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    Date Issued2021 (1)2016 (1)2015 (1)Author
    Sun, Ming (3)
    Bai, Boyang (1)Bi, Yanwei (1)Blomqvist, Karin (1)Chen, Yiwen (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Medicine (1)Program in Bioinformatics and Integrative Biology (1)Program in Molecular Medicine (1)Document TypeJournal Article (2)Preprint (1)KeywordAmino Acids, Peptides, and Proteins (2)Biochemistry, Biophysics, and Structural Biology (1)Bioinformatics (1)bioinformatics (1)Biophysics (1)View MoreJournalbioRxiv (1)Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950) (1)Nucleic acids research (1)

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    Identification of T Cell Epitopes in the Spike Glycoprotein of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 in Rhesus Macaques

    Liu, Xiaojuan; Li, Yuzhong; Xiao, Hongjian; Bi, Yanwei; Gong, Yue; Hu, Zhengrong R.; Zeng, Yaxin; Sun, Ming; He, Zhanlong L.; Lu, Shan; et al. (2021-05-12)
    The T cell response is an important detection index in severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) vaccine development. The present study was undertaken to determine the T cell epitopes in the spike (S) protein of SARS-CoV-2 that dominate the T cell responses in SARS-CoV-2-infected patients. PBMCs from rhesus macaques vaccinated with a DNA vaccine encoding the full-length S protein were isolated, and an ELISPOT assay was used to identify the recognized T cell epitopes among a total of 158 18-mer and 10-aa-overlapping peptides spanning the full-length S protein. Six multipeptide-based epitopes located in the S1 region, with four of the six located in the receptor-binding domain, were defined as the most frequently recognized epitopes in macaques. The conservation of the epitopes across species was also verified, and peptide mixtures for T cell response detection were established. Six newly defined T cell epitopes were found in the current study, which may provide a novel potential target for T cell response detection and the diagnosis and vaccine design of SARS-CoV-2 based on multipeptide subunit-based epitopes.
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    RSQ: a statistical method for quantification of isoform-specific structurome using transcriptome-wide structural profiling data [preprint]

    Wang, Yunfei; University of Texas at Dallas; Zhu, Xiaopeng; Sun, Ming; Chen, Yong; Zhang, Michael Q.; University of Texas at Dallas; Chen, Yiwen; Tu, Shikui; Dai, Qi; et al. (2016-06-18)
    The structure of RNA, which is considered to be a second layer of information alongside the genetic code, provides fundamental insights into the cellular function of both coding and non-coding RNAs. Several high-throughput technologies have been developed to profile transcriptome-wide RNA structures, i.e., the structurome. However, it is challenging to interpret the profiling data because the observed data represent an average over different RNA conformations and isoforms with different abundance. To address this challenge, we developed an RNA structurome quantification method (RSQ) to statistically model the distribution of reads over both isoforms and RNA conformations, and thus provide accurate quantification of the isoform-specific structurome. The quantified RNA structurome enables the comparison of isoform-specific conformations between different conditions, the exploration of RNA conformation variation affected by single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) , and the measurement of RNA accessibility for binding of either small RNAs in RNAi-based assays or RNA binding protein in transcriptional regulation. The model used in our method sheds new light on the potential impact of the RNA structurome on gene regulation.
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    Dynamical features of the Plasmodium falciparum ribosome during translation

    Sun, Ming; Li, Wen; Blomqvist, Karin; Das, Sanchaita; Hashem, Yaser; Dvorin, Jeffrey D.; Frank, Joachim (2015-12-02)
    Plasmodium falciparum, the mosquito-transmitted Apicomplexan parasite, causes the most severe form of human malaria. In the asexual blood-stage, the parasite resides within erythrocytes where it proliferates, multiplies and finally spreads to new erythrocytes. Development of drugs targeting the ribosome, the site of protein synthesis, requires specific knowledge of its structure and work cycle, and, critically, the ways they differ from those in the human host. Here, we present five cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) reconstructions of ribosomes purified from P. falciparum blood-stage schizonts at sub-nanometer resolution. Atomic models were built from these density maps by flexible fitting. Significantly, our study has taken advantage of new capabilities of cryo-EM, in visualizing several structures co-existing in the sample at once, at a resolution sufficient for building atomic models. We have discovered structural and dynamic features that differentiate the ribosomes of P. falciparum from those of mammalian system. Prompted by the absence of RACK1 on the ribosome in our and an earlier study we confirmed that RACK1 does not specifically co-purify with the 80S fraction in schizonts. More extensive studies, using cryo-EM methodology, of translation in the parasite will provide structural knowledge that may lead to development of novel anti-malarials.
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