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The goal of this theoretical study of infrared spectra was to ascertain to what degree molecules may be identified from their IR spectra and which spectral regions are best suited for this purpose. The frequencies considered range from the lowest frequency molecular vibrations in the far-IR, terahertz region (below ~3

The goal of this theoretical study of infrared spectra was to ascertain to what degree molecules may be identified from their IR spectra and which spectral regions are best suited for this purpose. The frequencies considered range from the lowest frequency molecular vibrations in the far-IR, terahertz region (below ~3 THz or 100 cm-1) up to the highest frequency vibrations (~120 THz or 4000 cm-1). An emphasis was placed on the IR spectra of chemical and biological threat molecules in the interest of detection and prevention. To calculate IR spectra, the technique of normal mode analysis was applied to organic molecules ranging in size from 8 to 11,352 atoms. The IR intensities of the vibrational modes were calculated in terms of the derivative of the molecular dipole moment with respect to each normal coordinate. Three sets of molecules were studied: the organophosphorus G- and V-type nerve agents and chemically related simulants (15 molecules ranging in size from 11 to 40 atoms); 21 other small molecules ranging in size from 8 to 24 atoms; and 13 proteins ranging in size from 304 to 11,352 atoms. Spectra for the first two sets of molecules were calculated using quantum chemistry software, the last two sets using force fields. The "middle" set used both methods, allowing for comparison between them and with experimental spectra from the NIST/EPA Gas-Phase Infrared Library. The calculated spectra of proteins, for which only force field calculations are practical, reproduced the experimentally observed amide I and II bands, but they were shifted by approximately +40 cm-1 relative to experiment. Considering the entire spectrum of protein vibrations, the most promising frequency range for differentiating between proteins was approximately 600-1300 cm-1 where water has low absorption and the proteins show some differences.
ContributorsMott, Adam J (Author) / Rez, Peter (Thesis advisor) / Ozkan, Banu (Committee member) / Shumway, John (Committee member) / Thorpe, Michael (Committee member) / Vaiana, Sara (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2012
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Description
Transition metal ions such as Zn2+, Mn2+, Co2+, and Fe2+ play crucial roles in organisms from all kingdoms of life. The homeostasis of these ions is mainly regulated by a group of secondary transporters from the cation diffusion facilitator (CDF) family. The mammalian zinc transporters (ZnTs), a subfamily of CDF,

Transition metal ions such as Zn2+, Mn2+, Co2+, and Fe2+ play crucial roles in organisms from all kingdoms of life. The homeostasis of these ions is mainly regulated by a group of secondary transporters from the cation diffusion facilitator (CDF) family. The mammalian zinc transporters (ZnTs), a subfamily of CDF, have been an important target for study as they are associated with several diseases, such as diabetes, delayed growth and osteopenia, Alzheimer’s disease, and Parkinsonism. The bacterial homolog of ZnTs, YiiP, is the first CDF transporter with a determined structure and is used as a model for studying the structural and mechanistic properties of CDF transporters. On the other hand, Molecular dynamics simulation has emerged as a valuable computational tool for exploring the physical basis of biological macromolecules' structure and function with atomic precision at femtosecond resolution. This work aims to elucidate the roles of the three Zn$2+ binding sites found on each YiiP protomer and the role of protons in the transport process of CDFs, which remain under debate despite previous thermodynamic and structural studies on YiiP. Cryo-EM, microscale thermophoresis (MST) and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations were used to address these questions. With a Zn2+ model that accurately reproduces experimental structures of the binding clusters, the dynamical influence of zinc binding on the transporter was accessed through MD simulations, which was consistent with the new cryo-EM structures. Zinc binding affinities obtained through MST were used to infer the stoichiometry of Zn2+/H+ antiport in combination with a microscopic thermodynamic model and constant pH simulations. The most likely microstates of H$^+$ and Zn2+ binding indicated a transport stoichiometry of 1 Zn2+ to 2-3 H+ depending on the external pH. A model describing the entire transport cycle of YiiP was finally built on these findings, providing insight into the structural and mechanistic properties of CDF transporters.
ContributorsFan, Shujie (Author) / Beckstein, Oliver (Thesis advisor) / Ozkan, Banu (Committee member) / Heyden, Matthias (Committee member) / Van Horn, Wade (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
The Bayesian paradigm provides a flexible and versatile framework for modeling complex biological systems without assuming a fixed functional form or other constraints on the underlying data. This dissertation explores the use of Bayesian nonparametric methods for analyzing fluorescence microscopy data in biophysics, with a focus on enumerating diffraction-limited particles,

