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Dive into the research topics where Todd W. Lane is active.

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Featured researches published by Todd W. Lane.


Journal of Applied Phycology | 2009

Triacylglycerol accumulation and profiling in the model diatoms Thalassiosira pseudonana and Phaeodactylum tricornutum (Baccilariophyceae) during starvation

Eizadora T. Yu; Frank Zendejas; Pamela Lane; Sara P. Gaucher; Blake A. Simmons; Todd W. Lane

Although substantial economic barriers exist, marine diatoms such as Thalassiosira pseudonana and Phaeodactylum tricornutum hold promise as feedstock for biodiesel because of their ability to manufacture and store triacylglycerols (TAGs). The recent sequencing of these two marine diatom genomes by the United States Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute and the development of improved systems for genetic manipulation should allow a more systematic approach to understanding and maximizing TAG production. However, in order to best utilize these genomes and genetic tools, we must first gain a deeper understanding of the nutrient-mediated regulation of TAG anabolism. By determining both the yield and molecular species distribution of TAGs we will, in the future, be able to fully characterize the effects of genetic manipulation. Here, we lay the groundwork for understanding TAG production in T. pseudonana and P. tricornutum, as a function of nitrate and silicate depletion. Diatoms were starved of either nitrate or silicate, and TAGs were extracted with hexane from lyophilized samples taken at various time intervals following starvation. The timing of TAG production and the relative abundance of TAGs were estimated by fluorescence spectroscopy using Nile red and the total yield per biomass determined by gravimetric assay. TAGs were analyzed using thin layer chromatography, gas chromatography–mass spectrometry, and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry to identify the major TAG species produced during the growth curve. Under our conditions, the TAG yield from T. pseudonana is about 14–18% of total dry weight. The TAG yield from P. tricornutum is about 14% of total dry weight. Silicate-starved T. pseudonana accumulated an average of 24% more TAGs than those starved for nitrate; however, the chemotypes of the TAGs produced were generally similar regardless of the starvation condition employed.


Nature | 1999

Modulation of cadmium uptake in phytoplankton by seawater CO2 concentration

Jay T. Cullen; Todd W. Lane; François M. M. Morel; Robert M. Sherrell

The vertical distribution of cadmium in the ocean is characteristic of an algal nutrient, although an underlying physiological basis remains undiscovered. The strong correlation between dissolved cadmium and phosphorus concentrations in sea water has nevertheless been exploited for reconstructing past nutrient distributions in the ocean. In culture experiments, the addition of cadmium accelerates the growth of some marine phytoplankton and increases the activity of carbonic anhydrase, normally a zinc-based metalloenzyme that is involved in inorganic carbon acquisition. Here we show that the concentration of a Cd-carbonic-anhydrase—distinct from Zn-carbonic-anhydrases—in a marine diatom is regulated by the CO2 partial pressure (pCO2) as well as by the zinc concentration. Field studies in intensely productive coastal waters off central California demonstrate that cadmium content in natural phytoplankton populations similarly increases as surface-water pCO2 decreases. Incubation experiments confirm that cadmium uptake by natural phytoplankton is inversely related to seawater pCO2 and zinc concentration. We thus propose that biological removal of cadmium from ocean surface waters is related to its utilization in carbonic anhydrase, and is regulated by dissolved CO2 and zinc concentrations. The dissolved seawater Cd/P ratio would therefore vary with atmospheric pCO2, complicating the use of cadmium as a tracer of past nutrient concentrations in the upper ocean.


The EMBO Journal | 1995

An essential single domain response regulator required for normal cell division and differentiation in Caulobacter crescentus.

Gregory B. Hecht; Todd W. Lane; Ohta N; Sommer Jm; Austin Newton

Signal transduction pathways mediated by sensor histidine kinases and cognate response regulators control a variety of physiological processes in response to environmental conditions. Here we show that in Caulobacter crescentus these systems also play essential roles in the regulation of polar morphogenesis and cell division. Previous studies have implicated histidine kinase genes pleC and divJ in the regulation of these developmental events. We now report that divK encodes an essential, cell cycle‐regulated homolog of the CheY/Spo0F subfamily and present evidence that this protein is a cognate response regulator of the histidine kinase PleC. The purified kinase domain of PleC, like that of DivJ, can serve as an efficient phosphodonor to DivK and as a phospho‐DivK phosphatase. Based on these and earlier genetic results we propose that PleC and DivK are members of a signal transduction pathway that couples motility and stalk formation to completion of a late cell division cycle event. Gene disruption experiments and the filamentous phenotype of the conditional divK341 mutant reveal that DivK also functions in an essential signal transduction pathway required for cell division, apparently in response to another histidine kinase. We suggest that phosphotransfer mediated by these two‐component signal transduction systems may represent a general mechanism regulating cell differentiation and cell division in response to successive cell cycle checkpoints.


