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Dive into the research topics where Bernhard Seiboth is active.

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Featured researches published by Bernhard Seiboth.


Biotechnology for Biofuels | 2012

A versatile toolkit for high throughput functional genomics with Trichoderma reesei.

André Schuster; Kenneth S. Bruno; James R. Collett; Scott E. Baker; Bernhard Seiboth; Christian P. Kubicek; Monika Schmoll

BackgroundThe ascomycete fungus, Trichoderma reesei (anamorph of Hypocrea jecorina), represents a biotechnological workhorse and is currently one of the most proficient cellulase producers. While strain improvement was traditionally accomplished by random mutagenesis, a detailed understanding of cellulase regulation can only be gained using recombinant technologies.ResultsAiming at high efficiency and high throughput methods, we present here a construction kit for gene knock out in T. reesei. We provide a primer database for gene deletion using the pyr4, amdS and hph selection markers. For high throughput generation of gene knock outs, we constructed vectors using yeast mediated recombination and then transformed a T. reesei strain deficient in non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) by spore electroporation. This NHEJ-defect was subsequently removed by crossing of mutants with a sexually competent strain derived from the parental strain, QM9414.ConclusionsUsing this strategy and the materials provided, high throughput gene deletion in T. reesei becomes feasible. Moreover, with the application of sexual development, the NHEJ-defect can be removed efficiently and without the need for additional selection markers. The same advantages apply for the construction of multiple mutants by crossing of strains with different gene deletions, which is now possible with considerably less hands-on time and minimal screening effort compared to a transformation approach. Consequently this toolkit can considerably boost research towards efficient exploitation of the resources of T. reesei for cellulase expression and hence second generation biofuel production.


Genome Biology | 2011

Comparative genome sequence analysis underscores mycoparasitism as the ancestral life style of Trichoderma

Christian P. Kubicek; Alfredo Herrera-Estrella; Diego Martinez; Irina S. Druzhinina; Michael R. Thon; Susanne Zeilinger; Sergio Casas-Flores; Benjamin A. Horwitz; Prasun K. Mukherjee; Mala Mukherjee; László Kredics; Luis David Alcaraz; Andrea Aerts; Zsuzsanna Antal; Lea Atanasova; Mayte Guadalupe Cervantes-Badillo; Jean F. Challacombe; Olga Chertkov; Kevin McCluskey; Fanny Coulpier; Nandan Deshpande; Hans von Döhren; Daniel J. Ebbole; Edgardo U. Esquivel-Naranjo; Erzsébet Fekete; Michel Flipphi; Fabian Glaser; Elida Yazmín Gómez-Rodríguez; Sabine Gruber; Cliff Han

BackgroundMycoparasitism, a lifestyle where one fungus is parasitic on another fungus, has special relevance when the prey is a plant pathogen, providing a strategy for biological control of pests for plant protection. Probably, the most studied biocontrol agents are species of the genus Hypocrea/Trichoderma.ResultsHere we report an analysis of the genome sequences of the two biocontrol species Trichoderma atroviride (teleomorph Hypocrea atroviridis) and Trichoderma virens (formerly Gliocladium virens, teleomorph Hypocrea virens), and a comparison with Trichoderma reesei (teleomorph Hypocrea jecorina). These three Trichoderma species display a remarkable conservation of gene order (78 to 96%), and a lack of active mobile elements probably due to repeat-induced point mutation. Several gene families are expanded in the two mycoparasitic species relative to T. reesei or other ascomycetes, and are overrepresented in non-syntenic genome regions. A phylogenetic analysis shows that T. reesei and T. virens are derived relative to T. atroviride. The mycoparasitism-specific genes thus arose in a common Trichoderma ancestor but were subsequently lost in T. reesei.ConclusionsThe data offer a better understanding of mycoparasitism, and thus enforce the development of improved biocontrol strains for efficient and environmentally friendly protection of plants.


