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Current research into live-cell dynamics, particularly those relating to chromatin structure and remodeling, are limited. The tools that are used to detect state changes in chromatin, such as Chromatin Immunoprecipitation and qPCR, require that the cell be killed off. This limits the ability of researchers to pinpoint changes in live

Current research into live-cell dynamics, particularly those relating to chromatin structure and remodeling, are limited. The tools that are used to detect state changes in chromatin, such as Chromatin Immunoprecipitation and qPCR, require that the cell be killed off. This limits the ability of researchers to pinpoint changes in live cells over a longer period of time. As such, there is a need for a live-cell sensor that can detect chromatin state changes. The Chromometer is a transgenic chromatin state sensor designed to better understand human cell fate and the chromatin changes that occur. HOXD11.12, a DNA sequence that attracts repressive Polycomb group (PCG) proteins, was placed upstream of a core promoter-driven fluorescent reporter (AmCyan fluorescent protein, CFP) to link chromatin repression to a CFP signal. The transgene was stably inserted at an ectopic site in U2-OS (osteosarcoma) cells. Expression of CFP should reflect the epigenetic state at the HOXD locus, where several genes are regulated by Polycomb to control cell differentiation. U2-OS cells were transfected with the transgene and grown under selective pressure. Twelve colonies were identified as having integrated parts from the transgene into their genomes. PCR testing verified 2 cell lines that contain the complete transgene. Flow cytometry indicated mono-modal and bimodal populations in all transgenic cell colonies. Further research must be done to determine the effectiveness of this device as a sensor for live cell state change detection.
ContributorsBarclay, David (Co-author) / Simper, Jan (Co-author) / Haynes, Karmella (Thesis director) / Brafman, David (Committee member) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor) / Harrington Bioengineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2016-05
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Description
Nucleic acid polymers have numerous applications in both therapeutics and research to control gene expression and bind biologically relevant targets. However, due to poor biological stability their clinical applications are limited. Chemical modifications can improve both intracellular and extracellular stability and enhance resistance to nuclease degradation. To identify a potential

Nucleic acid polymers have numerous applications in both therapeutics and research to control gene expression and bind biologically relevant targets. However, due to poor biological stability their clinical applications are limited. Chemical modifications can improve both intracellular and extracellular stability and enhance resistance to nuclease degradation. To identify a potential candidate for a highly stable synthetic nucleic acid, the biostability of α-L-threofuranosyl nucleic acid (TNA) was evaluated under simulated biological conditions. TNA contains a four-carbon sugar and is linked by 2’, 3’ phosphodiester bonds. We hypothesized that this distinct chemical structure would yield greater nuclease resistance in human serum and human liver microsomes, which were selected as biologically relevant nuclease conditions. We found that TNA oligonucleotides remained undigested for 7 days in these conditions. In addition, TNA/DNA heteropolymers and TNA/RNA oligonucleotide duplexes displayed nuclease resistance, suggesting that TNA has a protective effect over DNA and RNA. In conclusion TNA demonstrates potential as a viable synthetic nucleic acid for use in numerous clinical and therapeutic applications.
ContributorsCulbertson, Michelle Catherine (Author) / Maley, Carlo (Thesis director) / Mangone, Marco (Committee member) / Larsen, Andrew (Committee member) / School of Molecular Sciences (Contributor) / School of International Letters and Cultures (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2016-12
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Description
Disturbances in the protein interactome often play a large role in cancer progression. Investigation of protein-protein interactions (PPI) can increase our understanding of cancer pathways and will disclose unknown targets involved in cancer disease biology. Although numerous methods are available to study protein interactions, most platforms suffer from drawbacks including