The Bayesian paradigm provides a flexible and versatile framework for modeling complex biological systems without assuming a fixed functional form or other constraints on the underlying data. This dissertation explores the use of Bayesian nonparametric methods for analyzing fluorescence microscopy data in biophysics, with a focus on enumerating diffraction-limited particles, reconstructing potentials from trajectories corrupted by measurement noise, and inferring potential energy landscapes from fluorescence intensity experiments. This research demonstrates the power and potential of Bayesian methods for solving a variety of problems in fluorescence microscopy and biophysics more broadly.
ContributorsBryan IV, J Shepard (Author) / Presse, Steve (Thesis advisor) / Ozkan, Banu (Committee member) / Wadhwa, Navish (Committee member) / Shepherd, Doug (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Secondary active transporters play significant roles in maintaining living cells' homeostasis by utilizing the electrochemical gradient in driving ions or protons as the source of free energy to transport substrate through biological membranes.A broadly recognized molecular framework, the alternating access model, describes the transport mechanism as the transporter undergoes conformational

Secondary active transporters play significant roles in maintaining living cells' homeostasis by utilizing the electrochemical gradient in driving ions or protons as the source of free energy to transport substrate through biological membranes.A broadly recognized molecular framework, the alternating access model, describes the transport mechanism as the transporter undergoes conformational changes between different conformations and alternatingly exposes its binding site to intracellular and extracellular sides and, thus, exchanges ion and substrate in a cyclical manner. Recent progress in structural biology brought the first-ever structural insights into the mammalian Cation-Proton Antiporters (CPA) family of proteins. However, the dynamic atomic-level information about the interactions between the newly discovered structures and the bound ion or the corresponding substrate remains unknown. With Molecular Dynamics (MD), multiple spontaneous ion binding events were observed in the equilibrium simulations, revealing the binding site topology of Horse Sodium-Proton Exchanger 9 (NHE9) and Bison Sodium-Proton Antiporter 2 (NHA2) in their preferred protonation state. Further investigation into more CPA homologs compared various aspects, including sequence identity, binding site topology, and energetic properties, and obtained general insights into the similarities shared by the binding process of CPA members. The putative binding site and other conserved residues in their actively ion-bound poses were identified for each model, and their similarities were compared. The energetic properties accessed by the three-dimensional free energy profile, initially found to be binding unfavorable for the experimental structures, were recalculated based on the simulation data. The updated results show consistency with the correct binding affinity as indicated by the experimental methods. This work provided a general picture of the structures and the ion-protein interaction of CPA proteins and serves as comprehensive guidance for any related future structural and computational work.
ContributorsZhang, Chenou (Author) / Beckstein, Oliver (Thesis advisor) / Ozkan, Banu (Committee member) / Ros, Robert (Committee member) / Singharoy, Abhishek (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Scientists have used X-rays to study biological molecules for nearly a century. Now with the X-ray free electron laser (XFEL), new methods have been developed to advance structural biology. These new methods include serial femtosecond crystallography, single particle imaging, solution scattering, and time resolved techniques.

The XFEL is characterized by high

Scientists have used X-rays to study biological molecules for nearly a century. Now with the X-ray free electron laser (XFEL), new methods have been developed to advance structural biology. These new methods include serial femtosecond crystallography, single particle imaging, solution scattering, and time resolved techniques.

The XFEL is characterized by high intensity pulses, which are only about 50 femtoseconds in duration. The intensity allows for scattering from microscopic particles, while the short pulses offer a way to outrun radiation damage. XFELs are powerful enough to obliterate most samples in a single pulse. While this allows for a “diffract and destroy” methodology, it also requires instrumentation that can position microscopic particles into the X-ray beam (which may also be microscopic), continuously renew the sample after each pulse, and maintain sample viability during data collection.

Typically these experiments have used liquid microjets to continuously renew sample. The high flow rate associated with liquid microjets requires large amounts of sample, most of which runs to waste between pulses. An injector designed to stream a viscous gel-like material called lipidic cubic phase (LCP) was developed to address this problem. LCP, commonly used as a growth medium for membrane protein crystals, lends itself to low flow rate jetting and so reduces the amount of sample wasted significantly.

