Office: PHSC 130A
Phone: (405) 325-1677
Email: valya@ou.edu
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Valentin V. Rybenkov
- Associate Professor
- M.S. (Moscow Institute
of Physics and Technology) 1989
Ph.D. (Moscow Institute
of Physics and Technology) 1992
- Postdoctoral Research Assistant (University
of California, Berkeley) 1993-2000
- OU Junior Faculty Research Program Recipient,
2001
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Division:
Research Interests
- Physical chemistry and biochemistry
of nucleic acids; chromatin structure
and dynamics; mechanistic enzymology,
especially as related to the chromatin
modifying molecular motors.
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Research Description
DNA exists within the cell as an elaborately folded
nucleoprotein structure called the chromosome. Chromatin
structure undergoes marked, tightly controlled changes
during the cell cycle. Correct folding of the chromosome
is essential for faithful execution of such fundamental
events as chromosome replication, gene expression,
or cell division. Errors in either of the processes
often result in genomic instability and chromosomal
alterations potentially leading to carcinogenesis
or developmental defects. However a comprehensive
picture of how chromosome rearrangements are achieved
is still lacking.
It has become increasingly clear recently that
a number of chromatin remodeling functions are carried
out by ATP-dependent molecular motors, molecular
machines that dedicatedly deform DNA at the expense
of ATP hydrolysis. On a local level, a variety of
chromatin remodeling factors act to establish the
"open" chromatin conformation in a relatively
short fragment of the chromosome so that to affect
gene expression in specific loci. The global chromatin
rearrangements, such as chromosome condensation
during cell division, also appear to be mediated
by the activity of the chromatin modifying molecular
motors. An emerging group of DNA-dependent ATPases,
the proteins of SMC (structural maintenance
of chromosome) family, have been implicated
in such diverse range of cellular functions as chromosome
condensation, dosage compensation and DNA repair.
My labs research is focused on the mechanism
of SMC proteins.
The structure of SMC proteins befits their role
in orchestrating large-scale chromatin rearrangements.
They consist of two globular domains, the ATP- and
DNA-binding domains, connected by two long coiled-coil
regions. In solution the proteins dimerize in an
anti-parallel manner to form a molecule where the
two DNA binding domains can be as far as 100 nm
apart. Within the cell, the SMC proteins
associate with other, non-SMC proteins to form various
complexes with specific cellular functions. The
best biochemically characterized SMC complex is
13S condensin, a Xenopus SMC complex responsible
for chromosome condensation during cell division.
We recently learnt that 13S condensin compacts DNA
by directly introducing global writhe into the molecule
(see Fig.1, Kimura et al 1999).
Most intriguingly, this activity requires hydrolysis
of ATP and not merely ATP binding. This is an entirely
novel kind of enzymatic activity. Whereas the proposed
mechanism of SMC suggests immediate extrapolation
for the in vivo activity of condensin, a number
of questions remain unanswered. Does condensin compact
DNA in a single scissoring motion or does it employ
something like loop extrusion mechanism? What is
the role of ATP in the reaction? Does condensin
form a supramolecular structure on DNA? How general
is the found activity of condensin among various
SMC proteins? How is activity of SMCs regulated
inside the cell? We are addressing these questions
using MukBEF, a bacterial analog of 13S condensin,
as a model protein. In addition to the more traditional
biochemical and topological methods (see Rybenkov
et al 1997, Kimura et al 1999,
Vologodskii et al 2000 for examples)
we are planning to use single molecule techniques.
In the latter approach, a microscopic bead is attached
to a single DNA molecule, and both position of the
bead and the force exerted on the molecule is measured
in real time.
This set-up offers a unique advantage in studying
the DNA motors, since protein-induced
DNA deformation can be measured directly as the
shortening of the DNA molecule (Fig. 2). Furthermore,
single molecule methods allow to monitor complete
reaction cycle of the enzyme and to focus, if need
be, on the short-lived intermediates, which may
be difficult to detect by the bulk, population-averaged
methods. We expect that single molecule data will
complement the biochemical results and will allow
to reconstruct the mechanism of MukBEF. That in
turn should bring us closer to understanding how
does the chromatin structure relate to its functions.
Selected publications
Rybenkov,
V.V., Cozzarelli, N.R. and Vologodskii, A.V., "The probability of DNA
knotting and the effective diameter of the DNA double helix." Proc.
Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 90, 5307-5311, 1993.
Rybenkov,
V.V., Vologodskii, A.V. and Cozzarelli, N.R., "The effect of ionic
conditions on conformations of supercoiled DNA. I Sedimentation analysis." J. Mol. Biol., 267, 299-311, 1997.
Rybenkov,
V.V., Vologodskii, A.V. and Cozzarelli, N.R., "The effect of ionic
conditions on conformations of supercoiled DNA. II Catenation
equilibrium." J. Mol. Biol., 267, 312-323, 1997.
Rybenkov,
V.V., Vologodskii, A.V. and Cozzarelli, N.R., "The effect of ionic
conditions on DNA helical repeat, effective diameter, and free energy of supercoiling" Nucl. Acids Res., 25, 1412-1418, 1997.
Rybenkov,
V.V., Ullsperger, C. U., Vologodskii, A.V. and Cozzarelli, N.R.,
"Simplification of DNA topology below equilibrium values by type II topoisomerases." Science, 277, 690-693, 1997.
Alexandrov,
A.I., Cozzarelli N.R., Holmes, V.F., Khodursky, A.B., Peter, B.J., Postow, L.,
Rybenkov, V.V. and Vologodskii, A.V. "Mechanisms of separation of the
complementary strands of DNA during replication." in "Structural
Biology and Functional Genomics", NATO Science Series 3 (High technology),
E. Morton Bradbury and Sandor Pongor (eds), Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht,
Boston, London, 1999, pp. 217-235.
Kimura,
K., Rybenkov, V.V., Crisona, N., Hirano, T. and Cozzarelli, N.R. "13S condensin
actively reconfigures DNA by introducing global positive writhe: implications
for chromosome condensation" Cell, 98 (2), 239-248, 1999.
Vologodskii,
A.V., Zhang, W., Rybenkov, V.V., Podtelezhnikov, A.A., Subramanian, D.,
Griffith, J.D., Cozzarelli, N.R. "Mechanism of topology simplification by
type II DNA topoisomerases", Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci., 98(6),
3045-3049, 2001.
Dekker, N.H., Rybenkov, V.V., Duguet, M., Cozzarelli, N.R., Bensimon,
D. "The Mechanism of Type IA Topoisomerases"Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, (2002)
99(19):12126-31.
Petrushenko,
Z.M., Lai, C., Rai, R., Rybenkov, V.V. "DNA reshaping by MukB: right-handed
knotting, left-handed supercoiling" J. Biol. Chem., (2006) 281(8):4606-15.
Wang,
Q., Mordukhova, E., Edwards A., Rybenkov, V.V. "Chromosome condensation in the
absence of non-SMC subunits of MukBEF." J. Bacteriol., (2006) 188(12):4431-41.
Petrushenko,
Z.M., Lai, C., Rybenkov, V.V. "Antagonistic interaction between kleisins and
DNA with bacterial condensin MukB" submitted 2006.
She,
W., Wang, Q., Mordukhova, E.A. and Rybenkov, V.V. "MukEF is required for stable association of MukB with
the chromosome" submitted 2006
University of Oklahoma Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry 620 Parrington Oval, Rm 208 Norman, OK 73019-3051
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