Co-reporter:Lane A. Baker, Devasmita Chakraverty, Linda Columbus, Andrew L. Feig, William S. Jenks, Matthew Pilarz, Marilyne Stains, Rory Waterman, and Jodi L. Wesemann
Journal of Chemical Education 2014 Volume 91(Issue 11) pp:1874-1881
Publication Date(Web):October 24, 2014
DOI:10.1021/ed500547n
The Cottrell Scholars Collaborative New Faculty Workshop (CSC NFW) is a professional development program that was initiated in 2012 to address absences in the preparation of chemistry faculty at research universities as funded researchers and educators (i.e., teacher–scholars). The primary focus of the workshop is an introduction to evidence-based teaching methods; other topics including mentoring, work–life balance, time management, and grant writing are also addressed. A longer-term aim of the workshop is to develop lifelong teacher–scholars by encouraging workshop participants to engage with teaching-focused faculty learning communities through the CSC NFW and at their institutions. The workshop also provides a platform to investigate the adoption of student-centered pedagogies among new faculty, and a study of that process was initiated concurrently. Thus, the aim of the workshop program is to address professional development needs as well as understand the efficacy of that effort.Keywords: Curriculum; First-Year Undergraduate/General; Graduate Education/Research; Second-Year Undergraduate; Upper-Division Undergraduate;
Co-reporter:Sanofar J. Abdeen, Rebecca J. Swett, and Andrew L. Feig
ACS Chemical Biology 2010 Volume 5(Issue 12) pp:1097
Publication Date(Web):September 23, 2010
DOI:10.1021/cb100209b
Clostridium difficile causes severe hospital-acquired antibiotic-associated diarrhea due to the activity of two large protein toxins. Current treatments suffer from a high relapse rate and are generating resistant strains; thus new methods of dealing with these infections that target the virulence factors directly are of interest. Phage display was used to identify peptides that bind to the catalytic domain of C. difficile Toxin A. Library screening and subsequent quantitative binding and inhibition studies showed that several of these peptides are potent inhibitors. Fragment-based computational docking of these peptides elucidated the binding modes within the active site. These antitoxin peptides may serve as potential lead compounds to further engineer peptidomimetic inhibitors of the clostridial toxins.
Co-reporter:Andrew L. Feig
Biopolymers 2007 Volume 87(Issue 5-6) pp:
Publication Date(Web):1 AUG 2007
DOI:10.1002/bip.20816
Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) has been applied to the study of proteins for many years. Its use in the biophysical analysis of RNAs has lagged significantly behind its use in protein biochemistry, however, in part because of the relatively large samples required. As the instrumentation has become more sensitive, the ability to obtain high quality data on RNA folding and RNA ligand interactions has improved dramatically. This review provides an overview of the ITC experiment and describes recent work on RNA systems that have taken advantage of its versatility for the study of small molecule binding, protein binding, and the analysis of RNA folding. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 87: 293–301, 2007.
This article was originally published online as an accepted preprint. The “Published Online” date corresponds to the preprint version. You can request a copy of the preprint by emailing the Biopolymers editorial office at biopolymers@wiley.com
Co-reporter:Nilshad Salim, Rajan Lamichhane, Rui Zhao, Tuhina Banerjee, Jane Philip, David Rueda, Andrew L. Feig
Biophysical Journal (7 March 2012) Volume 102(Issue 5) pp:
Publication Date(Web):7 March 2012
DOI:10.1016/j.bpj.2011.12.052
Kissing hairpin interactions form when the loop residues of two hairpins have Watson-Crick complementarity. In a unimolecular context, kissing interactions are important for tertiary folding and pseudoknot formation, whereas in a bimolecular context, they provide a basis for molecular recognition. In some cases, kissing complexes can be a prelude to strand displacement reactions where the two hairpins resolve to form a stable extended intermolecular duplex. The kinetics and thermodynamics of kissing-complex formation and their subsequent strand-displacement reactions are poorly understood. Here, biophysical techniques including isothermal titration calorimetry, surface plasmon resonance, and single-molecule fluorescence have been employed to probe the factors that govern the stability of kissing complexes and their subsequent structural rearrangements. We show that the general understanding of RNA duplex formation can be extended to kissing complexes but that kissing complexes display an unusual level of stability relative to simple duplexes of the same sequence. These interactions form and break many times at room temperature before becoming committed to a slow, irreversible forward transition to the strand-displaced form. Furthermore, using smFRET we show that the primary difference between stable and labile kissing complexes is based almost completely on their off rates. Both stable and labile complexes form at the same rate within error, but less stable species dissociate rapidly, allowing us to understand how these complexes can help generate specificity along a folding pathway or during a gene regulation event.
Co-reporter:Rebecca J. Swett, G. Andrés Cisneros, Andrew L. Feig
Biophysical Journal (16 July 2013) Volume 105(Issue 2) pp:
Publication Date(Web):16 July 2013
DOI:10.1016/j.bpj.2013.05.031
Clostridium difficile (C. diff) is one of the most common and most severe hospital-acquired infections; its consequences range from lengthened hospital stay to outright lethality. C. diff causes cellular damage through the action of two large toxins TcdA and TcdB. Recently, there has been increased effort toward developing antitoxin therapies, rather than antibacterial treatments, in hopes of mitigating the acquisition of drug resistance. To date, no analysis of the recognition mechanism of TcdA or TcdB has been attempted. Here, we use small molecule flexible docking followed by unbiased molecular dynamics to obtain a more detailed perspective on how inhibitory peptides, exemplified by two species HQSPWHH and EGWHAHT function. Using principal component analysis and generalized masked Delaunay analysis, an examination of the conformational space of TcdB in its apo form as well as forms bound to the peptides and UDP-Glucose was performed. Although both species inhibit by binding in the active site, they do so in two very different ways. The simulations show that the conformational space occupied by TcdB bound to the two peptides are quite different and provide valuable insight for the future design of toxin inhibitors and other enzymes that interact with their substrates through conformational capture mechanisms and thus work by the disruption of the protein’s intrinsic motions.
Co-reporter:M.A. Faner, A.L. Feig
Methods (15 September 2013) Volume 63(Issue 2) pp:144-159
Publication Date(Web):15 September 2013
DOI:10.1016/j.ymeth.2013.04.023
•Techniques used for the discovery and study of Hfq-–RNA interactions are discussed.•The strengths and optimal application of the approaches are considered.•Issues unique to studying Hfq–RNA systems are addressed.To regulate stress responses and virulence, bacteria use small regulatory RNAs (sRNAs). These RNAs can up or down regulate target mRNAs through base pairing by influencing ribosomal access and RNA decay. A large class of these sRNAs, called trans-encoded sRNAs, requires the RNA binding protein Hfq to facilitate base pairing between the regulatory RNA and its target mRNA. The resulting network of regulation is best characterized in Escherichia coli and Salmonella typhimurium, but the importance of Hfq dependent sRNA regulation is recognized in a diverse population of bacteria. In this review we present the approaches and methods used to discover Hfq binding RNAs, characterize their interactions and elucidate their functions.