Disturbances in the protein interactome often play a large role in cancer progression. Investigation of protein-protein interactions (PPI) can increase our understanding of cancer pathways and will disclose unknown targets involved in cancer disease biology. Although numerous methods are available to study protein interactions, most platforms suffer from drawbacks including high false positive rates, low throughput, and lack of quantification. Moreover, most methods are not compatible for use in a clinical setting. To address these limitations, we have developed a multiplexed, in-solution protein microarray (MISPA) platform with broad applications in proteomics. MISPA can be used to quantitatively profile PPIs and as a robust technology for early detection of cancers. This method utilizes unique DNA barcoding of individual proteins coupled with next generation sequencing to quantitatively assess interactions via barcode enrichment. We have tested the feasibility of this technology in the detection of patient immune responses to oropharyngeal carcinomas and in the discovery of novel PPIs in the B-cell receptor (BCR) pathway. To achieve this goal, 96 human papillomavirus (HPV) antigen genes were cloned into pJFT7-cHalo (99% success) and pJFT7-n3xFlag-Halo (100% success) expression vectors. These libraries were expressed via a cell-free in vitro transcription-translation system with 93% and 96% success, respectively. A small-scale study of patient serum interactions with barcoded HPV16 antigens was performed and a HPV proteome-wide study will follow using additional patient samples. In addition, 15 query proteins were cloned into pJFT7_nGST expression vectors, expressed, and purified with 93% success to probe a library of 100 BCR pathway proteins and detect novel PPIs.
ContributorsRinaldi, Capria Lakshmi (Author) / LaBaer, Joshua (Thesis director) / Mangone, Marco (Committee member) / Borges, Chad (Committee member) / School of Molecular Sciences (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2016-12
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Description
The splicing of precursor messenger RNAs (pre-mRNAs) plays an essential role in dictating the mature mRNA profiles of eukaryotic cells. Mis-regulation of splicing, due to mutations in pre-mRNAs or in components of the splicing machinery, is associated with many diseases. Therefore, knowledge of pre-mRNA splicing mechanisms is required to understand

The splicing of precursor messenger RNAs (pre-mRNAs) plays an essential role in dictating the mature mRNA profiles of eukaryotic cells. Mis-regulation of splicing, due to mutations in pre-mRNAs or in components of the splicing machinery, is associated with many diseases. Therefore, knowledge of pre-mRNA splicing mechanisms is required to understand gene expression regulation during states of homeostasis and disease, and for the development of therapeutic interventions.Splicing is catalyzed by the spliceosome, a dynamic and protein-rich ribozyme composed of five small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) and ~170 auxiliary factors. Early interactions that occur in prespliceosomal complexes formed by the 5′- and 3′-splice-site bound U1 and U2 snRNPs are responsible for committing introns for removal. However, the mechanisms underlying these early interactions remain to be fully characterized for understanding the influence of alternative splicing factors and the impact of recurrent disease-associated mutations in prespliceosomal proteins. The goal of my dissertation research was to delineate the role of the U1 small nuclear RNA (snRNA) during prespliceosome assembly. By applying a cellular minigene reporter assay and a variety of in vitro techniques including cell-free protein expression, UV-crosslinking, electrophoretic mobility shift assays, surface plasmon resonance, and RNA affinity purification, my work establishes critical roles for the U1 snRNA stem-loops 3 (SL3) and 4 (SL4) in formation of intron definition interactions during prespliceosome assembly. Previously, the SL4 of the U1 snRNA was shown to form a molecular bridge across introns by contacting the U2-specific splicing factor 3A1 (SF3A1). I identified the Ubiquitin-like domain of SF3A1 as a non-canonical RNA binding domain responsible for U1-SL4 binding. I also determined a role for the SL3 region of the U1 snRNA in splicing and characterized the spliceosomal RNA helicase UAP56 as an SL3 interacting protein. By knocking-down the SL3- and SL4-interacting proteins, I confirmed that U1 splicing activity in vivo relies on UAP56 and SF3A1 and that their functions are interdependent. These findings, in addition to the observations made using in vitro splicing assays, support a model whereby UAP56, through its interaction with U1-SL3, enhances the cross-intron interaction between U1-SL4 and SF3A1 to promote prespliceosome formation.
ContributorsMartelly, William (Author) / Sharma, Shalini (Thesis advisor) / Mangone, Marco (Thesis advisor) / Gustin, Kurt (Committee member) / Chen, Julian (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Glioblastoma (GBM), the most common and aggressive primary brain tumor affecting adults, is characterized by an aberrant yet druggable epigenetic landscape. The Histone Deacetylases (HDACs), a major family of epigenetic regulators, favor transcriptional repression by mediating chromatin compaction and are frequently overexpressed in human cancers, including GBM. Hence, over the

