Matching Items (7)
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Description
Increasing energy and environmental problems describe the need to develop renewable chemicals and fuels. Global research has been targeting using microbial systems on a commercial scale for synthesis of valuable compounds. The goal of this project was to refactor and overexpress b6-f complex proteins in cyanobacteria to improve photosynthesis under

Increasing energy and environmental problems describe the need to develop renewable chemicals and fuels. Global research has been targeting using microbial systems on a commercial scale for synthesis of valuable compounds. The goal of this project was to refactor and overexpress b6-f complex proteins in cyanobacteria to improve photosynthesis under dynamic light conditions. Improvement in the photosynthetic system can directly relate to higher yields of valuable compounds such as carotenoids and higher yields of biomass which can be used as energy molecules. Four engineered strains of cyanobacteria were successfully constructed and overexpressed the corresponding four large subunits in the cytochrome b6-f complex. No significant changes were found in cell growth or pigment titer in the modified strains compared to the wild type. The growth assay will be performed at higher and/or dynamic light intensities including natural light conditions for further analysis.
ContributorsNauroth, Benjamin (Author) / Varman, Arul (Thesis director) / Singharoy, Abhishek (Committee member) / Li, Han (Committee member) / Chemical Engineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2020-05
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Description
High-pressure science has been advancing rapidly in the past several decades due to its potential to access bond engineering and lattice reconstruction. Thanks to the development of pressure devices and advanced in-situ probing technics, it is possible to probe structural phase transitions as well as materials’ optical, electrical, and magnetic

High-pressure science has been advancing rapidly in the past several decades due to its potential to access bond engineering and lattice reconstruction. Thanks to the development of pressure devices and advanced in-situ probing technics, it is possible to probe structural phase transitions as well as materials’ optical, electrical, and magnetic properties under extreme pressure, which will in turn help explain new emerging materials’ phases and phenomena. As one of the most popular high-pressure devices, the diamond anvil cell has been used to control the crystal structure and interatomic spacing of materials by applying high pressure while accessing their material properties in-situ. In this dissertation, advanced spectroscopy techniques combined with diamond anvil cells are used to help determine how emergent quantum materials behave under high pressure. A comprehensive summary is offered on the synthesis, characterization, and high-pressure studies of various low-dimensional material systems, such as 2D Ruddlesden-Popper hybrid lead bromide perovskites (CH3(CH2)3NH3)2(CH3NH3)nPbnBr3n+1, (n = 1 and n = 2); guanidinium based lead iodides (2D Gua2PbI4 and 1D GuaPbI3), in which researchers discovered extraordinary luminescent properties and extremely high quantum conversion efficiency; 2D Janus MoSSe and WSSe monolayers, in which the mirror symmetry is broken and an electrical field is built in due to different electronegativity of the top and bottom atom layers; and 2D tellurene, which possess a large potential application in optoelectronic devices and sensors. In combination with the density function theory simulations of such collaborators as Dr. Can Ataca (organic–inorganic halide perovskite), Dr. Arunima K. Singh (tellurene), and Dr. Houlong Zhuang (Janus), this study offers comprehensive and detailed insights into the fundamental physics and mechanics of how crystal structure and band structure evolve at high pressure, discovering new phases, understanding the phase transition mechanism, and determining optoelectronic device applications.
ContributorsLi, Han (Author) / Tongay, Sefaattin ST (Thesis advisor) / Botana, Antia Sanchez (Committee member) / Singh, Arunima K. (Committee member) / Ponce, Fernando (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Currently in the US, many patients with cancer do not benefit from the population-based screening, due to challenges associated with the existing cancer screening scheme. Blood-based diagnostic assays have the potential to detect diseases in a non-invasive way. Proteins released from small early tumors may only be present intermittently and

