Carlos J. Bustamante

Carlos Bustamante

Professor of Chemistry, Physics and Molecular and Cell Biology
The Raymond and Beverly Sackler Professor in Biophysics

bustamante@cchem.berkeley.edu
608A Stanley
(510) 643-9706
(510) 642-5943 (fax)

Research Group URL
Recent Publications


Research Interests

Biophysical Chemistry -- Scanning Force Microscope

Our research is focused on the structural characterization of nucleo-protein assemblies. The structure of chromatin and the global structure of protein-nucleic acid complexes relevant to the molecular mechanisms of control of transcription in prokaryotes are investigated using high resolution scanning force microscopy (SFM). This microscope, also known as Atomic Force Microscope (AFM) works by scanning a tip over the sample to sense the topography of the surface, thus functioning in much the same way than old record players. In addition, we are studying the elastic response of long linear polymers, the forces responsible for maintaining the tertiary structure of proteins, and the mechanical properties of molecular motors, using methods of single molecule manipulation such as laser tweezers and the SFM.

Our laboratory is involved in the study of the structural basis of protein-DNA interactions and their relevance in the processes of control of gene expression. In prokaryotes, and especially in eukaryotes, replication and transcription regulation involve the interaction of many specialized protein factors at regulator locations on the sequence to ensure correct sequence recognition, initiation, processivity, fidelity, and kinetic control. We wish to understand the multiple structural, spatial, and functional relationships among these regulatory factors. We are using the SFM as a high resolution tool to image initiation and elongation transcription complexes of E. coli RNA polymerase to characterize the spatial relationships between the enzyme and the DNA template. We are also beginning to investigate what structural changes are negotiated between RNA polymerase and chromatin during transcription. To this end, we are using the SFM to image complexes of nucleosome-containing DNA fragments carrying a promoter and a terminator upstream and downstream of the nucleosome positioning sequence, respectively. We plan to compare the behavior of various prokaryotic and eukaryotic polymerases as they transcribe through the nucleosome, to investigate whether transcription through a nucleosome is an inherent property of the core particle, or a property of each enzyme itself, and to characterize various intermediates of the translocation process.

Our laboratory is also working actively in the development of methods of single-molecule manipulation, including the use of SFM cantilevers, optical or laser tweezers, and magnetic beads to investigate the mechanical properties of macromolecules. In one project, we first tether a single protein molecule of T-4 lysozyme between a surface and the end of an SFM cantilever. We can then separate the surfaces in a controlled fashion to induce the mechanical unfolding of the molecule to characterize the nature, range, and strength of the forces that maintain its three-dimensional structure. Our objective is to carry out the unfolding of the molecule at equilibrium so as to obtain the potential energy function of the molecule as a function of the mechanical extension. This function represents the most complete description of the folded state of the protein. We plan to investigate how external conditions in the medium, i.e. temperature, denaturant concentration, etc., or point-directed mutations affect the shape of the potential energy function.

Finally, our laboratory is also engaged in the study of DNA-binding molecular motors (RNA polymerase, DNA polymerase, etc.) using optical tweezers to investigate the dynamics of these molecules during translocation, as well as the effect of external force load and nucleotide tri-phosphate concentration on their power and force generation. In parallel, we are developing both microscopic (chemical ratchet-type) and phenomenological models of molecular motors which will be tested experimentally. We believe that single molecule experiments can provide a unique look into the molecular mechanisms responsible for the mechano-chemical conversion process in these protein machines.

Biography

  • Born 1951, Peru
  • B.S. Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia
  • M.S. Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos
  • Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley
  • Kellogg Foundation Scholarship during the Master in Biochemistry (1973-1975)
  • Fullbright Commission and Institute of International Education Fellow (1975-1976)
  • Abraham Rosenberg Scholarship, University of California, Berkeley (1975-1976)
  • Research Assistant, University of California, Berkeley (1976-1981)
  • Postdoctoral Fellow, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, University of California, Berkely (1981-1982)
  • Assistant Professor, Department of Chemistry, University of New Mexico (1982-1986)
  • Searle Scholar (1984)
  • Alfred P. Sloan Fellow (1985)
  • Associate Professor, Department of Chemistry, University of New Mexico (1986-1989)
  • Presidential Lecturer in Chemistry, University of New Mexico (1986)
  • State of New Mexico Eminent Scholar (1989)
  • Professor of Chemistry, Department of Chemistry, University of New Mexico (1989-1990)
  • Professor & Member of the Institute of Molecular Biology, University of Oregon (1991-1998)
  • Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator (1994-1998)
  • Elected Fellow of the American Physical Society (1995)
  • Member of the Science Advisory Board of the Searle Scholars Program (1997-2000)
  • Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator (2000)
  • Professor in Molecular and Cell Biology, Chemistry, and Physics, UC Berkeley (1998 - present)