Biotechnology for Biofuels | 2009

Metabolic engineering strategies for the improvement of cellulase production by Hypocrea jecorina

Christian P. Kubicek; Marianna Mikus; André Schuster; Monika Schmoll; Bernhard Seiboth

Hypocrea jecorina (= Trichoderma reesei) is the main industrial source of cellulases and hemicellulases used to depolymerise plant biomass to simple sugars that are converted to chemical intermediates and biofuels, such as ethanol. Cellulases are formed adaptively, and several positive (XYR1, ACE2, HAP2/3/5) and negative (ACE1, CRE1) components involved in this regulation are now known. In addition, its complete genome sequence has been recently published, thus making the organism susceptible to targeted improvement by metabolic engineering. In this review, we summarise current knowledge about how cellulase biosynthesis is regulated, and outline recent approaches and suitable strategies for facilitating the targeted improvement of cellulase production by genetic engineering.


FEBS Journal | 2005

A complete survey of Trichoderma chitinases reveals three distinct subgroups of family 18 chitinases

Verena Seidl; Birgit Huemer; Bernhard Seiboth; Christian P. Kubicek

Genome‐wide analysis of chitinase genes in the Hypocrea jecorina (anamorph: Trichoderma reesei) genome database revealed the presence of 18 ORFs encoding putative chitinases, all of them belonging to glycoside hydrolase family 18. Eleven of these encode yet undescribed chitinases. A systematic nomenclature for the H. jecorina chitinases is proposed, which designates the chitinases corresponding to their glycoside hydrolase family and numbers the isoenzymes according to their pI from Chi18‐1 to Chi18‐18. Phylogenetic analysis of H. jecorina chitinases, and those from other filamentous fungi, including hypothetical proteins of annotated fungal genome databases, showed that the fungal chitinases can be divided into three groups: groups A and B (corresponding to class V and III chitinases, respectively) also contained the so Trichoderma chitinases identified to date, whereas a novel group C comprises high molecular weight chitinases that have a domain structure similar to Kluyveromyces lactis killer toxins. Five chitinase genes, representing members of groups A–C, were cloned from the mycoparasitic species H. atroviridis (anamorph: T. atroviride). Transcription of chi18‐10 (belonging to group C) and chi18‐13 (belonging to a novel clade in group B) was triggered upon growth on Rhizoctonia solani cell walls, and during plate confrontation tests with the plant pathogen R. solani. Therefore, group C and the novel clade in group B may contain chitinases of potential relevance for the biocontrol properties of Trichoderma.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Tracking the roots of cellulase hyperproduction by the fungus Trichoderma reesei using massively parallel DNA sequencing

Stéphane Le Crom; Wendy Schackwitz; Len A. Pennacchio; Jon K. Magnuson; David E. Culley; James R. Collett; Joel Martin; Irina S. Druzhinina; Hugues Mathis; Frédéric Monot; Bernhard Seiboth; Barbara Cherry; Michael Rey; Randy M. Berka; Christian P. Kubicek; Scott E. Baker; Antoine Margeot

Trichoderma reesei (teleomorph Hypocrea jecorina) is the main industrial source of cellulases and hemicellulases harnessed for the hydrolysis of biomass to simple sugars, which can then be converted to biofuels such as ethanol and other chemicals. The highly productive strains in use today were generated by classical mutagenesis. To learn how cellulase production was improved by these techniques, we performed massively parallel sequencing to identify mutations in the genomes of two hyperproducing strains (NG14, and its direct improved descendant, RUT C30). We detected a surprisingly high number of mutagenic events: 223 single nucleotides variants, 15 small deletions or insertions, and 18 larger deletions, leading to the loss of more than 100 kb of genomic DNA. From these events, we report previously undocumented non-synonymous mutations in 43 genes that are mainly involved in nuclear transport, mRNA stability, transcription, secretion/vacuolar targeting, and metabolism. This homogeneity of functional categories suggests that multiple changes are necessary to improve cellulase production and not simply a few clear-cut mutagenic events. Phenotype microarrays show that some of these mutations result in strong changes in the carbon assimilation pattern of the two mutants with respect to the wild-type strain QM6a. Our analysis provides genome-wide insights into the changes induced by classical mutagenesis in a filamentous fungus and suggests areas for the generation of enhanced T. reesei strains for industrial applications such as biofuel production.


