Jenny Le

Emeryville, California, United States Contact Info
461 followers 451 connections

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About

I handle everything in starting and running a lab, even the hands-on research.

I…

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Experience & Education

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Volunteer Experience

  • Origami and Science Consultant

    smART

    - 2 years 1 month

    Science and Technology

    • Introduced STEM principles through origami and art, influencing students into STEM careers.
    • Created/implemented DNA origami modules for students to visualize and build “DNA” structures.

  • Mentor

    OhioMOD for BIOMOD

    - 2 years

    Science and Technology

    • Directed 8 undergraduate students in their research project of a biosensing DNA-based nanostructure for a biomolecular design competition (BIOMOD) to Bronze and Silver awards.
    • Coordinated training and managed subgroups for media development, budgeting, and travel logistics with excellent interpersonal, multi-tasking, problem-solving, and troubleshooting skills.

  • Student Leader, Team Green Representative

    Office of Residential Life, UCLA

    - 1 year

    Social Services

    • Coordinated workshops and programs for audiences ranging from 5-70 people.
    • Presented at programs with topics addressing social justice and different sustainable practices
    • Efforts led to residential hall winning in the energy competition on the Residential Hill.
    • Regularly communicated between advisors and residents concerning the quality of residential programs.
    • Mentor to incoming first-years to UCLA. Promoted sustainability and the green initiative. Coordinated green…

    • Coordinated workshops and programs for audiences ranging from 5-70 people.
    • Presented at programs with topics addressing social justice and different sustainable practices
    • Efforts led to residential hall winning in the energy competition on the Residential Hill.
    • Regularly communicated between advisors and residents concerning the quality of residential programs.
    • Mentor to incoming first-years to UCLA. Promoted sustainability and the green initiative. Coordinated green programs and workshops for residents.

  • Vice President

    Biophysics Student Organization, OSU

    - 1 year 3 months

    Social Services

    • Mediator between BSO and the Council of Graduate Students (CGS) Delegation.
    • Coordinate social activities for Biophysics graduate students.

  • Biophysics Delegate

    Council of Graduate Students, OSU

    - 1 year 3 months

    Social Services

    • Ensured the quality of OSU graduate life. Organized a financial wellness workshop for graduate students
    • Graduate representative on Financial Wellness External Committee.

Publications

  • Design, Assembly, and Function of DNA Origami Mechanisms

    Springer

    This chapter provides an overview of the common procedures used in making functional DNA origami devices. These procedures include the design, assembly, purification, and characterization of the DNA origami structures, with a focus on dynamic devices.

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  • Fueling DNA Self-Assembly via Gel-Released Regulators

    ACS Nano

    The development of responsive, multicomponent molecular materials requires means to physically separate yet easily couple distinct processes. Here we demonstrate methods to use molecules and reactions loaded into microliter-sized polyacrylamide hydrogels (mini-gels) to control the dynamic self-assembly of DNA nanotubes. We first characterize the UV-mediated release of DNA molecules from mini-gels, changing diffusion rates and minimizing spontaneous leakage of DNA. We then demonstrate that…

    The development of responsive, multicomponent molecular materials requires means to physically separate yet easily couple distinct processes. Here we demonstrate methods to use molecules and reactions loaded into microliter-sized polyacrylamide hydrogels (mini-gels) to control the dynamic self-assembly of DNA nanotubes. We first characterize the UV-mediated release of DNA molecules from mini-gels, changing diffusion rates and minimizing spontaneous leakage of DNA. We then demonstrate that mini-gels can be used as compartments for storage and release of DNA that mediates the assembly or disassembly of DNA nanotubes in a one-pot process and that the speed of DNA release is controlled by the mini-gel porosity. With this approach, we achieve control of assembly and disassembly of nanotubes with distinct kinetics, including a finite delay that is obtained by loading distinct DNA regulators into distinct mini-gels. We finally show that mini-gels can also host and localize enzymatic reactions, by transcribing RNA regulators from synthetic genes loaded in the mini-gels, with diffusion of RNA to the aqueous phase resulting in the activation of self-assembly. Our experimental data are recapitulated by a mathematical model that describes the diffusion of DNA molecules from the gel phase to the aqueous phase in which they control self-assembly of nanotubes. Looking forward, DNA-loaded mini-gels may be further miniaturized and patterned to build more sophisticated storage compartments for use within multicomponent, complex biomolecular materials relevant for biomedical applications and artificial life.

