Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Antje Breitenstein is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Antje Breitenstein.


Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2004

Electric chips for rapid detection and quantification of nucleic acids

Magdalena Gabig-Cimińska; Anders Holmgren; H Andresen; K Bundvig Barken; Mogens Wümpelmann; Jörg Albers; Rainer Hintsche; Antje Breitenstein; Peter Neubauer; Marcin Los; Agata Czyż; Grzegorz Węgrzyn; G Silfversparre; Britta Jürgen; Thomas Schweder; Sven-Olof Enfors

A silicon chip-based electric detector coupled to bead-based sandwich hybridization (BBSH) is presented as an approach to perform rapid analysis of specific nucleic acids. A microfluidic platform incorporating paramagnetic beads with immobilized capture probes is used for the bio-recognition steps. The protocol involves simultaneous sandwich hybridization of a single-stranded nucleic acid target with the capture probe on the beads and with a detection probe in the reaction solution, followed by enzyme labeling of the detection probe, enzymatic reaction, and finally, potentiometric measurement of the enzyme product at the chip surface. Anti-DIG-alkaline phosphatase conjugate was used for the enzyme labeling of the DIG-labeled detection probe. p-Aminophenol phosphate (pAPP) was used as a substrate. The enzyme reaction product, p-aminophenol (pAP), is oxidized at the anode of the chip to quinoneimine that is reduced back to pAP at the cathode. The cycling oxidation and reduction of these compounds result in a current producing a characteristic signal that can be related to the concentration of the analyte. The performance of the different steps in the assay was characterized using in vitro synthesized RNA oligonucleotides and then the instrument was used for analysis of 16S rRNA in Escherichia coli extract. The assay time depends on the sensitivity required. Artificial RNA target and 16S rRNA, in amounts ranging from 10(11) to 10(10) molecules, were assayed within 25 min and 4 h, respectively.


International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 2002

Reclassification of Clostridium hydroxybenzoicum as Sedimentibacter hydroxybenzoicus gen. nov., comb. nov., and description of Sedimentibacter saalensis sp. nov..

Antje Breitenstein; Juergen Wiegel; Claus Haertig; Norbert Weiss; Jan R. Andreesen; Ute Lechner

Strain ZF2T, isolated from freshwater sediment, is a motile, rod-shaped, gram-positive, endospore-forming, amino acid- and pyruvate-utilizing, anaerobic bacterium. It requires yeast extract for growth. Carbohydrates are not utilized. The optimal temperature and pH for growth are 37 degrees C and 6.8-7.3, respectively. The G+C content of the DNA is 34.0 mol %. A 16S rDNA sequence analysis of strain ZF2T revealed that the highest similarity (94.4%) was shared with Clostridium hydroxybenzoicum JW/Z-1T. Strain ZF2T, however, was not able to carboxylate phenol or to decarboxylate 4-hydroxybenzoate, which are characteristic properties of strain JW/Z-1T. The degree of 16S rDNA relatedness, together with the physiological and chemotaxonomic properties, suggest that strain ZF2T represents a novel species that is clearly distinct from Clostridium hydroxybenzoicum JW/Z-1T. In a phylogenetic dendrogram, both strains form a separate cluster that is peripherally associated with the Peptostreptococcus group (cluster XIII) of the clostridia and the lineage of Helcococcus kunzii. Strains ZF2T and JW/Z-1T show a somewhat deeper branching from the cluster XII clostridia Clostridium purinolyticum and Clostridium acidiurici. The latter strains possessed the closest 16S rDNA similarity (between 88.4 and 90.7%), but were clearly separated by phenotypic markers. Therefore, a new genus, Sedimentibacter gen. nov., is described, comprising Sedimentibacter hydroxybenzoicus gen. nov., comb. nov., as the type species of the genus, with JW/Z-1T (= ATCC 51151T = DSM 7310T) as the type strain, and the novel species Sedimentibacter saalensis sp. nov., with strain ZF2T (= DSM 13558T = ATCC BAA-283T) as the type strain.


