Graduate Students |
Postdoctoral Fellows |
Research Scientists |
Former Lab Members |
|
Julia Dooher |
Kevin Klein |
Michael Newman |
Lorne Walker |
Patti Kiser |
Mona Dellos |
Jessica Wisocky |
Chaowei Tsai |
Garrett Tomblingson
Julia Dooher
Bio:
Julia Dooher grew up in Melrose, MA and received her BS in Biology, Magna
cum Laude, from Tufts University. As an undergraduate, she worked in the laboratory
of Tom Gilmore at
Boston University, and was a recipient of an NSF undergraduate summer research
award and Lemelson Fellowship from Hampshire College. As a graduate student
in the Lingappa Lab, Julia received an NSF graduate fellowship, an ARCS Foundation
award, a UW Magnuson Scholarship, and the 2005 UW Pathobiology Dept. Outstanding
Student Award. Julia was awarded her PhD from the University of Washington
Dept. of Pathobiology in November 2005.
Julia has a long-standing interest in photography, and her photographs of
landscapes taken on a cross country trip and a trip to Europe have been featured
in Bricolage, the UW Literary and Arts Journal.
Research:
Julia spearheaded a number of new directions in the Lingappa Lab. She demonstrated
that Gag polypeptides of diverse primate lentiviruses associate with ABCE1 in
primate cells, even though these Gag proteins have limited sequence homology.
Julia also used apyrase, an enzyme that hydrolyzes ATP, to trap elusive capsid
assembly intermediates, allowing such intermediates to be identified biochemically
in cells for the first time (Dooher and Lingappa 2004).
More recently, Julia used a pulse-chase labeling approach to demonstrate that
in primate cells HIV-1 Gag enters ABCE1-containing complexes within minutes
after synthesis and exits these complexes just before virus maturation and
release begins. Julia’s pulse-chase studies of HIV-1 mutants suggest that when
progression of Gag through ABCE1-containing assembly intermediates is slowed,
virus release is also delayed, suggesting that viral-host interactions can
alter virion production. Along with Bobbie Schneider at the FHCRC
Electron Microscopy lab, Julia piloted an immunogold labeling electron
microscopy techniques to confirm that HIV-1 Gag colocalizes with ABCE1 at sites
of assembly at the plasma membrane (Dooher, Schneider, Reed and Lingappa 2007).
Julia also initiated a project to study how highly pathogenic viral variants may have evolved to utilize ABCE1 more efficiently than less pathogenic isolates from which they are derived.
Publications:
- Wang Y, Dooher JE, Koedood Zhao M, Gilmore TD. Characterization of mouse
Trip6: a putative intracellular signaling protein. Gene. 1999 Jul 8;234(2): 403-9.
- Barkett M, Dooher JE, Lemonnier L, Simmons L, Scarpati JN, Wang Y,
Gilmore TD. Three mutations in v-Rel render it resistant to cleavage
by cell-death protease caspase-3. Biochem Biophys Acta. 2001 Apr 3;
1526(1):25-36.
- Dooher, J. E. and J. R. Lingappa. Cell-free capsid assembly of primate
lentiviruses from three different lineages. Journal of Medical Primatology,
33: 272-280, 2004.
[Abstract]
- Dooher, J. E., M. Pineda, J. Overbaugh, and J. R. Lingappa.
Characterization of virus infectivity and cell-free capsid assembly of
SIVmneCL8 and SIVmac239. Journal of Medical Primatology, 33: 262-271, 2004.
[Abstract]
- Dooher, J. E. and J. R. Lingappa. Cell-free capsid assembly of primate
lentiviruses from three different lineages. Journal of Medical Primatology,
33: 272-280, 2004.
[Abstract]
- Dooher JE, Lingappa JR. Conservation of a step-wise, energy-sensitive
pathway involving HP68 for assembly of primate lentiviral capsids in cells. Journal of Virology,
78: 1645-1656, 2004. [Abstract]
- Lingappa, J. R., M. A. Newman, K. C. Klein, and J. E. Dooher. Comparing
capsid assembly of primate lentiviruses and hepatitis B virus using
cell-free systems. Virology 333: 114-123, 2005.