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  • High-Force Application by a Nanoscale DNA Force Spectrometer

    ACS Nano

    The ability to apply and measure high forces (>10 pN) on the nanometer scale is critical to the development of nanomedicine, molecular robotics, and the understanding of biological processes such as chromatin condensation, membrane deformation, and viral packaging. Established force spectroscopy techniques including optical traps, magnetic tweezers, and atomic force microscopy rely on micron-sized or larger handles to apply forces, limiting their applications within constrained geometries…

    The ability to apply and measure high forces (>10 pN) on the nanometer scale is critical to the development of nanomedicine, molecular robotics, and the understanding of biological processes such as chromatin condensation, membrane deformation, and viral packaging. Established force spectroscopy techniques including optical traps, magnetic tweezers, and atomic force microscopy rely on micron-sized or larger handles to apply forces, limiting their applications within constrained geometries including cellular environments and nanofluidic devices. A promising alternative to these approaches is DNA-based molecular calipers. However, this approach is currently limited to forces on the scale of a few piconewtons. To study the force application capabilities of DNA devices, we implemented DNA origami nanocalipers with tunable mechanical properties in a geometry that allows application of force to rupture a DNA duplex. We integrated static and dynamic single-molecule characterization methods and statistical mechanical modeling to quantify the device properties including force output and dynamic range. We found that the thermally driven dynamics of the device are capable of applying forces of at least 20 piconewtons with a nanometer-scale dynamic range. These characteristics could eventually be used to study other biomolecular processes such as protein unfolding or to control high-affinity interactions in nanomechanical devices or molecular robots.

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  • A nanoscale DNA force spectrometer capable of applying tension and compression on biomolecules

    Nucleic Acid Research

    Single molecule force spectroscopy is a powerful approach to probe the structure, conformational changes, and kinetic properties of biological and synthetic macromolecules. However, common approaches to apply forces to biomolecules require expensive and cumbersome equipment and relatively large probes such as beads or cantilevers, which limits their use for many environments and makes integrating with other methods challenging. Furthermore, existing methods have key limitations such as an…

    Single molecule force spectroscopy is a powerful approach to probe the structure, conformational changes, and kinetic properties of biological and synthetic macromolecules. However, common approaches to apply forces to biomolecules require expensive and cumbersome equipment and relatively large probes such as beads or cantilevers, which limits their use for many environments and makes integrating with other methods challenging. Furthermore, existing methods have key limitations such as an inability to apply compressive forces on single molecules. We report a nanoscale DNA force spectrometer (nDFS), which is based on a DNA origami hinge with tunable mechanical and dynamic properties. The angular free energy landscape of the nDFS can be engineered across a wide range through substitution of less than 5% of the strand components. We further incorporate a removable strut that enables reversible toggling of the nDFS between open and closed states to allow for actuated application of tensile and compressive forces. We demonstrate the ability to apply compressive forces by inducing a large bend in a 249bp DNA molecule, and tensile forces by inducing DNA unwrapping of a nucleosome sample. These results establish a versatile tool for force spectroscopy and robust methods for designing nanoscale mechanical devices with tunable force application.

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  • Quantitative Modeling of Nucleosome Unwrapping from Both Ends

    Biophysical Journal

    In eukaryotic cells, DNA is packaged into chromatin where nucleosomes are the basic packaging unit. Important cellular processes including gene expression, DNA replication, and DNA repair require nucleosomal DNA to be unwrapped so that functional proteins can access their target sites, which otherwise are sterically occluded. A key question in this process is what the unwrapped conformations individual nucleosomes adopt within chromatin are. Here, we develop a concurrent nucleosome unwrapping…

    In eukaryotic cells, DNA is packaged into chromatin where nucleosomes are the basic packaging unit. Important cellular processes including gene expression, DNA replication, and DNA repair require nucleosomal DNA to be unwrapped so that functional proteins can access their target sites, which otherwise are sterically occluded. A key question in this process is what the unwrapped conformations individual nucleosomes adopt within chromatin are. Here, we develop a concurrent nucleosome unwrapping model to address this question. We hypothesize that for a given end-to-end distance of the nucleosomal DNA, the nucleosomal DNA stochastically unwraps from the histone core from both ends independently and that this combination of unwrapping from both sides results in a significant increase in the average distance between the DNA extending from both sides of the nucleosomes. We test our model on recently published experiments using a DNA origami nanocaliper that quantifies nucleosome unwrapping and achieve good agreement between experiment and model prediction. We then investigate the DNA origami caliper distribution when attached to a hexasome (a nucleosome lacking an H2A/H2B dimer). A significant shift in the caliper angle distribution caused by the asymmetric structural features of the hexasome seen experimentally is consistent with the model. Our modeling approach may be more broadly useful to the interpretation of other studies of nucleosome dynamics, chromatin dynamics, and regulatory processes involving nucleosome unwrapping, as well as more generally to optimization of future DNA origami designs to probe mechanical properties of biomolecules.

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  • Uncertainty quantification of a DNA origami mechanism using a coarse-grained model and kinematic variance analysis

    Nanoscale

    Significant advances have been made towards the design, fabrication, and actuation of dynamic DNA nanorobots including the development of DNA origami mechanisms. These DNA origami mechanisms integrate relatively stiff links made of bundles of double-stranded DNA and relatively flexible joints made of single-stranded DNA to mimic the design of macroscopic machines and robots. Despite reproducing the complex configurations of macroscopic machines, these DNA origami mechanisms exhibit significant…

    Significant advances have been made towards the design, fabrication, and actuation of dynamic DNA nanorobots including the development of DNA origami mechanisms. These DNA origami mechanisms integrate relatively stiff links made of bundles of double-stranded DNA and relatively flexible joints made of single-stranded DNA to mimic the design of macroscopic machines and robots. Despite reproducing the complex configurations of macroscopic machines, these DNA origami mechanisms exhibit significant deviations from their intended motion behavior since nanoscale mechanisms are subject to significant thermal fluctuations that lead to variations in the geometry of the underlying DNA origami components. Understanding these fluctuations is critical to assess and improve the performance of DNA origami mechanisms and to enable precise nanoscale robotic functions. Here, we report a hybrid computational framework combining coarse-grained modeling with kinematic variance analysis to predict uncertainties in the motion pathway of a multi-component DNA origami mechanism. Coarse-grained modeling was used to evaluate the variation in geometry of individual components due to thermal fluctuations. This variation was incorporated in kinematic analyses to predict the motion pathway uncertainty of the entire mechanism, which agreed well with experimental characterization of motion. We further demonstrated the ability to predict the probability density of DNA origami mechanism conformations based on analysis of mechanical properties of individual joints. This integration of computational analysis, modeling tools, and experimental methods establish the foundation to predict and manage motion uncertainties of general DNA origami mechanisms to guide the design of DNA-based nanoscale machines and robots.

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  • Making Meaning through Art-Integrated Engineering

    2017 American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE) Annual Conference and Exposition

    This paper presents findings from a two-year mixed methods research study investigating the impact of an arts-integrated (STEAM) approach to engineering education on middle school students and their teachers. The paper explores how the science and art teachers involved in the project constructed understandings of engineering and how they viewed engineering’s relevance to their classroom practice. The major, overarching innovation of this work is the integration of biomolecular engineering and…

    This paper presents findings from a two-year mixed methods research study investigating the impact of an arts-integrated (STEAM) approach to engineering education on middle school students and their teachers. The paper explores how the science and art teachers involved in the project constructed understandings of engineering and how they viewed engineering’s relevance to their classroom practice. The major, overarching innovation of this work is the integration of biomolecular engineering and the arts to achieve personally meaningful experiences that improve students’ content knowledge and future interest in biomolecular engineering and related areas.

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  • Probing Nucleosome Stability with DNA Origami

    ACS Nano

    The organization of eukaryotic DNA into nucleosomes and chromatin undergoes dynamic structural changes to regulate genome processing, including transcription and DNA repair. Critical chromatin rearrangements occur over a wide range of distances, including the mesoscopic length scale of tens of nanometers. However, there is a lack of methodologies that probe changes over this mesoscopic length scale within chromatin. We have designed, constructed, and implemented a DNA-based nanocaliper that…

    The organization of eukaryotic DNA into nucleosomes and chromatin undergoes dynamic structural changes to regulate genome processing, including transcription and DNA repair. Critical chromatin rearrangements occur over a wide range of distances, including the mesoscopic length scale of tens of nanometers. However, there is a lack of methodologies that probe changes over this mesoscopic length scale within chromatin. We have designed, constructed, and implemented a DNA-based nanocaliper that probes this mesoscopic length scale. We developed an approach of integrating nucleosomes into our nanocaliper at two attachment points with over 50% efficiency. Here, we focused on attaching the two DNA ends of the nucleosome to the ends of the two nanocaliper arms, so the hinge angle is a readout of the nucleosome end-to-end distance. We demonstrate that nucleosomes integrated with 6, 26, and 51 bp linker DNA are partially unwrapped by the nanocaliper by an amount consistent with previously observed structural transitions. In contrast, the nucleosomes integrated with the longer 75 bp linker DNA remain fully wrapped. We found that the nanocaliper angle is a sensitive measure of nucleosome disassembly and can read out transcription factor (TF) binding to its target site within the nucleosome. Interestingly, the nanocaliper not only detects TF binding but also significantly increases the probability of TF occupancy at its site by partially unwrapping the nucleosome. These studies demonstrate the feasibility of using DNA nanotechnology to both detect and manipulate nucleosome structure, which provides a foundation of future mesoscale studies of nucleosome and chromatin structural dynamics.

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Honors & Awards

  • Best Poster Award from Materials Week

    Institute of Materials, The Ohio State University

  • Plenary Speaker

    Interdisciplinary Graduate Program Symposium

  • Marianna Russell Technology Grant

    The Women's Place @ The Ohio State University

  • Committee on Inclusion and Diversity (CID) Travel Award

    Biophysical Society

  • Outstanding Student Oral Presentation

    Interdisciplinary Graduate Program Symposium

  • Bruin Bash Award

    UCLA

    Scholarship

  • Cal Grant Access

    -

    Renewable Scholarship

  • Elk Grant

    -

    Renewable Scholarship

  • Federal Pell Grant

    -

    Renewable Scholarship

  • Freedom Village Scholarship

    -

    Renewable Scholarship

  • National Merit Scholarship

    -

    Renewable Scholarship

  • Ola Zuckerman Scholarship

    -

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