Currently in the US, many patients with cancer do not benefit from the population-based screening, due to challenges associated with the existing cancer screening scheme. Blood-based diagnostic assays have the potential to detect diseases in a non-invasive way. Proteins released from small early tumors may only be present intermittently and get diluted to tiny concentrations in the blood, making them difficult to use as biomarkers. However, they can induce autoantibody (AAb) responses, which can amplify the signal and persist in the blood even if the antigen is gone. Circulating autoantibodies is a promising class of molecules that have potential to serve as early detection biomarkers for cancers. This Ph.D thesis aims to screen for autoantibody biomarkers for the early detection of two deadly cancer, basal-like breast cancer and lung adenocarcinoma. First, a method was developed to display proteins in both native and denatured conformation on protein array. This method adopted a novel protein tag technology, called HaloTag, to covalently immobilize proteins on glass slide surface. The covalent attachment allowed these proteins to endure harsh treatment without getting dissociated from slide surface, which enabled the profiling of antibody responses against both conformational and linear epitopes. Next, a plasma screening protocol was optimized to significantly increase signal to noise ratio of protein array based AAb detection. Following this, the AAb responses in basal-like breast cancer were explored using nucleic acid programmable protein arrays (NAPPA) containing 10,000 full-length human proteins in 45 cases and 45 controls. After verification in a large sample set (145 basal-like breast cancer cases / 145 controls / 70 non-basal breast cancer) by ELISA, a 13-AAb classifier was developed to differentiate patients from controls with a sensitivity of 33% at 98% specificity. Similar approach was also applied to the lung cancer study to identify AAbs that distinguished lung cancer patients from computed-tomography positive benign pulmonary nodules (137 lung cancer cases, 127 smoker controls, 170 benign controls). In this study, two panels of AAbs were discovered that showed promising sensitivity and specificity. Six out of eight AAb targets were also found to have elevated mRNA level in lung adenocarcinoma patients using TCGA data. These projects as a whole provide novel insights on the association between AAbs and cancer, as well as general B cell antigenicity against self-proteins.
ContributorsWang, Jie (Author) / LaBaer, Joshua (Thesis advisor) / Anderson, Karen S (Committee member) / Lake, Douglas F (Committee member) / Chang, Yung (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
Description

We present a microarray nonlinear calibration (MiNC) method for quantifying antibody binding to the surface of protein microarrays that significantly increases the linear dynamic range and reduces assay variation compared with traditional approaches. A serological analysis of guinea pig Mycobacterium tuberculosis models showed that a larger number of putative antigen

We present a microarray nonlinear calibration (MiNC) method for quantifying antibody binding to the surface of protein microarrays that significantly increases the linear dynamic range and reduces assay variation compared with traditional approaches. A serological analysis of guinea pig Mycobacterium tuberculosis models showed that a larger number of putative antigen targets were identified with MiNC, which is consistent with the improved assay performance of protein microarrays. MiNC has the potential to be employed in biomedical research using multiplex antibody assays that need quantitation, including the discovery of antibody biomarkers, clinical diagnostics with multi-antibody signatures, and construction of immune mathematical models.

ContributorsYu, Xiaobo (Author) / Wallstrom, Garrick (Author) / Magee, Mitch (Author) / Qiu, Ji (Author) / Mendoza, D. Eliseo A. (Author) / Wang, Jie (Author) / Bian, Xiaofang (Author) / Graves, Morgan (Author) / LaBaer, Joshua (Author) / Biodesign Institute (Contributor)
Created2013-08-12
Description

Throughout the long history of virus-host co-evolution, viruses have developed delicate strategies to facilitate their invasion and replication of their genome, while silencing the host immune responses through various mechanisms. The systematic characterization of viral protein-host interactions would yield invaluable information in the understanding of viral invasion/evasion, diagnosis and therapeutic

Throughout the long history of virus-host co-evolution, viruses have developed delicate strategies to facilitate their invasion and replication of their genome, while silencing the host immune responses through various mechanisms. The systematic characterization of viral protein-host interactions would yield invaluable information in the understanding of viral invasion/evasion, diagnosis and therapeutic treatment of a viral infection, and mechanisms of host biology. With more than 2,000 viral genomes sequenced, only a small percent of them are well investigated. The access of these viral open reading frames (ORFs) in a flexible cloning format would greatly facilitate both in vitro and in vivo virus-host interaction studies. However, the overall progress of viral ORF cloning has been slow. To facilitate viral studies, we are releasing the initiation of our panviral proteome collection of 2,035 ORF clones from 830 viral genes in the Gateway® recombinational cloning system. Here, we demonstrate several uses of our viral collection including highly efficient production of viral proteins using human cell-free expression system in vitro, global identification of host targets for rubella virus using Nucleic Acid Programmable Protein Arrays (NAPPA) containing 10,000 unique human proteins, and detection of host serological responses using micro-fluidic multiplexed immunoassays. The studies presented here begin to elucidate host-viral protein interactions with our systemic utilization of viral ORFs, high-throughput cloning, and proteomic technologies. These valuable plasmid resources will be available to the research community to enable continued viral functional studies.

ContributorsYu, Xiaobo (Author) / Bian, Xiaofang (Author) / Throop, Andrea (Author) / Song, Lusheng (Author) / del Moral, Lerys (Author) / Park, Jin (Author) / Seiler, Catherine (Author) / Fiacco, Michael (Author) / Steel, Jason (Author) / Hunter, Preston (Author) / Saul, Justin (Author) / Wang, Jie (Author) / Qiu, Ji (Author) / Pipas, James M. (Author) / LaBaer, Joshua (Author) / Biodesign Institute (Contributor)
Created2013-11-30
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Description
Technologies capable of characterizing the full breadth of cellular systems need to be able to measure millions of proteins, isoforms, and complexes simultaneously. We describe an approach that fulfils this criterion: Adaptive Dynamic Artificial Poly-ligand Targeting (ADAPT). ADAPT employs an enriched library of single-stranded oligodeoxynucleotides (ssODNs) to profile complex biological

Technologies capable of characterizing the full breadth of cellular systems need to be able to measure millions of proteins, isoforms, and complexes simultaneously. We describe an approach that fulfils this criterion: Adaptive Dynamic Artificial Poly-ligand Targeting (ADAPT). ADAPT employs an enriched library of single-stranded oligodeoxynucleotides (ssODNs) to profile complex biological samples, thus achieving an unprecedented coverage of system-wide, native biomolecules. We used ADAPT as a highly specific profiling tool that distinguishes women with or without breast cancer based on circulating exosomes in their blood. To develop ADAPT, we enriched a library of ~10[superscript 11] ssODNs for those associating with exosomes from breast cancer patients or controls. The resulting 10[superscript 6] enriched ssODNs were then profiled against plasma from independent groups of healthy and breast cancer-positive women. ssODN-mediated affinity purification and mass spectrometry identified low-abundance exosome-associated proteins and protein complexes, some with known significance in both normal homeostasis and disease. Sequencing of the recovered ssODNs provided quantitative measures that were used to build highly accurate multi-analyte signatures for patient classification. Probing plasma from 500 subjects with a smaller subset of 2000 resynthesized ssODNs stratified healthy, breast biopsy-negative, and -positive women. An AUC of 0.73 was obtained when comparing healthy donors with biopsy-positive patients.
ContributorsDomenyuk, Valeriy (Author) / Zhong, Zhenyu (Author) / Stark, Adam (Author) / Xiao, Nianqing (Author) / O'Neill, Heather A. (Author) / Wei, Xixi (Author) / Wang, Jie (Author) / Tinder, Teresa T. (Author) / Tonapi, Sonal (Author) / Duncan, Janet (Author) / Hornung, Tassilo (Author) / Hunter, Andrew (Author) / Miglarese, Mark R. (Author) / Schorr, Joachim (Author) / Halbert, David D. (Author) / Quackenbush, John (Author) / Poste, George (Author) / Berry, Donald A. (Author) / Mayer, Gunter (Author) / Famulok, Michael (Author) / Spetzler, David (Author) / Consortium for Biosocial Complex Systems (Contributor) / Complex Adaptive Systems Initiative (Contributor)
Created2017-02-20
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Description

Rationale: Cell-free protein microarrays display naturally-folded proteins based on just-in-time in situ synthesis, and have made important contributions to basic and translational research. However, the risk of spot-to-spot cross-talk from protein diffusion during expression has limited the feature density of these arrays.

Methods: In this work, we developed the Multiplexed Nucleic

Rationale: Cell-free protein microarrays display naturally-folded proteins based on just-in-time in situ synthesis, and have made important contributions to basic and translational research. However, the risk of spot-to-spot cross-talk from protein diffusion during expression has limited the feature density of these arrays.

Methods: In this work, we developed the Multiplexed Nucleic Acid Programmable Protein Array (M-NAPPA), which significantly increases the number of displayed proteins by multiplexing as many as five different gene plasmids within a printed spot.

Results: Even when proteins of different sizes were displayed within the same feature, they were readily detected using protein-specific antibodies. Protein-protein interactions and serological antibody assays using human viral proteome microarrays demonstrated that comparable hits were detected by M-NAPPA and non-multiplexed NAPPA arrays. An ultra-high density proteome microarray displaying > 16k proteins on a single microscope slide was produced by combining M-NAPPA with a photolithography-based silicon nano-well platform. Finally, four new tuberculosis-related antigens in guinea pigs vaccinated with Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) were identified with M-NAPPA and validated with ELISA.

Conclusion: All data demonstrate that multiplexing features on a protein microarray offer a cost-effective fabrication approach and have the potential to facilitate high throughput translational research.

ContributorsYu, Xiaobo (Author) / Song, Lusheng (Author) / Petritis, Brianne (Author) / Bian, Xiaofang (Author) / Wang, Haoyu (Author) / Viloria, Jennifer (Author) / Park, Jin (Author) / Bui, Hoang (Author) / Li, Han (Author) / Wang, Jie (Author) / Liu, Lei (Author) / Yang, Liuhui (Author) / Duan, Hu (Author) / McMurray, David N. (Author) / Achkar, Jacqueline M. (Author) / Magee, Mitch (Author) / Qiu, Ji (Author) / LaBaer, Joshua (Author) / Biodesign Institute (Contributor)
Created2017-09-20