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    Armour Faculty

    Dale A. Webster, Ph.D.

    Research Professor of Biology
    Distinguished Professor of Biology

    Office: 396 Life Sciences Building
    Office Hours:
    Phone: 312.567.3491
    Fax: 312.567.3494
    Email: dale.webster@iit.edu
    Web:

    Expertise

    Education

    • B.S, University of Michigan
    • Ph.D, University of California, Berkeley

    Curriculum Vitae

    Research & Major Accomplishments

    Roles of heme proteins in bacterial respiration and terminal electron transport; biochemistry and molecular biology of bacterial hemoglobin and cytochromes; regulation of bacterial hemoglobin synthesis by oxygen; Na+ transport by respiratory enzymes; use of bacterial hemoglobin in biotechnology and bioremediation.

    Current Projects

    Awards/Honors

    Patents

    Books

    Selected Publications

    • Wei, M.-L., WEBSTER, D.A., and Stark, B.C. (1998) "Metabolic engineering of Serratia marcescens with the bacterial hemoglobin gene: alterations in fermentation pathways." Biotechnology and Bioengineering 59: 640-646.

    • Dikshit, K.L., Orii, Y., Navani, N., Patel, S., Huang, H.-Y., Stark, B.C., and WEBSTER, D.A. (1998) "Site-directed mutagenesis of bacterial hemoglobin: the role of glutamine (E7) in oxygen-binding in the distal heme pocket." Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 349: 161-166.

    • Park, C., Moon, J.-Y., Cokic, P., and WEBSTER, D.A. (1996) "Na+-translocating cytochrome bo from Vitreoscilla: some parameters of its Na+ pumping and orientation in synthetic vesicles." (1996) Biochemistry 35: 11895-11900.

    • Efiok, B.J.S. and D.A. WEBSTER (1992) "Sodium-coupled ATP synthesis in the bacterium, Vitreoscilla." Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics 292: 102-106.

    • Dikshit, K.L., and WEBSTER, D.A.(1988) "Cloning, characterization and expression of the bacterial globin gene from Vitreoscilla in Escherichia coli." Gene 70: 377-386.

    Professional Society Memberships

    Editorial Board Service

    Professional Society Service

    Grants

    Community Service

    Jialing Xiang
    Department of Biological, Chemical, and Physical Sciences

    Cell death is a normal body function. Each day, cells repair themselves or commit suicide and die. About 15 years ago, researchers began to look more closely at it for clues to diseases involving abnormal cell death, like cancer. more...

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