp; Zach Hensel; Jie Xiao
The FtsZ protein, a tubulin-like GTPase, plays a pivotal role in prokaryotic cell division. In vivo it localizes to the midcell and assembles into a ring-like structure-the Z-ring. The Z-ring serves as an essential scaffold to recruit all other division proteins and generates contractile force for cytokinesis, but its supramolecular structure remains unknown. Electron microscopy (EM) has been unsuccessful in detecting the Z-ring due to the dense cytoplasm of bacterial cells, and conventional fluorescence light microscopy (FLM) has only provided images with limited spatial resolution (200–300 nm) due to the diffraction of light. Hence, given the small sizes of bacteria cells, identifying the in vivo structure of the Z-ring presents a substantial challenge. Here, we used photoactivated localization microscopy (PALM), a single molecule-based super-resolution imaging technique, to characterize the in vivo structure of the Z-ring in E. coli. We achieved a spatial resolution of ∼35 nm and discovered that in addition to the expected ring-like conformation, the Z-ring of E. coli adopts a novel compressed helical conformation with variable helical length and pitch. We measured the thickness of the Z-ring to be ∼110 nm and the packing density of FtsZ molecules inside the Z-ring to be greater than what is expected for a single-layered flat ribbon configuration. Our results strongly suggest that the Z-ring is composed of a loose bundle of FtsZ protofilaments that randomly overlap with each other in both longitudinal and radial directions of the cell. Our results provide significant insight into the spatial organization of the Z-ring and open the door for further investigations of structure-function relationships and cell cycle-dependent regulation of the Z-ring.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2012
Zach Hensel; Haidong Feng; Bo Han; Christine L. Hatem; Jin Wang; Jie Xiao
Gene expression is inherently stochastic; precise gene regulation by transcription factors is important for cell-fate determination. Many transcription factors regulate their own expression, suggesting that autoregulation counters intrinsic stochasticity in gene expression. Using a new strategy, cotranslational activation by cleavage (CoTrAC), we probed the stochastic expression dynamics of cI, which encodes the bacteriophage λ repressor CI, a fate-determining transcription factor. CI concentration fluctuations influence both lysogenic stability and induction of bacteriophage λ. We found that the intrinsic stochasticity in cI expression was largely determined by CI expression level irrespective of autoregulation. Furthermore, extrinsic, cell-to-cell variation was primarily responsible for CI concentration fluctuations, and negative autoregulation minimized CI concentration heterogeneity by counteracting extrinsic noise and introducing memory. This quantitative study of transcription factor expression dynamics sheds light on the mechanisms cells use to control noise in gene regulatory networks.
PLOS Biology | 2013
Zach Hensel; Xiaoli Weng; Arvin Cesar Lagda; Jie Xiao
A high-resolution, single-molecule study directly assesses the prevalence and dynamics of DNA looping in gene regulation in live E. coli cells.
Biophysical Journal | 2011
Guo Fu; Tao Huang; Jackson Buss; Carla Coltharp; Zach Hensel; Jie Xiao
The FtsZ protein, a tubulin-like GTPase, plays a pivotal role in prokaryotic cell division. In vivo it localizes to the midcell and assembles into a ring-like structure-the Z-ring. The Z-ring serves as an essential scaffold to recruit all other division proteins and generates contractile force for cytokinesis, but its supramolecular structure remains unknown. Electron microscopy (EM) has been unsuccessful in detecting the Z-ring due to the dense cytoplasm of bacterial cells, and conventional fluorescence light microscopy (FLM) has only provided images with limited spatial resolution (200-300 nm) due to the diffraction of light. Hence, given the small sizes of bacteria cells, identifying the in vivo structure of the Z-ring presents a substantial challenge. Here, we used photoactivated localization microscopy (PALM), a single molecule-based super-resolution imaging technique, to characterize the in vivo structure of the Z-ring in E. coli. We achieved a spatial resolution of ,35 nm and discovered that in addition to the expected ring-like conformation, the Z-ring of E. coli adopts a novel compressed helical conformation with variable helical length and pitch. We measured the thickness of the Z-ring to be ,110 nm and the packing density of FtsZ molecules inside the Z-ring to be greater than what is expected for a single-layered flat ribbon configuration. Our results strongly suggest that the Z-ring is composed of a loose bundle of FtsZ protofilaments that randomly overlap with each other in both longitudinal and radial directions of the cell. Our results provide significant insight into the spatial organization of the Z-ring and open the door for further investigations of structure-function relationships and cell cycledependent regulation of the Z-ring.
Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2013
Zach Hensel; Jie Xiao
The recent emergence of new experimental tools employing sensitive fluorescence detection in vivo has made it possible to visualize various aspects of gene regulation at the single-molecule level in the native, intracellular context. In this review, we will first describe general considerations for in vivo, single-molecule fluorescence detection of DNA, mRNA, and protein molecules involved in gene regulation. We will then give an overview of the rapidly evolving suite of molecular tools available for observing gene regulation in vivo and discuss new insights they have brought into gene regulation.
ChemBioChem | 2009
Zach Hensel; Jie Xiao
What mechanism underlies the induction of the lac operon? Expression from the lac operon is an all‐or‐none phenomenon. Recent work by Choi et al. combines single‐molecule imaging of gene expression with single‐cell induction measurements to develop a stochastic model describing the critical role of single lac‐repressor molecules in induction.
Nature Communications | 2018
Xiaona Fang; Qiong Liu; Christopher Bohrer; Zach Hensel; Wei Han; Jin Wang; Jie Xiao
Bistable switches are common gene regulatory motifs directing two mutually exclusive cell fates. Theoretical studies suggest that bistable switches are sufficient to encode more than two cell fates without rewiring the circuitry due to the non-equilibrium, heterogeneous cellular environment. However, such a scenario has not been experimentally observed. Here by developing a new, dual single-molecule gene-expression reporting system, we find that for the two mutually repressing transcription factors CI and Cro in the classic bistable bacteriophage λ switch, there exist two new production states, in which neither CI nor Cro is produced, or both CI and Cro are produced. We construct the corresponding potential landscape and map the transition kinetics among the four production states. These findings uncover cell fate potentials beyond the classical picture of bistable switches, and open a new window to explore the genetic and environmental origins of the cell fate decision-making process in gene regulatory networks.Bistable switches are a common regulatory motif in cell fate decision-making circuits with two mutually exclusive expression states. Here the authors develop a bistable reporter system and report two additional expression states.
Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2013
Zach Hensel; Xiaona Fang; Jie Xiao
We describe a fluorescence microscopy method, Co-Translational Activation by Cleavage (CoTrAC) to image the production of protein molecules in live cells with single-molecule precision without perturbing the proteins functionality. This method makes it possible to count the numbers of protein molecules produced in one cell during sequential, five-minute time windows. It requires a fluorescence microscope with laser excitation power density of ~0.5 to 1 kW/cm(2), which is sufficiently sensitive to detect single fluorescent protein molecules in live cells. The fluorescent reporter used in this method consists of three parts: a membrane targeting sequence, a fast-maturing, yellow fluorescent protein and a protease recognition sequence. The reporter is translationally fused to the N-terminus of a protein of interest. Cells are grown on a temperature-controlled microscope stage. Every five minutes, fluorescent molecules within cells are imaged (and later counted by analyzing fluorescence images) and subsequently photobleached so that only newly translated proteins are counted in the next measurement. Fluorescence images resulting from this method can be analyzed by detecting fluorescent spots in each image, assigning them to individual cells and then assigning cells to cell lineages. The number of proteins produced within a time window in a given cell is calculated by dividing the integrated fluorescence intensity of spots by the average intensity of single fluorescent molecules. We used this method to measure expression levels in the range of 0-45 molecules in single 5 min time windows. This method enabled us to measure noise in the expression of the λ repressor CI, and has many other potential applications in systems biology.
Physical Review E | 2012
Haidong Feng; Zach Hensel; Jie Xiao; Jin Wang
Biophysical Journal | 2012
Jie Xiao; Zach Hensel; Haidong Feng; Bo Han; Jin Wang