This work discusses sample delivery and injection for XFEL experiments. It reviews the liquid microjet method extensively, and presents the LCP injector as a novel device for serial crystallography, including detailed protocols for the LCP injector and anti-settler operation.
ContributorsJames, Daniel (Author) / Spence, John (Thesis advisor) / Weierstall, Uwe (Committee member) / Kirian, Richard (Committee member) / Schmidt, Kevin (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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Description
ABSTRACT

X-Ray crystallography and NMR are two major ways of achieving atomic

resolution of structure determination for macro biomolecules such as proteins. Recently, new developments of hard X-ray pulsed free electron laser XFEL opened up new possibilities to break the dilemma of radiation dose and spatial resolution in diffraction imaging by outrunning

ABSTRACT

X-Ray crystallography and NMR are two major ways of achieving atomic

resolution of structure determination for macro biomolecules such as proteins. Recently, new developments of hard X-ray pulsed free electron laser XFEL opened up new possibilities to break the dilemma of radiation dose and spatial resolution in diffraction imaging by outrunning radiation damage with ultra high brightness femtosecond X-ray pulses, which is so short in time that the pulse terminates before atomic motion starts. A variety of experimental techniques for structure determination of macro biomolecules is now available including imaging of protein nanocrystals, single particles such as viruses, pump-probe experiments for time-resolved nanocrystallography, and snapshot wide- angle x-ray scattering (WAXS) from molecules in solution. However, due to the nature of the "diffract-then-destroy" process, each protein crystal would be destroyed once

probed. Hence a new sample delivery system is required to replenish the target crystal at a high rate. In this dissertation, the sample delivery systems for the application of XFELs to biomolecular imaging will be discussed and the severe challenges related to the delivering of macroscopic protein crystal in a stable controllable way with minimum waste of sample and maximum hit rate will be tackled with several different development of injector designs and approaches. New developments of the sample delivery system such as liquid mixing jet also opens up new experimental methods which gives opportunities to study of the chemical dynamics in biomolecules in a molecular structural level. The design and characterization of the system will be discussed along with future possible developments and applications. Finally, LCP injector will be discussed which is critical for the success in various applications.
ContributorsWang, Dingjie (Author) / Spence, John CH (Thesis advisor) / Weierstall, Uwe (Committee member) / Schmidt, Kevin (Committee member) / Fromme, Petra (Committee member) / Ozkan, Banu (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2014
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Description
The superior brightness and ultra short pulse duration of X-ray free electron laser

(XFEL) allows it to outrun radiation damage in coherent diffractive imaging since elastic scattering terminates before photoelectron cascades commences. This “diffract-before-destroy” feature of XFEL opened up new opportunities for biological macromolecule imaging and structure studies by breaking the

The superior brightness and ultra short pulse duration of X-ray free electron laser

(XFEL) allows it to outrun radiation damage in coherent diffractive imaging since elastic scattering terminates before photoelectron cascades commences. This “diffract-before-destroy” feature of XFEL opened up new opportunities for biological macromolecule imaging and structure studies by breaking the limit to spatial resolution imposed by the maximum dose that is allowed before radiation damage. However, data collection in serial femto-second crystallography (SFX) using XFEL is affected by a bunch of stochastic factors, which pose great challenges to the data analysis in SFX. These stochastic factors include crystal size, shape, random orientation, X-ray photon flux, position and energy spectrum. Monte-Carlo integration proves effective and successful in extracting the structure factors by merging all diffraction patterns given that the data set is sufficiently large to average out all stochastic factors. However, this approach typically requires hundreds of thousands of patterns collected from experiments. This dissertation explores both experimental and algorithmic methods to eliminate or reduce the effect of stochastic factors in data acquisition and analysis. Coherent convergent X-ray beam diffraction (CCB) is discussed for possibilities of obtaining single-shot angular-integrated rocking curves. It is also shown the interference between Bragg disks helps ab-initio phasing. Two-color diffraction scheme is proposed for time-resolved studies and general data collection strategies are discussed based on error metrics. A new auto-indexing algorithm for sparse patterns is developed and demonstrated for both simulated and experimental data. Statistics show that indexing rate is increased by 3 times for I3C data set collected from beam time LJ69 at Linac coherent light source (LCLS). Finally, dynamical inversion from electron diffraction is explored as an alternative approach for structure determination.
ContributorsLi, Chufeng (Author) / Spence, John CH (Thesis advisor) / Spence, John (Committee member) / Kirian, Richard (Committee member) / Weierstall, Uwe (Committee member) / Schmidt, Kevin (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
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Description
Phase problem has been long-standing in x-ray diffractive imaging. It is originated from the fact that only the amplitude of the scattered wave can be recorded by the detector, losing the phase information. The measurement of amplitude alone is insufficient to solve the structure. Therefore, phase retrieval is essential to

