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Hannah Tabakh

Microbiology Graduate Student

Education

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  • B.S. University of California, Berkeley

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Research Interests

Hannah received her BS in Microbial Biology in 2013. Her research interests are the molecular mechanisms of how bacteria adapt to, detoxify and evade toxic stressors in their environment. Her current project focuses on bacterial mechanisms of resistance to host-derived toxic molecules using the model intracellular pathogen Listeria monocytogenes.

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Email: htabakh@uw.edu

Phone: 206-616-0675

Publications

 

Rhodius, V.A., Segall-Shapiro T.H., D. Sharon, B.D., Ghodasara, A., Orlova, E., Tabakh, H., Burkhardt, D.H., Clancy, K., Peterson, T.C., Gross, C.A., and Voigt, C.A. (2013). “Design of orthogonal genetic switches based on a crosstalk map of σs, anti-σs, and promoters.” Molecular Systems Biology. 9:702.

The Department of Microbiology

The University of Washington

© 2016 by Joshua Woodward.

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