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Dive into the research topics where Taraka Dale is active.

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Featured researches published by Taraka Dale.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2005

Idiosyncratic tuning of tRNAs to achieve uniform ribosome binding

Mikołaj Olejniczak; Taraka Dale; Richard P. Fahlman; Olke C. Uhlenbeck

The binding of seven tRNA anticodons to their complementary codons on Escherichia coli ribosomes was substantially impaired, as compared with the binding of their natural tRNAs, when they were transplanted into tRNA2Ala. An analysis of chimeras composed of tRNA2Ala and various amounts of either tRNA3Gly or tRNA2Arg indicates that the presence of the parental 32-38 nucleotide pair is sufficient to restore ribosome binding of the transplanted anticodons. Furthermore, mutagenesis of tRNA2Ala showed that its highly conserved A32-U38 pair serves to weaken ribosome affinity. We propose that this negative binding determinant is used to offset the very tight codon-anticodon interaction of tRNA2Ala. This suggests that each tRNA sequence has coevolved with its anticodon to tune ribosome affinity to a value that is the same for all tRNAs.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2008

Specificity of the ribosomal A site for aminoacyl-tRNAs

Taraka Dale; Richard P. Fahlman; Mikołaj Olejniczak; Olke C. Uhlenbeck

Although some experiments suggest that the ribosome displays specificity for the identity of the esterified amino acid of its aminoacyl-tRNA substrate, a study measuring dissociation rates of several misacylated tRNAs containing the GAC anticodon from the A site showed little indication for such specificity. In this article, an expanded set of misacylated tRNAs and two 2′-deoxynucleotide-substituted mRNAs are used to demonstrate the presence of a lower threshold in koff values for aa-tRNA binding to the A site. When a tRNA binds sufficiently well to reach this threshold, additional stabilizing effects due to the esterified amino acid or changes in tRNA sequence are not observed. However, specificity for different amino acid side chains and the tRNA body is observed when tRNA binding is sufficiently weaker than this threshold. We propose that uniform aa-tRNA binding to the A site may be a consequence of a conformational change in the ribosome, induced by the presence of the appropriate combination of contributions from the anticodon, amino acid and tRNA body.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2016

Discovery of Bioactive Metabolites in Biofuel Microalgae That Offer Protection against Predatory Bacteria.

Christopher E. Bagwell; Amanda Abernathy; Remy Barnwell; Charles E. Milliken; Peter A. Noble; Taraka Dale; Kevin R. Beauchesne; Peter D. R. Moeller

Microalgae could become an important resource for addressing increasing global demand for food, energy, and commodities while helping to reduce atmospheric greenhouse gasses. Even though Chlorophytes are generally regarded safe for human consumption, there is still much we do not understand about the metabolic and biochemical potential of microscopic algae. The aim of this study was to evaluate biofuel candidate strains of Chlorella and Scenedesmus for the potential to produce bioactive metabolites when grown under nutrient depletion regimes intended to stimulate production of triacylglycerides. Strain specific combinations of macro- and micro-nutrient restricted growth media did stimulate neutral lipid accumulation by microalgal cultures. However, cultures that were restricted for iron consistently and reliably tested positive for cytotoxicity by in vivo bioassays. The addition of iron back to these cultures resulted in the disappearance of the bioactive components by LC/MS fingerprinting and loss of cytotoxicity by in vivo bioassay. Incomplete NMR characterization of the most abundant cytotoxic fractions suggested that small molecular weight peptides and glycosides could be responsible for Chlorella cytotoxicity. Experiments were conducted to determine if the bioactive metabolites induced by Fe-limitation in Chlorella sp. cultures would elicit protection against Vampirovibrio chlorellavorus, an obligate predator of Chlorella. Introduction of V. chlorellavorus resulted in a 72% decrease in algal biomass in the experimental controls after 7 days. Conversely, only slight losses of algal biomass were measured for the iron limited Chlorella cultures (0–9%). This study demonstrates a causal linkage between iron bioavailability and bioactive metabolite production in strains of Chlorella and Scenedesmus. Further study of this phenomenon could contribute to the development of new strategies to extend algal production cycles in open, outdoor systems while ensuring the protection of biomass from predatory losses.


Metabolic Engineering Communications | 2018

A protocatechuate biosensor for Pseudomonas putida KT2440 via promoter and protein evolution

Ramesh K. Jha; Jeremy M. Bingen; Christopher W. Johnson; Theresa L. Kern; Payal Khanna; Daniel S. Trettel; Charlie E. M. Strauss; Gregg T. Beckham; Taraka Dale

Robust fluorescence-based biosensors are emerging as critical tools for high-throughput strain improvement in synthetic biology. Many biosensors are developed in model organisms where sophisticated synthetic biology tools are also well established. However, industrial biochemical production often employs microbes with phenotypes that are advantageous for a target process, and biosensors may fail to directly transition outside the host in which they are developed. In particular, losses in sensitivity and dynamic range of sensing often occur, limiting the application of a biosensor across hosts. Here we demonstrate the optimization of an Escherichia coli-based biosensor in a robust microbial strain for the catabolism of aromatic compounds, Pseudomonas putida KT2440, through a generalizable approach of modulating interactions at the protein-DNA interface in the promoter and the protein-protein dimer interface. The high-throughput biosensor optimization approach demonstrated here is readily applicable towards other allosteric regulators.


Molecular Cell | 2004

Uniform Binding of Aminoacylated Transfer RNAs to the Ribosomal A and P Sites

Richard P. Fahlman; Taraka Dale; Olke C. Uhlenbeck


Biochemistry | 2004

The affinity of elongation factor Tu for an aminoacyl-tRNA is modulated by the esterified amino acid

Taraka Dale; Lee E. Sanderson; Olke C. Uhlenbeck


Algal Research-Biomass Biofuels and Bioproducts | 2014

Getting to low-cost algal biofuels: A monograph on conventional and cutting-edge harvesting and extraction technologies

J. E. Coons; Daniel M. Kalb; Taraka Dale; Babetta L. Marrone


Trends in Biochemical Sciences | 2005

Amino acid specificity in translation.

Taraka Dale; Olke C. Uhlenbeck


Biochemistry | 1998

Stability of RNA hairpins closed by wobble base pairs.

Matthew R. Giese; Kelly Betschart; Taraka Dale; Cheryl K. Riley; Carrie Rowan; Kimberly J. Sprouse; Martin J. Serra


Algal Research-Biomass Biofuels and Bioproducts | 2017

Review of the algal biology program within the National Alliance for Advanced Biofuels and Bioproducts

Clifford J. Unkefer; Richard T. Sayre; Jon K. Magnuson; Daniel B. Anderson; Ivan Baxter; Ian K. Blaby; Judith K. Brown; Michael Carleton; Rose Ann Cattolico; Taraka Dale; Timothy P. Devarenne; C. Meghan Downes; Susan K. Dutcher; David T. Fox; Ursula Goodenough; Jan G. Jaworski; Jonathan E. Holladay; David M. Kramer; Andrew T. Koppisch; Mary S. Lipton; Babetta L. Marrone; Margaret McCormick; István Molnár; John B. Mott; Kimberly L. Ogden; Ellen A. Panisko; Matteo Pellegrini; Juergen Polle; James W. Richardson; Martin Sabarsky

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Babetta L. Marrone

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Daniel M. Kalb

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Daniel B. Anderson

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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John B. Mott

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Richard T. Sayre

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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