Phase problem has been long-standing in x-ray diffractive imaging. It is originated from the fact that only the amplitude of the scattered wave can be recorded by the detector, losing the phase information. The measurement of amplitude alone is insufficient to solve the structure. Therefore, phase retrieval is essential to structure determination with X-ray diffractive imaging. So far, many experimental as well as algorithmic approaches have been developed to address the phase problem. The experimental phasing methods, such as MAD, SAD etc, exploit the phase relation in vector space. They usually demand a lot of efforts to prepare the samples and require much more data. On the other hand, iterative phasing algorithms make use of the prior knowledge and various constraints in real and reciprocal space. In this thesis, new approaches to the problem of direct digital phasing of X-ray diffraction patterns from two-dimensional organic crystals were presented. The phase problem for Bragg diffraction from two-dimensional (2D) crystalline monolayer in transmission may be solved by imposing a compact support that sets the density to zero outside the monolayer. By iterating between the measured stucture factor magnitudes along reciprocal space rods (starting with random phases) and a density of the correct sign, the complex scattered amplitudes may be found (J. Struct Biol 144, 209 (2003)). However this one-dimensional support function fails to link the rod phases correctly unless a low-resolution real-space map is also available. Minimum prior information required for successful three-dimensional (3D) structure retrieval from a 2D crystal XFEL diffraction dataset were investigated, when using the HIO algorithm. This method provides an alternative way to phase 2D crystal dataset, with less dependence on the high quality model used in the molecular replacement method.
ContributorsZhao, Yun (Author) / Spence, John C.H. (Thesis advisor) / Schmidt, Kevin (Committee member) / Weierstall, Uwe (Committee member) / Kirian, Richard (Committee member) / Zatsepin, Nadia (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
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Description
Proteins are the machines of living systems that carry out a diverse set of essential biochemical functions. Furthermore, the diversity of their functions has grown overtime via molecular evolution. This thesis aims to explore fundamental questions in protein science regarding the mechanisms of protein evolution particularly addressing how substitutions in

Proteins are the machines of living systems that carry out a diverse set of essential biochemical functions. Furthermore, the diversity of their functions has grown overtime via molecular evolution. This thesis aims to explore fundamental questions in protein science regarding the mechanisms of protein evolution particularly addressing how substitutions in sequence modulate function through structure and structural dynamics. In the work presented here, the first goal is to develop a set of tools which connect the sequence-structure relationship which are implemented in two major projects of protein structural refinement and protein structural design. Both of these two works highlight the importance of capturing important pairwise interactions within a given protein system.The second major goal of this work is to understand how sequence and structural dynamics give rise to protein function, and, importantly, how Nature can utilize allostery to evolve towards a new function. Here I employ several in-house and novel computational tools to shed light onto the mechanisms of allostery, and, particularly dynamic allostery in the absence of structural rearrangements. This analysis is applied to several different protein systems including Pin1, LacI, CoV-1 and CoV-2 and TEM-1. I show that the dynamics of protein systems may be altered fundamentally by distal perturbations such as ligand binding or point mutations. These peturbations lead to change in local interactions which cascade within the 3-D network of interaction of a protein and give rise to flexibility changes of distal sites, particularly those of functional/active residues positions thereby altering the protein function. This networking picture of the protein is further explored through asymmetric dynamic coupling which shows to be a marker of allosteric interactions between distal residue pairs. Within the networking picture, the concept of sequence context dependence upon mutation becomes critical in understanding the functional outcome of these mutations. Here I design a computational tool, EpiScore, which is able to capture these effects and correlate them to measured experimental epistasis in two protein systems, dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) and TEM-1. Ultimately, the work provided in this thesis shows that both allostery and epistasis may be considered, and accurately modeled, as intrinsic properties of anisotropic networks.
Contributorscampitelli, paul (Author) / Ozkan, Banu (Thesis advisor) / Ghirlanda, Giovanna (Committee member) / Hariadi, Rizal (Committee member) / Thorpe, Michael (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021