Microbial Cell Factories | 2003

Sandwich hybridisation assay for quantitative detection of yeast RNAs in crude cell lysates

Jari Rautio; Kim Bundvig Barken; Juhani Lahdenperä; Antje Breitenstein; Søren Molin; Peter Neubauer

BackgroundA rapid microtiter plate based sandwich hybridization assay was developed for detection and quantification of single RNA species using magnetic beads. Following solution hybridization target RNA molecules were collected by biotin-streptavidin affinity binding and detected by fluorescence signal generated by alkaline phosphatase. The 18S rRNA and SUC2 mRNA of Saccharomyces cerevisiae were used as model RNA target molecules.ResultsThe sensitivity of the assay was approximately 1.2 × 109 (2 fmol) molecules of target RNA. The developed method was feasible with crude cell lysates of S. cerevisiae carlsbergensis and was evaluated by measuring the levels of 18S rRNA during cell growth and SUC2 mRNA under repressive and inductive conditions. The 18S rRNA expression level followed the changes in the specific growth rate. SUC2 mRNA levels were in good correlation with the measured invertase enzyme activities.ConclusionsThe here presented sandwich hybridisation method was succefully applied for monitoring the amounts of ribosomal RNA and mRNA with high expression level in shake flask cultivation conditions. Sandwich hybridisation method offers a fast and convenient tool for following single key RNA species of interest in the production conditions.


Archives of Microbiology | 2001

Analysis of a 2,4,6-trichlorophenol-dehalogenating enrichment culture and isolation of the dehalogenating member Desulfitobacterium frappieri strain TCP-A

Antje Breitenstein; Aimo Saano; Mirja Salkinoja-Salonen; Jan R. Andreesen; Ute Lechner

Abstract. An anaerobic, 2,4,6-trichlorophenol ortho-dehalogenating mixed culture was enriched from sediment of the river Saale (Germany). Two isolated dechlorinating colonies (MK1 and MK2) consisted of rods of different lengths and thicknesses, indicating heterogeneity. Following subcultivation with thiosulfate as alternative electron acceptor and cocultivation with Clostridium celerecrescensT, the 2,4,6-trichlorophenol-dehalogenating bacterium Desulfitobacterium frappieri strain TCP-A was isolated and characterized regarding its taxonomic properties and the spectrum of chlorophenols that it dehalogenated. Four other bacterial strains were coenriched and identified as organisms with closest phylogenetic relatedness to the Clostridium type strains C. indolis, C. glycolicum, C. hydroxybenzoicum and C. sporosphaeroides (16S rDNA sequence identities of 99.5, 99.2, 94.4, and 93.5%, respectively). Amplified ribosomal DNA restriction analysis of the original dehalogenating cultures MK1 and MK2 (when not exposed to thiosulfate) confirmed the microbial heterogeneity and revealed the presence of two additional species related to the type strains of C. celerecrescens and Clostridium propionicum. Only one copy of the 16S rRNA genes of Desulfitobacterium frappieri in each of the clone libraries of MK1 and MK2 (containing 136 and 56 clones, respectively) was found by dot-blot hybridization, suggesting a relatively low number of the dehalogenating bacterium within the enrichment culture.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2002

Role of the general stress response during strong overexpression of a heterologous gene in Escherichia coli

Thomas Schweder; H. Y. Lin; Britta Jürgen; Antje Breitenstein; S. Riemschneider; V. Khalameyzer; A. Gupta; K. Büttner; Peter Neubauer

Abstract. The strong overexpression of heterologous genes in Escherichia coli often leads to inhibition of cell growth, ribosome destruction, loss of culturability, and induction of stress responses, such as a heat shock-like response. Here we demonstrate that the general stress response, which is connected to the stress response regulator σS (σ38, rpoS gene product), is suppressed during strong overproduction of a heterologous α-glucosidase. The mRNA levels of the rpoS and osmY stress genes drastically decrease after induction of the strong overexpression system. It is shown that an rpoS mutation causes a significant loss of cell viability after induction of the expression system. Furthermore, it is demonstrated that an E. coli clpP mutant, which could be suggested to improve heterologous protein production, is not a good production host if a tac-promoter is used to control the expression of the recombinant gene. Data from this study suggest that the overexpression of the α-glucosidase was greatly decreased by sigma factor competition in the clpP mutant, due to the increased σS level in this mutant background.