Glioblastoma (GBM), the most common and aggressive primary brain tumor affecting adults, is characterized by an aberrant yet druggable epigenetic landscape. The Histone Deacetylases (HDACs), a major family of epigenetic regulators, favor transcriptional repression by mediating chromatin compaction and are frequently overexpressed in human cancers, including GBM. Hence, over the last decade there has been considerable interest in using HDAC inhibitors (HDACi) for the treatment of malignant primary brain tumors. However, to date most HDACi tested in clinical trials have failed to provide significant therapeutic benefit to patients with GBM. This is because current HDACi have poor or unknown pharmacokinetic profiles, lack selectivity towards the different HDAC isoforms, and have narrow therapeutic windows. Isoform selectivity for HDACi is important given that broad inhibition of all HDACs results in widespread toxicity across different organs. Moreover, the functional roles of individual HDAC isoforms in GBM are still not well understood. Here, I demonstrate that HDAC1 expression increases with brain tumor grade and is correlated with decreased survival in GBM. I find that HDAC1 is the essential HDAC isoform in glioma stem cells and its loss is not compensated for by its paralogue HDAC2 or other members of the HDAC family. Loss of HDAC1 alone has profound effects on the glioma stem cell phenotype in a p53-dependent manner and leads to significant suppression of tumor growth in vivo. While no HDAC isoform-selective inhibitors are currently available, the second-generation HDACi quisinostat harbors high specificity for HDAC1. I show that quisinostat exhibits potent growth inhibition in multiple patient-derived glioma stem cells. Using a pharmacokinetics- and pharmacodynamics-driven approach, I demonstrate that quisinostat is a brain-penetrant molecule that reduces tumor burden in flank and orthotopic models of GBM and significantly extends survival both alone and in combination with radiotherapy. The work presented in this thesis thereby unveils the non-redundant functions of HDAC1 in therapy- resistant glioma stem cells and identifies a brain-penetrant HDACi with higher selectivity towards HDAC1 as a potent radiosensitizer in preclinical models of GBM. Together, these results provide a rationale for developing quisinostat as a potential adjuvant therapy for the treatment of GBM.
ContributorsLo Cascio, Costanza (Author) / LaBaer, Joshua (Thesis advisor) / Mehta, Shwetal (Committee member) / Mirzadeh, Zaman (Committee member) / Mangone, Marco (Committee member) / Paek, Andrew (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Skin wounds can be caused by traumatic lacerations or incisions which disrupt the structural and functional integrity of the skin. Wound closure and primary intention treatment of the wound as soon as possible is crucial to avoid or minimize the risk of infection that can result in a compromised healing

Skin wounds can be caused by traumatic lacerations or incisions which disrupt the structural and functional integrity of the skin. Wound closure and primary intention treatment of the wound as soon as possible is crucial to avoid or minimize the risk of infection that can result in a compromised healing rate or advanced functional intricacy. The gold standard treatment for skin wound healing is suturing. Light-activated tissue sealing is an appealing alternative to sutures as it seals the wound edges minimizing the risk of infection and scarring, especially when utilized along with biodegradable polymeric biomaterials in the wound bed. Silk fibroins can be used as a biodegradable biomaterial that possesses properties supporting cell migration and proliferation in the tissue it interacts with. In addition, histamine treatment is shown to have extensive effects on cellular functions promoting wound healing. Here, the evaluation of Laser-activated Sealants (LASE) consisting of silk fibroin films induced with Indocyanine Green dye in a wound sealed with laser in the presence of Histamine receptor agonists H1R, H2R and H4R take place. The results were evaluated using Trans-epidermal Water Loss (TEWL), histological and analytical techniques where immune cell biomarkers Arginase-1, Ly6G, iNOS, Alpha-SMA, Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen (PCNA), and E-Cadherin were used to study the activity of specific cells such as macrophages, neutrophils, and myofibroblasts that aid in wound healing. PBS was used as a control for histamine receptor agonists. It was found that TEWL increased when treated with H1 receptor agonists while decreasing significantly in H2R and H4R-treated wounds. Arginase-1 activity improved, while it displayed an inverse relationship compared to iNOS. H4R agonist escalated Alpha-SMA cells, while others did not have any significant difference. Ly6G activity depleted in all histamine agonists significantly, while PCNA and E-Cadherin failed to show a positive or negative effect.
ContributorsPatel, Dirghau Manishbhai (Author) / Rege, Kaushal (Thesis advisor) / Massia, Stephen (Committee member) / Brafman, David (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Advances in sequencing technology have generated an enormous amount of data over the past decade. Equally advanced computational methods are needed to conduct comparative and functional genomic studies on these datasets, in particular tools that appropriately interpret indels within an evolutionary framework. The evolutionary history of indels is complex and

