Picture of Joe Loparo

Joseph John Loparo, Ph.D.

Professor of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology

The Loparo laboratory utilizes single-molecule methods to understand the dynamics of the multiprotein complexes involved in genome maintenance. We aim to develop approaches that allow us to probe the structure and function of these complexes in real time in order to better understand how their assembly and activity are regulated.

Research:

Single-Molecule Studies of DNA Damage Tolerance and Repair

The Loparo laboratory utilizes single-molecule methods to understand the dynamics of the multiprotein complexes involved in genome maintenance. We aim to develop approaches that allow us to probe the structure and function of these complexes in real time in order to better understand how their assembly and activity are regulated. Major areas of current research include:

Regulation of error prone DNA polymerases in DNA replication and translesion synthesis

We are interested in how cells regulate the access of low-fidelity polymerases to the replication fork as their misuse leads to genome instability. In translesion synthesis (TLS), error-prone TLS polymerases are recruited to sites of DNA damage to carry out strand extension over DNA lesions that block the progress of the replisome. Using the E. coli replisome as a model system, we have demonstrated that we can reconstitute translesion synthesis at site-specific DNA lesions and observe polymerase exchange on individual DNAs. Using this approach we have shown that the translesion polymerases Pol IV and Pol II can bind the processivity clamp, allowing for rapid lesion bypass. In current work we are extending these studies to the fully reconstituted replisome and to studies in live cells.

Repair of double-strand DNA breaks by non-homologous end joining

DNA double strand breaks (DSBs) are extremely toxic lesions that can arise spontaneously or can be induced by agents such as ionizing radiation or endonucleases involved in programmed genome rearrangements. For the majority of the cell cycle DSBs are repaired by NHEJ, a process that robustly ligates even damaged or incompatible DNA ends, albeit in a way that often generates insertion or deletion mutations. We are using single-molecule FRET approaches to directly visualize the repair of DSBs in reconstituted systems and in vertebrate cell free extracts. We have demonstrated that end synapsis passes through at least two structurally distinct states and have identified the core NHEJ factors required to form these states. We are currently working to further describe how the assembly of the NHEJ machinery is controlled, how DNA ends are held together by this machinery, and how mutations are minimized during repair.

Molecular mechanisms of bacterial chromosome compaction and segregation

Bacteria use a collection of nucleoid-associated proteins to help condense and segregate their chromosomes. To better understand how these proteins remodel DNA, my laboratory has developed novel in vitro single-molecule approaches to better track DNA dynamics and visualize protein-DNA association in the absence of protein labeling. We have used these techniques to interrogate ParB and structural maintenance of chromosomes (SMC), two highly conserved proteins involved in chromosome organization and segregation. ParB is a sequence specific DNA binding protein that recognizes a 16 base pair sequence known as parS found near replication origins and spreads thousands of bases from these sites into neighboring non-specific DNA. In collaboration with David Rudner’s laboratory, we demonstrated that ParB spreading requires DNA bridging interactions both in vitro and in vivo and identified a patch of highly conserved arginine residues that are required for forming these higher order protein-DNA interactions.

SMCs are characterized by their unique V-shaped structure; SMC monomers dimerize at the apex of the V with each arm terminating in an ATPase head. Binding of ATP results in head-head engagement, which is believed to close the SMC ring. Central to understanding SMC function is elucidating the mechanism by which SMC interacts with and remodels DNA and determining how this activity is coupled to the SMC ATPase cycle. We have combined single-molecule imaging of fluorescently labeled prokaryotic SMC molecules with flow-stretching of individual DNAs to investigate how SMCs are loaded onto DNA and form higher order structures that condense DNA. Our work demonstrates that SMCs have varied interactions with DNA that evolve as SMCs are loaded and assembled on DNA. We are currently working to better understand how SMC clusters assemble both in vitro and in cells.

Address: 

Room SGM - 204A

250 Longwood Avenue

Boston, MA 02115

Publications View
Compartmentalization of the replication fork by single-stranded DNA-binding protein regulates translesion synthesis.
Authors: Authors: Chang S, Thrall ES, Laureti L, Piatt SC, Pagès V, Loparo JJ.
Nat Struct Mol Biol
View full abstract on Pubmed
More than just content: building community in the graduate classroom.
Authors: Authors: Venkatesh MJ, Elchert AR, Fakoya B, Fernandez F, Kwong AC, Liu YJ, Lotfy P, Lowe DD, Petty CA, Rodríguez-delaRosa A, Seguinot BO, Shi Y, Loparo JJ.
Nat Biotechnol
View full abstract on Pubmed
Repair of DNA Double-Strand Breaks by the Nonhomologous End Joining Pathway.
Authors: Authors: Stinson BM, Loparo JJ.
Annu Rev Biochem
View full abstract on Pubmed
Real-Time Imaging of Polioviral RNA Translocation across a Membrane.
Authors: Authors: Karunatilaka KS, Filman DJ, Strauss M, Loparo JJ, Hogle JM.
mBio
View full abstract on Pubmed
XLF acts as a flexible connector during non-homologous end joining.
Authors: Authors: Carney SM, Moreno AT, Piatt SC, Cisneros-Aguirre M, Lopezcolorado FW, Stark JM, Loparo JJ.
Elife
View full abstract on Pubmed
Catalytically inactive T7 DNA polymerase imposes a lethal replication roadblock.
Authors: Authors: Hernandez AJ, Lee SJ, Chang S, Lee JA, Loparo JJ, Richardson CC.
J Biol Chem
View full abstract on Pubmed
A Mechanism to Minimize Errors during Non-homologous End Joining.
Authors: Authors: Stinson BM, Moreno AT, Walter JC, Loparo JJ.
Mol Cell
View full abstract on Pubmed
A gatekeeping function of the replicative polymerase controls pathway choice in the resolution of lesion-stalled replisomes.
Authors: Authors: Chang S, Naiman K, Thrall ES, Kath JE, Jergic S, Dixon NE, Fuchs RP, Loparo JJ.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
View full abstract on Pubmed
Embedding academic and professional skills training with experimental-design chalk talks.
Authors: Authors: Heustis RJ, Venkatesh MJ, Gutlerner JL, Loparo JJ.
Nat Biotechnol
View full abstract on Pubmed
The Gene-Silencing Protein MORC-1 Topologically Entraps DNA and Forms Multimeric Assemblies to Cause DNA Compaction.
Authors: Authors: Kim H, Yen L, Wongpalee SP, Kirshner JA, Mehta N, Xue Y, Johnston JB, Burlingame AL, Kim JK, Loparo JJ, Jacobsen SE.
Mol Cell
View full abstract on Pubmed