David Savage

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Name: Savage, David
Organization: University of California, Berkeley , USA
Department: USADepartment of Chemistry
Title: (PhD)

TOPICS

Co-reporter:Rayka Yokoo;Rachel D. Hood;David F. Savage
Photosynthesis Research 2015 Volume 126( Issue 1) pp:33-46
Publication Date(Web):2015 October
DOI:10.1007/s11120-014-0049-x
Cyanobacteria are a diverse bacterial phylum whose members possess a high degree of ultrastructural organization and unique gene regulatory mechanisms. Unraveling this complexity will require the use of live-cell fluorescence microscopy, but is impeded by the inherent fluorescent background associated with light-harvesting pigments and the need to feed photosynthetic cells light. Here, we outline a roadmap for overcoming these challenges. Specifically, we show that although basic cyanobacterial biology creates challenging experimental constraints, these restrictions can be mitigated by the careful choice of fluorophores and microscope instrumentation. Many of these choices are motivated by recent successful live-cell studies. We therefore also highlight how live-cell imaging has advanced our understanding of bacterial microcompartments, circadian rhythm, and the organization and segregation of the bacterial nucleoid.
Co-reporter:Walter Bonacci;Poh K. Teng;Bruno Afonso;Henrike Niederholtmeyer;Patricia Grob;David F. Savage;Pamela A. Silver
PNAS 2012 Volume 109 (Issue 2 ) pp:478-483
Publication Date(Web):2012-01-10
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1108557109
Bacterial microcompartments are proteinaceous complexes that catalyze metabolic pathways in a manner reminiscent of organelles. Although microcompartment structure is well understood, much less is known about their assembly and function in vivo. We show here that carboxysomes, CO2-fixing microcompartments encoded by 10 genes, can be heterologously produced in Escherichia coli. Expression of carboxysomes in E. coli resulted in the production of icosahedral complexes similar to those from the native host. In vivo, the complexes were capable of both assembling with carboxysomal proteins and fixing CO2. Characterization of purified synthetic carboxysomes indicated that they were well formed in structure, contained the expected molecular components, and were capable of fixing CO2 in vitro. In addition, we verify association of the postulated pore-forming protein CsoS1D with the carboxysome and show how it may modulate function. We have developed a genetic system capable of producing modular carbon-fixing microcompartments in a heterologous host. In doing so, we lay the groundwork for understanding these elaborate protein complexes and for the synthetic biological engineering of self-assembling molecular structures.
Co-reporter:David Savage, Wenjun Zhang
Current Opinion in Chemical Biology (December 2016) Volume 35() pp:A1-A3
Publication Date(Web):December 2016
DOI:10.1016/j.cbpa.2016.11.003
Co-reporter:Stacy-Anne Morgan, Dana C Nadler, Rayka Yokoo, David F Savage
Current Opinion in Chemical Biology (December 2016) Volume 35() pp:150-158
Publication Date(Web):December 2016
DOI:10.1016/j.cbpa.2016.09.020
Guanosine5'-(tetrahydrogen triphosphate), 3'-(trihydrogen diphosphate)
N-CYCLOPROPYL-3-PROPYL-2-OXIRANECARBOXAMIDE
Hydrogen cation
(S)-2-Amino-4-(methylselanyl)butanoic acid
Guanosine5'-(tetrahydrogen triphosphate)