ASU Electronic Theses and Dissertations
This collection includes most of the ASU Theses and Dissertations from 2011 to present. ASU Theses and Dissertations are available in downloadable PDF format; however, a small percentage of items are under embargo. Information about the dissertations/theses includes degree information, committee members, an abstract, supporting data or media.
In addition to the electronic theses found in the ASU Digital Repository, ASU Theses and Dissertations can be found in the ASU Library Catalog.
Dissertations and Theses granted by Arizona State University are archived and made available through a joint effort of the ASU Graduate College and the ASU Libraries. For more information or questions about this collection contact or visit the Digital Repository ETD Library Guide or contact the ASU Graduate College at gradformat@asu.edu.
- 35 Arizona State University
- 11 Gould, Ian
- 10 Yan, Hao
- 8 Ghirlanda, Giovanna
- 6 Liu, Yan
- 5 Hecht, Sidney M
- 4 Chen, Julian
- more
- 4 Hayes, Mark
- 3 Allen, James
- 3 Fromme, Petra
- 3 Jones, Anne K
- 3 Levitus, Marcia
- 3 Redding, Kevin
- 3 Ros, Alexandra
- 2 Chaput, John
- 2 Francisco, Wilson
- 2 Hecht, Sidney
- 2 Lindsay, Stuart
- 2 Mills, Jeremy H
- 2 Moore, Thomas
- 2 Redding, Kevin E
- 2 Skibo, Edward
- 2 Wachter, Rebekka
- 2 Wang, Xu
- 2 Woodbury, Neal
- 2 Zhang, Peiming
- 1 Alcala-Torano, Rafael de Jesus
- 1 Allen, James P
- 1 BADSHAH, SYED LAL
- 1 Beckstein, Oliver
- 1 Binder, Jennifer K.
- 1 Borges, Chad
- 1 Borges, Chad R
- 1 Bozeman, Trevor
- 1 Brennan, Bradley
- 1 Buttry, Daniel
- 1 Chaut, John C
- 1 Coe, Jesse
- 1 Darzi, Evan Rashied
- 1 FROMME, PETRA
- 1 Francisco, Wilson A
- 1 Fu, Qiang
- 1 GOULD, IAN
- 1 Gust, Devens
- 1 Gust, John Devens
- 1 Heyden, Matthias
- 1 Jaruvangsanti, Jennifer
- 1 Jennings, David
- 1 Jones, Anne
- 1 Kim, Hanseong
- 1 Kuriata, Agnieszka Magdalena
- 1 Kwan, Patrick
- 1 Li, Wei
- 1 Lindsay, Stuart M
- 1 Luo, Jinghui
- 1 Maini, Rumit
- 1 Matyushov, Dmitry
- 1 Mcintosh, Chelsea Lee
- 1 Moore, Ana L
- 1 Moore, Thomas A
- 1 Morgan, Ashli
- 1 Mujica, Vladimiro
- 1 Nakano, Asuka
- 1 Nangreave, Ryan Christopher
- 1 Pal, Suchetan
- 1 REDDING, KEVIN E
- 1 Richert, Ranko
- 1 Ros, Robert
- 1 Roshdiferdosi, Shadi
- 1 Roy Chowdhury, Sandipan
- 1 Roy, Basab
- 1 SENAPATI, SUBHADIP
- 1 Sayres, Scott
- 1 Schmierer, Margaret Louise
- 1 Seo, Dong-Kyun
- 1 Sisco, Nicholas John
- 1 Torres, Cesar I
- 1 Van Horn, Wade D
- 1 Vaughn, Michael David
- 1 Wachter, Rebekka M
- 1 Waskasi, Morteza
- 1 Wei, Xixi
- 1 Yan, Qin
- 1 Yang, Yuhe Renee
- 1 Yarger, Jeff L
- 1 Yarger, Jeffery
- 1 Zhang, Fei
- 1 Zhang, Su
- 1 Zhao, Zhao
- 35 English
- 35 Public
- Chemistry
- Biochemistry
- 5 Biophysics
- 4 DNA
- 3 Analytical chemistry
- 3 DNA nanotechnology
- 2 Antioxidant
- more
- 2 Bleomycin
- 2 Cancer
- 2 Energy
- 2 Protein
- 2 self-assembly
- 1 Addiction
- 1 Alternative Genetic System
- 1 Amino Acid
- 1 Aminoacylated
- 1 Antimony Tin Oxide
- 1 Applications
- 1 Artificial Photosynthesis
- 1 Atomic Force Microscopy
- 1 BCL2 i-Motif
- 1 BIDIRECTIONALITY
- 1 Beta amino acid
- 1 Bozeman
- 1 C60
- 1 CEM Leukemia Cells
- 1 Catalytic Bias
- 1 Cell Viability
- 1 Chromatin
- 1 Copper Binding
- 1 Cytidine Methylation
- 1 DNA Nanotechnology
- 1 DNA computation
- 1 DNA nanostructures
- 1 DSSC
- 1 Darwinian Evolution
- 1 Decorin Binding Protein
- 1 Dielectric constant
- 1 Dielectrophoresis
- 1 ELECTRON TRANSFER
- 1 EXCITATION ENERGY TRANSFER
- 1 Electron Transfer
- 1 Electron transport chain
- 1 Engineering
- 1 FRDA Lymphocytes
- 1 Fluorescence
- 1 Fluorescence Microscopy
- 1 Fluorescent Protein
- 1 Fucosylation
- 1 GFP
- 1 Glycans
- 1 Glycosaminoglycan
- 1 Glycosaminoglycan-binding protein
