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My associates and I are using physical biochemical approaches to study
what might be called the molecular basis of gene expression. Most of our
experimental work is concerned with the function and regulation of the complexes
that control DNA transcription and replication, with studies focused primarily
on transcription with the E. coli DNA-dependent RNA polymerase and its regulatory
factors and on replication with the seven-protein bacteriophage T4-coded
DNA replication system. Comparative studies are also underway using selected
components of some equivalent eukaryotic systems. In transcription our group is studying the transcription cycle, both at
the overall operon level and at the level of the various steps of the single-nucleotide
addition-excision cycle. At the operon level we are studying regulatory
interactions that control activation and repression at initiation, the kinetics
of elongation, and the molecular bases of the elongation-termination decision
at both intrinsic and rho-dependent transcription terminators, together
with the mechanisms of action antitermination factors. We have recently
completed a study of E. coli transcription termination factor rho, in terms
of its function as a specific RNA-DNA helicase and as a transcript terminator.
Our antitermination studies have focussed on the mechanisms of action of
the N protein of phage lambda in N-dependent antitermination systems. At
the single-nucleotide addition-excision cycle level we are using various
kinetic techniques to understand the molecular origins of transcriptional
processivity and fidelity. In replication our work began with studies of the cooperative binding
of the T4 gene 32 (single-stranded DNA binding) protein to the single-stranded
DNA (and RNA). This then led us to examine the interactions of the other
components of the system, including those of the DNA polymerase with the
primer-template and the polymerase accessory proteins. These studies have
shown that the basically nonprocessive T4 DNA polymerase can be rendered
fully processive by means of "sliding-clamp" processivity factor,
and that the role of the other accessory proteins is to carry out the specific
and ATP-dependent loading of the processivity factor onto the polymerase
at the primer-template junction in the replication fork. The resulting complex
can carry out leading strand DNA replication with essentially in vivo rate,
fidelity, and processivity. The helicase of the T4 DNA replication system
functions as a hexamer and, in combination with a single T4 primase subunit,
forms a stable primosome subassembly. We have recently also shown a direct
coupling between the polymerase and the helicase. This complex alone, if
properly loaded onto a model replication fork, can carry out processive
synthesis on a double-stranded DNA construct at the physiological rate.
The mode of assembly of these components into a fully functional and coupled
DNA replication system is currently being studied. In all these studies we emphasize the elucidation of the detailed mechanisms
and general principles of protein-nucleic acid and protein-protein interactions
that underlie the function of these biologically central complexes. Termination and antitermination complexes that are being studied in the
von Hippel laboratory. Greive S.J. and P.H. von Hippel. (2005) Thinking quantitatively about transcriptional
regulation. Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol 6:221-32. Johnson N.P., W.A. Baase, and P.H. Von Hippel (2004) Low-energy circular
dichroism of 2-aminopurine dinucleotide as a probe of local conformation
of DNA and RNA. PNAS 101:3426-31. Delagoutte E. and P.H. von Hippel (2003) Function and assembly of the
bacteriophage T4 DNA replication complex: interactions of the T4 polymerase
with various model DNA constructs. J Biol Chem
278:25435-47. Pasman, Z. and P.H. von Hippel (2002) Active Escherichia coli transcription
elongation complexes are functionally homogeneous. J
Mol Biol 322:505-19. Pietroni, P., M.C. Young, G.J. Latham, and P.H. von Hippel (2001) Dissections
of the ATP-driven reaction cycle of the bacteriophage T4 DNA replication
processivity clamp loading system. J Mol Biol
309:869-91. von Hippel, P.H. and E. Delagoutte (2001) A general model for nucleic
acid helicases and their "coupling" within macromolecular machines.
Cell 104:177-90. To Contact Dr. von Hippel:Research Interests:

Selected Publications:
Phone: 541-346-6097
petevh@molbio.uoregon.edu