[Abstract ]
- Lingappa JR, Dooher JE, Newman MA, Kiser PK, Klein KC. Basic residues in the nucleocapsid domain of gag are required for interaction of HIV-1 gag with ABCE1 (HP68), a cellular protein important for HIV-1 capsid assembly. J Biol Chem. 2005 Feb 17;281(7):3773-84. [Abstract]
- Dooher, Julia E., Schneider, Bobbie L., Reed, Jonathan C. & Lingappa, Jaisri R. (2006)
Host ABCE1 is at plasma membrane HIV assembly sites and its dissociation from Gag is linked to subsequent events of virus production.
Traffic. 2007 Mar; 8(3):195-211[Abstract]
Michael Newman 
Bio:
Michael Newman was a member of the Lingappa lab from 2003 – 2006, and obtained his M.S. degree from the Dept. of Pathobiology in June 2006.
Publications:
- Lingappa JR, Dooher JE, Newman MA, Kiser PK, Klein KC. Basic residues in the nucleocapsid domain of Gag are required for interaction of HIV-1 Gag with ABCE1 (HP68), a cellular protein important for HIV-1 capsid assembly. J Biol Chem. 2006 Feb 17;281(7):3773-84. [Abstract]
- Lingappa, J. R., M. A. Newman, K. C. Klein, and J. E. Dooher. Comparing
capsid assembly of primate lentiviruses and hepatitis B virus using
cell-free systems. Virology 333: 114-123, 2005.
[Abstract ]
Patti Kiser 
Bio:
Patti Kiser was a member of the Lingappa lab from 2000 to 2003, and obtained her M.S. degree from the Dept. of Pathobiology in June 2003.
Patti's Publications with the Lingappa Lab:
- Lingappa JR, Dooher JE, Newman MA, Kiser PK, Klein KC. Basic residues in the nucleocapsid domain of gag are required for interaction of HIV-1 gag with ABCE1 (HP68), a cellular protein important for HIV-1 capsid assembly. J Biol Chem. 2005 Feb 17;281(7):3773-84. [Abstract]
- Zimmerman C, Klein KC, Kiser PK, Singh AR,
Firestein BL, Riba SC, Lingappa JR. Identification of a host protein essential for
assembly of immature HIV-1 capsids. Nature. 415(6867): 88-92, Jan 2002
[Abstract]
[PDF]
Lorne Walker 
Bio:
Lorne Walker graduated from UW in June 2002 with a double major in Biochemistry and Applied and Computational Mathematical Sciences. He was a technician in the Lingappa lab from 2002 – 2005 and was involved in a wide variety of projects. He is currently an MD PhD student in the UC San Diego MSTP program.
Publications:
- Thielen BK, Klein KC, Walker LW, Rieck M, Buckner JH, Tomblingson GW, and Lingappa JR. T cells contain an RNase-insensitive inhibitor of APOBEC3G deaminase activity. PLoS Pathogens, accepted June 2007.
Mona Dellos 
Bio:
Mona Dellos worked in the Lingappa lab while she was an undergraduate at UW. She worked closely with Kevin Klein, a graduate student in the lab, on the assembly of Hepatitis C virus. Mona is now a member of the Lagunoff Lab in the Dept. of Microbiology at UW.
Publications:
- Klein, K. C., S. R. Dellos, and J. R. Lingappa. Identification of residues in the core protein that are critical for assembly of hepatitis C virus capsids using a cell-free system. Journal of Virology. 2005 Jun;79(11):6814-26. Erratum in: J Virol. 2005 Aug;79(15):10098.
[
Abstract]
Jessica Wisocky 
Bio:
Jessica Wisocky worked as a lab helper in the Lingappa Lab in 2005.
Chaowei Tsai 
Bio:
Chaowei grew up in Taiwan and moved to Washington with his family in the summer of 1997. He is currently an undergraduate at the University of Washington, majoring in Microbiology and Biochemistry. He was a technician with the Lingappa Lab in 2005.
Garrett Tomblingson
photo by MV Santos
Bio:
Garrett was a research technician in the Lingappa Lab between August 2005 and June 2007.
Publications:
- Thielen BK, Klein KC, Walker LW, Rieck M, Buckner JH, Tomblingson GW, and Lingappa JR. T cells contain an RNase-insensitive inhibitor of APOBEC3G deaminase activity. PLoS Pathogens, accepted June 2007.

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