Journal of Phycology | 1997

CARBONIC ANHYDRASE IN THE MARINE DIATOM THALASSIOSIRA WEISSFLOGII (BACILLARIOPHYCEAE)1

Samantha B. Roberts; Todd W. Lane; François M. M. Morel

The zinc metalloenzyme carbonic anhydrase plays a critical role in inorganic carbon acquisition in marine diatoms, thus conferring on zinc a key role in oceanic carbon cycling. As a first step in determining the location and function of carbonic anhydrase (CA) in Bacillariophyceae, we purified and partially sequenced CA from T. weissflogii (Gru) Fryxell et Hasle (TWCA1) and cloned the corresponding cDNA (twca1). The twca1 sequence is different from other known algal carbonic anhydrase genes, and encodes a protein of roughly 34 kDa. The amino terminal amino acids sequenced from purified TWCA1 are 72 residues downstream of the putative starting methionine predicted by twca1. This difference may be due to the presence of a short‐lived signal sequence designed to guide the enzyme to the correct cellular location. The absence of any homology between TWCA1 and previously sequenced CAs from Chlorophyceae may indicate either convergent evolution or that carbon acquisition represents a fundamental physiological difference among algal phyla.


Analytical Chemistry | 2008

Microfluidic-Based Cell Sorting of Francisella tularensis Infected Macrophages Using Optical Forces

Thomas D. Perroud; Julia N. Kaiser; Jay C. Sy; Todd W. Lane; Catherine Branda; Anup K. Singh; Kamlesh D. Patel

We have extended the principle of optical tweezers as a noninvasive technique to actively sort hydrodynamically focused cells based on their fluorescence signal in a microfluidic device. This micro fluorescence-activated cell sorter (microFACS) uses an infrared laser to laterally deflect cells into a collection channel. Green-labeled macrophages were sorted from a 40/60 ratio mixture at a throughput of 22 cells/s over 30 min achieving a 93% sorting purity and a 60% recovery yield. To rule out potential photoinduced cell damage during optical deflection, we investigated the response of mouse macrophage to brief exposures (<4 ms) of focused 1064-nm laser light (9.6 W at the sample). We found no significant difference in viability, cell proliferation, activation state, and functionality between infrared-exposed and unexposed cells. Activation state was measured by the phosphorylation of ERK and nuclear translocation of NF-kappaB, while functionality was assessed in a similar manner, but after a lipopolysaccharide challenge. To demonstrate the selective nature of optical sorting, we isolated a subpopulation of macrophages highly infected with the fluorescently labeled pathogen Francisella tularensis subsp. novicida. A total of 10,738 infected cells were sorted at a throughput of 11 cells/s with 93% purity and 39% recovery.


Functional Plant Biology | 2002

Acquisition of inorganic carbon by the marine diatom Thalassiosira weissflogii

François M. M. Morel; Elizabeth H. Cox; Anne M. L. Kraepiel; Todd W. Lane; Allen J. Milligan; Irene Schaperdoth; John R. Reinfelder; Philippe D. Tortell

Recent data on the physiology of inorganic carbon acquisition by the model marine diatom Thalassiosira weissflogii (Grunow) demonstrate the importance of the catalytic equilibration of HCO3-and CO2by carbonic anhydrases located in the periplasm and in the cytoplasm. These enzymes can use Zn, Co or Cd as their metal centre, and their activity increases at low ambient CO2. The silica frustule provides buffering for extracellular CA activity, The transmembrane transport of CO2 may occur by passive diffusion. Under CO2 limitation, the cytoplasmic HCO3-is used to form malate and oxaloacetic acid via phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase. It appears that subsequent decarboxylation of these compounds in the chloroplast regenerates CO2 near the site of Rubisco, and thus provides the organism with an effective unicellular C4 photosynthetic pathway. These results, together with other published data, bring up two major questions regarding inorganic carbon acquisition in diatoms: What is the major species of inorganic carbon (CO2 or HCO3-) transported across the membrane under natural conditions? And what is the form of carbon (inorganic or organic) accumulated by the cells?


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2014

Parasites in algae mass culture

Laura T. Carney; Todd W. Lane

Parasites are now known to be ubiquitous across biological systems and can play an important role in modulating algal populations. However, there is a lack of extensive information on their role in artificial ecosystems such as algal production ponds and photobioreactors. Parasites have been implicated in the demise of algal blooms. Because individual mass culture systems often tend to be unialgal and a select few algal species are in wide scale application, there is an increased potential for parasites to have a devastating effect on commercial scale monoculture. As commercial algal production continues to expand with a widening variety of applications, including biofuel, food and pharmaceuticals, the parasites associated with algae will become of greater interest and potential economic impact. A number of important algal parasites have been identified in algal mass culture systems in the last few years and this number is sure to grow as the number of commercial algae ventures increases. Here, we review the research that has identified and characterized parasites infecting mass cultivated algae, the techniques being proposed and or developed to control them, and the potential impact of parasites on the future of the algal biomass industry.


PLOS ONE | 2013

A Microfluidic DNA Library Preparation Platform for Next-Generation Sequencing

Hanyoup Kim; Mais J. Jebrail; Anupama Sinha; Zachary W. Bent; Owen David Solberg; Kelly P. Williams; Stanley A. Langevin; Ronald F. Renzi; James L. Van De Vreugde; Robert J. Meagher; Joseph S. Schoeniger; Todd W. Lane; Steven S. Branda; Michael S. Bartsch; Kamlesh D. Patel

Next-generation sequencing (NGS) is emerging as a powerful tool for elucidating genetic information for a wide range of applications. Unfortunately, the surging popularity of NGS has not yet been accompanied by an improvement in automated techniques for preparing formatted sequencing libraries. To address this challenge, we have developed a prototype microfluidic system for preparing sequencer-ready DNA libraries for analysis by Illumina sequencing. Our system combines droplet-based digital microfluidic (DMF) sample handling with peripheral modules to create a fully-integrated, sample-in library-out platform. In this report, we use our automated system to prepare NGS libraries from samples of human and bacterial genomic DNA. E. coli libraries prepared on-device from 5 ng of total DNA yielded excellent sequence coverage over the entire bacterial genome, with >99% alignment to the reference genome, even genome coverage, and good quality scores. Furthermore, we produced a de novo assembly on a previously unsequenced multi-drug resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae strain BAA-2146 (KpnNDM). The new method described here is fast, robust, scalable, and automated. Our device for library preparation will assist in the integration of NGS technology into a wide variety of laboratories, including small research laboratories and clinical laboratories.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2002

Protein Sequences and Cellular Factors Required for Polar Localization of a Histidine Kinase in Caulobacter crescentus

Stephen A. Sciochetti; Todd W. Lane; Noriko Ohta; Austin Newton

The Caulobacter crescentus sensor kinase DivJ is required for an early cell division step and localizes at the base of the newly formed stalk during the G1-to-S-phase transition when the protein is synthesized. To identify sequences within DivJ that are required for polar localization, we examined the ability of mutagenized DivJ sequences to direct localization of the green fluorescent protein. The effects of overlapping C-terminal deletions of DivJ established that the N-terminal 326 residues, which do not contain the kinase catalytic domain, are sufficient for polar localization of the fusion protein. Internal deletions mapped a shorter sequence between residues 251 and 312 of the cytoplasmic linker that are required for efficient localization of this sensor kinase. PleC kinase mutants, which are blocked in the swarmer-to-stalked-cell transition and form flagellated, nonmotile cells, also fail to localize DivJ. To dissect the cellular factors involved in establishing subcellular polarity, we have examined DivJ localization in a pleC mutant suppressed by the sokA301 allele of ctrA and in a pleD mutant, both of which display a supermotile, stalkless phenotype. The observation that these Mot(+) strains localize DivJ to a single cell pole indicate that localization may be closely coupled to the gain of motility and that normal stalk formation is not required. We have also observed, however, that filamentous parC mutant cells, which are defective in DNA segregation and the completion of cell separation, are motile and still fail to localize DivJ to the new cell pole. These results suggest that formation of new sites for DivJ localization depends on events associated with the completion of cell separation as well as the gain of motility. Analysis of PleC and PleD mutants also provides insights into the function of the His-Asp proteins in cell cycle regulation. Thus, the ability of the sokA301 allele of ctrA to bypass the nonmotile phenotype of the pleC null mutation provides evidence that the PleC kinase controls cell motility by initiating a signal transduction pathway regulating activity of the global response regulator CtrA. Analysis of the pleD mutant cell cycle demonstrates that disruption of the swarmer-to-stalked-cell developmental sequence does not affect the asymmetric organization of the Caulobacter cell cycle.


RNA Biology | 2013

Peregrine: A rapid and unbiased method to produce strand-specific RNA-Seq libraries from small quantities of starting material.

Stanley A. Langevin; Zachary W. Bent; Owen David Solberg; Deanna Joy Curtis; Pamela Lane; Kelly P. Williams; Joseph S. Schoeniger; Anupama Sinha; Todd W. Lane; Steven S. Branda

Use of second generation sequencing (SGS) technologies for transcriptional profiling (RNA-Seq) has revolutionized transcriptomics, enabling measurement of RNA abundances with unprecedented specificity and sensitivity and the discovery of novel RNA species. Preparation of RNA-Seq libraries requires conversion of the RNA starting material into cDNA flanked by platform-specific adaptor sequences. Each of the published methods and commercial kits currently available for RNA-Seq library preparation suffers from at least one major drawback, including long processing times, large starting material requirements, uneven coverage, loss of strand information and high cost. We report the development of a new RNA-Seq library preparation technique that produces representative, strand-specific RNA-Seq libraries from small amounts of starting material in a fast, simple and cost-effective manner. Additionally, we have developed a new quantitative PCR-based assay for precisely determining the number of PCR cycles to perform for optimal enrichment of the final library, a key step in all SGS library preparation workflows.

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Pamela Lane

Sandia National Laboratories

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Laura T. Carney

Sandia National Laboratories

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Ryan W. Davis

Sandia National Laboratories

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Kamlesh D. Patel

Sandia National Laboratories

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Owen David Solberg

Sandia National Laboratories

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Steven S. Branda

Sandia National Laboratories

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Kelly P. Williams

Sandia National Laboratories

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Deanna Joy Curtis

Sandia National Laboratories

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