- 1 Green fluorescent protein
- 1 Hydrogen evolution
- 1 Hydrogenase
- 1 In vitro protein synthesis
- 1 Inorganic chemistry
- 1 Ion channels
- 1 Kaede
- 1 Lab-on-a-chip
- 1 Lyme disease
- 1 Marcus Theory
- 1 Medicine
- 1 Metal Nanoparticle
- 1 Methylene blue
- 1 Methylene violet
- 1 Microfluidics
- 1 Mitochondrial Disease
- 1 Molecular biology
- 1 Molecular chemistry
- 1 NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance)
- 1 Nanoscience
- 1 Nanotechnology
- 1 Nicotine
- 1 Nitrosomonas Europaea
- 1 Non-proteinogenic
- 1 Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy
- 1 Nucleosome
- 1 Oxygen Tolerance
- 1 PCNA
- 1 PHOTOSYSTEM I
- 1 PRIMARY CHARGE SEPARATION
- 1 Pharmaceutical sciences
- 1 Photoconversion
- 1 Photosystem
- 1 Photosystem I
- 1 Physical chemistry
- 1 Physics
- 1 Plasma/Serum
- 1 Pre-concentration
- 1 Protein Film Electrochemistry
- 1 Pyrimidoblamic acid
- 1 Pyrococcus furiosus
- 1 Quinones
- 1 REACTION CENTER
- 1 Reorganization Energy
- 1 Rosetta
- 1 SFX
- 1 Separation
- Dwarf Galaxies as Laboratories of Protogalaxy Physics: Canonical Star Formation Laws at Low Metallicity
- Evolutionary Genetics of CORL Proteins
- Social Skills and Executive Functioning in Children with PCDH-19
- Deep Domain Fusion for Adaptive Image Classification
- Software Defined Pulse-Doppler Radar for Over-The-Air Applications: The Joint Radar-Communications Experiment
The communication of genetic material with biomolecules has been a major interest in cancer biology research for decades. Among its different levels of involvement, DNA is known to be a target of several antitumor agents. Additionally, tissue specific interaction between macromolecules such as proteins and structurally important regions of DNA has been reported to define the onset of certain types of cancers. Illustrated in Chapter 1 is the general history of research on the interaction of DNA and anticancer drugs, most importantly different congener of bleomycin (BLM). Additionally, several synthetic analogues of bleomycin, including the structural components and functionalities, are …
- Contributors
- Roy, Basab, Hecht, Sidney M, Jones, Anne, et al.
- Created Date
- 2014
The ability to manipulate the interaction between small molecules and biological macromolecules towards the study of disease pathogenesis has become a very important part of research towards treatment options for various diseases. The work described here shows both the use of DNA oligonucleotides as carriers for a nicotine hapten small molecule, and the use of microsomes to study the stability of compounds derived to treat mitochondrial diseases. Nicotine addiction is a worldwide epidemic because nicotine is one of the most widely used addictive substances. It is linked to early death, typically in the form of heart or lung disease. A …
- Contributors
- Schmierer, Margaret Louise, Hecht, Sidney M, Allen, James, et al.
- Created Date
- 2016
In eukaryotes, DNA is packed in a highly condensed and hierarchically organized structure called chromatin, in which DNA tightly wraps around the histone octamer consisting of one histone 3-histone 4 (H3-H4) tetramer and two histone 2A- histone 2B (H2A-H2B) dimers with 147 base pairs in an almost two left handed turns. Almost all DNA dependent cellular processes, such as DNA duplication, transcription, DNA repair and recombination, take place in the chromatin form. Based on the critical importance of appropriate chromatin condensation, this thesis focused on the folding behavior of the nucleosome array reconstituted using different templates with various controllable factors …
- Contributors
- Fu, Qiang, Lindsay, Stuart M, Yan, Hao, et al.