Microbial Cell Factories | 2010

Quality control of inclusion bodies in Escherichia coli

Britta Jürgen; Antje Breitenstein; Vlada B. Urlacher; Knut Büttner; H. Y. Lin; Michael Hecker; Thomas Schweder; Peter Neubauer

BackgroundBacterial inclusion bodies (IBs) are key intermediates for protein production. Their quality affects the refolding yield and further purification. Recent functional and structural studies have revealed that IBs are not dead-end aggregates but undergo dynamic changes, including aggregation, refunctionalization of the protein and proteolysis. Both, aggregation of the folding intermediates and turnover of IBs are influenced by the cellular situation and a number of well-studied chaperones and proteases are included. IBs mostly contain only minor impurities and are relatively homogenous.ResultsIBs of α-glucosidase of Saccharomyces cerevisiae after overproduction in Escherichia coli contain a large amount of (at least 12 different) major product fragments, as revealed by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (2D PAGE). Matrix-Assisted-Laser-Desorption/Ionization-Time-Of-Flight Mass-Spectrometry (MALDI-ToF MS) identification showed that these fragments contain either the N- or the C-terminus of the protein, therefore indicate that these IBs are at least partially created by proteolytic action. Expression of α-glucosidase in single knockout mutants for the major proteases ClpP, Lon, OmpT and FtsH which are known to be involved in the heat shock like response to production of recombinant proteins or to the degradation of IB proteins, clpP, lon, ompT, and ftsH did not influence the fragment pattern or the composition of the IBs. The quality of the IBs was also not influenced by the sampling time, cultivation medium (complex and mineral salt medium), production strategy (shake flask, fed-batch fermentation process), production strength (T5-lac or T7 promoter), strain background (K-12 or BL21), or addition of different protease inhibitors during IB preparation.Conclusionsα-glucosidase is fragmented before aggregation, but neither by proteolytic action on the IBs by the common major proteases, nor during downstream IB preparation. Different fragments co-aggregate in the process of IB formation together with the full-length product. Other intracellular proteases than ClpP or Lon must be responsible for fragmentation. Reaggregation of protease-stable α-glucosidase fragments during in situ disintegration of the existing IBs does not seem to occur.


Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2005

Sensitive genus-specific detection of Legionella by a 16S rRNA based sandwich hybridization assay.

Tarja T. Leskelä; Anu Tilsala-Timisjärvi; Jaana M. Kusnetsov; Peter Neubauer; Antje Breitenstein


Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2007

RNA-based sandwich hybridisation method for detection of lactic acid bacteria in brewery samples

Sanna Huhtamella; Marika Leinonen; Timo Nieminen; Beatrix Fahnert; Liisa Myllykoski; Antje Breitenstein; Peter Neubauer


Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2006

16S rRNA targeted sandwich hybridization method for direct quantification of mycobacteria in soils

Timo Nieminen; Jaakko Pakarinen; Irina Tsitko; Mirja Salkinoja-Salonen; Antje Breitenstein; Terhi Ali-Vehmas; Peter Neubauer


Journal of The Institute of Brewing | 2009

Improved Enrichment Cultivation of Beer Spoiling Lactic Acid Bacteria by Continuous Glucose Addition to the Culture

Sanna Taskila; Peter Neubauer; Mika Tuomola; Antje Breitenstein; Jukka Kronlöf; Tomi Hillukkala

Collaboration


Dive into the Antje Breitenstein's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Peter Neubauer

Technical University of Berlin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Britta Jürgen

University of Greifswald

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Aimo Saano

University of Helsinki

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jari Rautio

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge