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Chemistry & Chemical Biology / New Brunswick

Research

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Structure of Transcription Initiation Complexes

Transcription initiation, the first step in gene expression, is the step at which most regulation of gene expression occurs. Richard Ebright's lab seeks to understand the structure, function, and regulation of transcription initiation complexes and to develop gene-specific inhibitors of transcription initiation as potential therapeutic agents.

Illustration description: Crystallographic structure of a transcriptional activator (catabolite activator protein, CAP; cyan) in complex with its target in the transcriptional machinery (RNA polymerase a-subunit C-terminal domain, aCTD; green) and DNA (red). There are no large-scale conformational changes in the activator and target, and the interface between the activator and target is small (residues highlighted in navy and yellow)—consistent with the proposal that transcriptional activation involves a simple "recruitment" mechanism.

See Benoff, B., Yang, H., Lawson, C.L., Parkinson, G., Liu, J., Blatter, E., Ebright, Y.W., Berman, H.M., and Ebright, R.H. 2002. Science 297:1562-1566.

For more information, visit Richard H. Ebright's website and Dr. Helen Berman's website or the Protein Data Bank.




Select from any of the following topics to learn more about the department's research in that area.

The First Semiconductor Bulk Material That Emits Direct White Light

Electropositive Chalcogen Encapsulants of Oxo Cluster Compounds

Alkane metathesis

Lanthanide Fluoride Clusters: the most efficient molecular NIR emission sources currently available

Phenylalanine

Amyloidogenesis in vitro

Protein Data Bank

Structure of Transcription Initiation Complexes

DNA structure and interactions

Surface chemistry: chlorine induced copper-silicide crystallization on silicon

Transition structure for the enzyme-catalyzed decarboxylation of a nucleic acid