Advances in sequencing technology have generated an enormous amount of data over the past decade. Equally advanced computational methods are needed to conduct comparative and functional genomic studies on these datasets, in particular tools that appropriately interpret indels within an evolutionary framework. The evolutionary history of indels is complex and often involves repetitive genomic regions, which makes identification, alignment, and annotation difficult. While previous studies have found that indel lengths in both deoxyribonucleic acid and proteins obey a power law, probabilistic models for indel evolution have rarely been explored due to their computational complexity. In my research, I first explore an application of an expectation-maximization algorithm for maximum-likelihood training of a codon substitution model. I demonstrate the training accuracy of the expectation-maximization on my substitution model. Then I apply this algorithm on a published 90 pairwise species dataset and find a negative correlation between the branch length and non-synonymous selection coefficient. Second, I develop a post-alignment fixation method to profile each indel event into three different phases according to its codon position. Because current codon-aware models can only identify the indels by placing the gaps between codons and lead to the misalignment of the sequences. I find that the mouse-rat species pair is under purifying selection by looking at the proportion difference of the indel phases. I also demonstrate the power of my sliding-window method by comparing the post-aligned and original gap positions. Third, I create an indel-phase moore machine including the indel rates of three phases, length distributions, and codon substitution models. Then I design a gillespie simulation that is capable of generating true sequence alignments. Next I develop an importance sampling method within the expectation-maximization algorithm that can successfully train the indel-phase model and infer accurate parameter estimates from alignments. Finally, I extend the indel phase analysis to the 90 pairwise species dataset across three alignment methods, including Mafft+sw method developed in chapter 3, coati-sampling methods applied in chapter 4, and coati-max method. Also I explore a non-linear relationship between the dN/dS and Zn/(Zn+Zs) ratio across 90 species pairs.
ContributorsZhu, Ziqi (Author) / Cartwright, Reed A (Thesis advisor) / Taylor, Jay (Committee member) / Wideman, Jeremy (Committee member) / Mangone, Marco (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Protein-nucleic acid interactions are ubiquitous in biological systems playing a pivotal role in fundamental processes such as replication, transcription and translation. These interactions have been extensively used to develop biosensors, imaging techniques and diagnostic tools.This dissertation focuses on design of a small molecule responsive biosensor that employs transcription factor/deoxyribonucleic acid

Protein-nucleic acid interactions are ubiquitous in biological systems playing a pivotal role in fundamental processes such as replication, transcription and translation. These interactions have been extensively used to develop biosensors, imaging techniques and diagnostic tools.This dissertation focuses on design of a small molecule responsive biosensor that employs transcription factor/deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) interactions to detect 10 different analytes including antibiotics such as tetracyclines and erythromycin. The biosensor harnesses the multi-turnover collateral cleavage activity of Cas12a to provide signal amplification in less than an hour that can be monitored using fluorescence as well as on paper based diagnostic devices. In addition, the functionality of this assay was preserved when testing tap water and wastewater spiked with doxycycline. Overall, this biosensor has potential to expand the range of small molecule detection and can be used to identify environmental contaminants. In second part of the dissertation, interactions between nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPS) and ribonucleic acid (RNA) were utilized for programming the synthesis of nonribosomal peptides. RNA scaffolds harboring peptide binding aptamers and interconnected using kissing loops to guide the assembly of NRPS modules modified with corresponding aptamer-binding peptides were built. A successful chimeric assembly of Ent synthetase modules was shown that was characterized by the production of Enterobactin siderophore. It was found that the programmed RNA/NRPS assembly could achieve up to 60% of the yield of wild-type biosynthetic pathway of the iron-chelator enterobactin. Finally, a cas12a-based detection method for discriminating short tandem repeats where a toehold exchange mechanism was designed to distinguish different numbers of repeats found in Huntington’s disease, Spinocerebellar ataxia type 10 and type 36. It was observed that the system discriminates well when lesser number of repeats are present and provides weaker resolution as the size of DNA strands increases. Additionally, the system can identify Kelch13 mutations such as P553L, N458Y and F446I from the wildtype sequence for Artemisinin resistance detection. This dissertation demonstrates the great utility of harnessing protein-nucleic acid interactions to construct biomolecular devices for detecting clinically relevant nucleic acid mutations, a variety of small molecule analyte and programming the production of useful molecules.
ContributorsChaudhary, Soma (Author) / Green, Alexander (Thesis advisor) / Stephanopoulos, Nicholas (Committee member) / Mangone, Marco (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
The advent of CRISPR/Cas9 revolutionized the field of genetic engineering and gave rise to the development of new gene editing tools including prime editing. Prime editing is a versatile gene editing method that mediates precise insertions and deletions and can perform all 12 types of point mutations. In turn, prime