- Created Date
- 2010
The bleomycins are a family of glycopeptide-derived antibiotics isolated from various Streptomyces species and have been the subject of much attention from the scientific community as a consequence of their antitumor activity. Bleomycin clinically and is an integral part of a number of combination chemotherapy regimens. It has previously been shown that bleomycin has the ability to selectively target tumor cells over their non-malignant counterparts. Pyrimidoblamic acid, the N-terminal metal ion binding domain of bleomycin is known to be the moiety that is responsible for O2 activation and the subsequent chemistry leading to DNA strand scission and overall antitumor activity. …
- Contributors
- Bozeman, Trevor, Hecht, Sidney M, Chaput, John, et al.
- Created Date
- 2013
A novel small metal-binding protein (SmbP), with only 93 residues and no similarity to other known proteins, has been isolated from the periplasm of Nitrosomonas europaea. It is characterized by its high percentage (17%) of histidines, a motif of ten repeats of seven residues, a four α-helix bundle structure, and a high binding affinity to about six equivalents of Cu2+. The goal of this study is to investigate the Cu2+ binding sites in SmbP and to understand how Cu2+ stabilizes the protein. Preliminary folding experiments indicated that Cu2+ greatly stabilizes SmbP. In this study, protein folding data from circular dichroism …
- Contributors
- Yan, Qin, Francisco, Wilson A, Allen, James, et al.
- Created Date
- 2010
The green fluorescent protein (GFP)-like fluorescent proteins play an important role for the color of reef-building corals. Different colors of extant coral fluorescent proteins (FPs) have evolved from a green ancestral protein. Interestingly, green-to-red photoconversion FPs (Kaede-type Red FPs) are only found in clade D from Scleractinia (Faviina suborder). Therefore, I focus on the evolution of Kaede-type FPs from Faviina suborder ancestral FP. A total of 13 mutations have been identified previously that recapitulate the evolution of Kaede-type red FPs from the ancestral green FP. To examine the effect of each mutation, total ten reconstructed FPs were analyzed and six …
- Contributors
- Kim, Hanseong, Wachter, Rebekka M, Fromme, Petra, et al.
- Created Date
- 2012
A major goal of synthetic biology is to recapitulate emergent properties of life. Despite a significant body of work, a longstanding question that remains to be answered is how such a complex system arose? In this dissertation, synthetic nucleic acid molecules with alternative sugar-phosphate backbones were investigated as potential ancestors of DNA and RNA. Threose nucleic acid (TNA) is capable of forming stable helical structures with complementary strands of itself and RNA. This provides a plausible mechanism for genetic information transfer between TNA and RNA. Therefore TNA has been proposed as a potential RNA progenitor. Using molecular evolution, functional sequences …
- Contributors
- Zhang, Su, Chaut, John C, Ghirlanda, Giovanna, et al.
- Created Date
- 2011
Glycans are monosaccharide-based heteropolymers that are found covalently attached to many different proteins and lipids and are ubiquitously displayed on the exterior surfaces of cells. Serum glycan composition and structure are well known to be altered in many different types of cancer. In fact, glycans represent a promising but only marginally accessed source of cancer markers. The approach used in this dissertation, which is referred to as “glycan node analysis”, is a molecularly bottom-up approach to plasma/serum (P/S) glycomics based on glycan linkage analysis that captures features such as α2-6 sialylation, β1-6 branching, and core fucosylation as single analytical signals. …
- Contributors
- Roshdiferdosi, Shadi, Borges, Chad R, Woodbury, Neal, et al.
- Created Date
- 2018
Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), a biopolymer well known for its role in preserving genetic information in biology, is now drawing great deal of interest from material scientists. Ease of synthesis, predictable molecular recognition via Watson-Crick base pairing, vast numbers of available chemical modifications, and intrinsic nanoscale size makes DNA a suitable material for the construction of a plethora of nanostructures that can be used as scaffold to organize functional molecules with nanometer precision. This dissertation focuses on DNA-directed organization of metallic nanoparticles into well-defined, discrete structures and using them to study photonic interaction between fluorophore and metal particle. Presented here are …
- Contributors
- Pal, Suchetan, Liu, Yan, Yan, Hao, et al.
- Created Date
- 2012
Nature is a master at organizing biomolecules in all intracellular processes, and researchers have conducted extensive research to understand the way enzymes interact with each other through spatial and orientation positioning, substrate channeling, compartmentalization, and more. DNA nanostructures of high programmability and complexity provide excellent scaffolds to arrange multiple molecular/macromolecular components at nanometer scale to construct interactive biomolecular complexes and networks. Due to the sequence specificity at different positions of the DNA origami nanostructures, spatially addressable molecular pegboard with a resolution of several nm (less than 10 nm) can be achieved. So far, DNA nanostructures can be used to build …
- Contributors
- Yang, Yuhe Renee, Yan, Hao, Liu, Yan, et al.
- Created Date
- 2016