The advent of CRISPR/Cas9 revolutionized the field of genetic engineering and gave rise to the development of new gene editing tools including prime editing. Prime editing is a versatile gene editing method that mediates precise insertions and deletions and can perform all 12 types of point mutations. In turn, prime editing represents great promise in the design of new gene therapies and disease models where editing was previously not possible using current gene editing techniques. Despite advancements in genome modification technologies, parallel enrichment strategies of edited cells remain lagging behind in development. To this end, this project aimed to enhance prime editing using transient reporter for editing enrichment (TREE) technology to develop a method for the rapid generation of clonal isogenic cell lines for disease modeling. TREE uses an engineered BFP variant that upon a C-to-T conversion will convert to GFP after target modification. Using flow cytometry, this BFP-to-GFP conversion assay enables the isolation of edited cell populations via a fluorescent reporter of editing. Prime induced nucleotide engineering using a transient reporter for editing enrichment (PINE-TREE), pairs prime editing with TREE technology to efficiently enrich for prime edited cells. This investigation revealed PINE-TREE as an efficient editing and enrichment method compared to a conventional reporter of transfection (RoT) enrichment strategy. Here, PINE-TREE exhibited a significant increase in editing efficiencies of single nucleotide conversions, small insertions, and small deletions in multiple human cell types. Additionally, PINE-TREE demonstrated improved clonal cell editing efficiency in human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs). Most notably, PINE-TREE efficiently generated clonal isogenic hiPSCs harboring a mutation in the APOE gene for in vitro modeling of Alzheimer’s Disease. Collectively, results gathered from this study exhibited PINE-TREE as a valuable new tool in genetic engineering to accelerate the generation of clonal isogenic cell lines for applications in developmental biology, disease modeling, and drug screening.
ContributorsKostes, William Warner (Author) / Brafman, David (Thesis advisor) / Jacobs, Bertram (Committee member) / Lapinaite, Audrone (Committee member) / Tian, Xiaojun (Committee member) / Wang, Xiao (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
The Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) pandemic, declared in March 2020 resulted in an unprecedented scientific effort that led to the deployment in less than a year of several vaccines to prevent severe disease, hospitalizations, and death from coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Most vaccine models focus on the

The Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) pandemic, declared in March 2020 resulted in an unprecedented scientific effort that led to the deployment in less than a year of several vaccines to prevent severe disease, hospitalizations, and death from coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Most vaccine models focus on the production of neutralizing antibodies against the spike (S) to prevent infection. As the virus evolves, new variants emerge that evade neutralizing antibodies produced by natural infection and vaccination, while memory T cell responses are long-lasting and resilient to most of the changes found in variants of concern (VOC). Several lines of evidence support the study of T cell-mediated immunity in SARS-CoV-2 infections. First, T cell reactivity against SARS-CoV-2 is found in both (cluster of differentiation) CD4+ and CD8+ T cell compartments in asymptomatic, mild, and severe recovered COVID-19 patients. Second, an early and stronger CD8+ T cell response correlates with less severe COVID-19 disease [1-4]. Third, both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells that are reactive to SARS-CoV-2 viral antigens are found in healthy unexposed individuals suggesting that cross-reactive and conserved epitopes may be protective against infection. The current study is focused on the T cell-mediated response, with special attention to conserved, non-spike-cross-reactive epitopes that may be protective against SARS-CoV-2. The first chapter reviews the importance of epitope prediction in understanding the T cell-mediated responses to a pathogen. The second chapter centers on the validation of SARS-CoV-2 CD8+ T cell predicted peptides to find conserved, immunodominant, and immunoprevalent epitopes that can be incorporated into the next generation of vaccines against severe COVID-19 disease. The third chapter explores pre-existing immunity to SARS-CoV-2 in a pre-pandemic cohort and finds two highly immunogenic epitopes that are conserved among human common cold coronaviruses (HCoVs). To end, the fourth chapter explores the concept of T cell receptor (TCR) cross-reactivity by isolating SARS-CoV-2-reactive TCRs to elucidate the mechanisms of cross-reactivity to SARS-CoV-2 and other human coronaviruses (HCoVs).
ContributorsCarmona, Jacqueline (Author) / Anderson, Karen S (Thesis advisor) / Lake, Douglas (Thesis advisor) / Maley, Carlo (Committee member) / Mangone, Marco (Committee member) / LaBaer, Joshua (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023