BMC Genomics | 2008

The Hypocrea jecorina (Trichoderma reesei) hypercellulolytic mutant RUT C30 lacks a 85 kb (29 gene-encoding) region of the wild-type genome

Verena Seidl; Christian Gamauf; Irina S. Druzhinina; Bernhard Seiboth; Lukas Hartl; Christian P. Kubicek

BackgroundThe hypercellulolytic mutant Hypocrea jecorina (anamorph Trichoderma reesei) RUT C30 is the H. jecorina strain most frequently used for cellulase fermentations and has also often been employed for basic research on cellulase regulation. This strain has been reported to contain a truncated carbon catabolite repressor gene cre1 and is consequently carbon catabolite derepressed. To date this and an additional frame-shift mutation in the glycoprotein-processing β-glucosidase II encoding gene are the only known genetic differences in strain RUT C30.ResultsIn the present paper we show that H. jecorina RUT C30 lacks an 85 kb genomic fragment, and consequently misses additional 29 genes comprising transcription factors, enzymes of the primary metabolism and transport proteins. This loss is already present in the ancestor of RUT C30 – NG 14 – and seems to have occurred in a palindromic AT-rich repeat (PATRR) typically inducing chromosomal translocations, and is not linked to the cre1 locus. The mutation of the cre1 locus has specifically occurred in RUT C30. Some of the genes that are lacking in RUT C30 could be correlated with pronounced alterations in its phenotype, such as poor growth on α-linked oligo- and polyglucosides (loss of maltose permease), or disturbance of osmotic homeostasis.ConclusionOur data place a general caveat on the use of H. jecorina RUT C30 for further basic research.


BMC Genomics | 2011

The CRE1 carbon catabolite repressor of the fungus Trichoderma reesei: A master regulator of carbon assimilation

Thomas Portnoy; Antoine Margeot; Rita Linke; Lea Atanasova; Erzsébet Fekete; Erzsébet Sándor; Lukas Hartl; Levente Karaffa; Irina S. Druzhinina; Bernhard Seiboth; Stéphane Le Crom; Christian P. Kubicek

BackgroundThe identification and characterization of the transcriptional regulatory networks governing the physiology and adaptation of microbial cells is a key step in understanding their behaviour. One such wide-domain regulatory circuit, essential to all cells, is carbon catabolite repression (CCR): it allows the cell to prefer some carbon sources, whose assimilation is of high nutritional value, over less profitable ones. In lower multicellular fungi, the C2H2 zinc finger CreA/CRE1 protein has been shown to act as the transcriptional repressor in this process. However, the complete list of its gene targets is not known.ResultsHere, we deciphered the CRE1 regulatory range in the model cellulose and hemicellulose-degrading fungus Trichoderma reesei (anamorph of Hypocrea jecorina) by profiling transcription in a wild-type and a delta-cre1 mutant strain on glucose at constant growth rates known to repress and de-repress CCR-affected genes. Analysis of genome-wide microarrays reveals 2.8% of transcripts whose expression was regulated in at least one of the four experimental conditions: 47.3% of which were repressed by CRE1, whereas 29.0% were actually induced by CRE1, and 17.2% only affected by the growth rate but CRE1 independent. Among CRE1 repressed transcripts, genes encoding unknown proteins and transport proteins were overrepresented. In addition, we found CRE1-repression of nitrogenous substances uptake, components of chromatin remodeling and the transcriptional mediator complex, as well as developmental processes.ConclusionsOur study provides the first global insight into the molecular physiological response of a multicellular fungus to carbon catabolite regulation and identifies several not yet known targets in a growth-controlled environment.


Molecular Microbiology | 2012

The putative protein methyltransferase LAE1 controls cellulase gene expression in Trichoderma reesei

Bernhard Seiboth; Razieh Karimi; Pallavi A. Phatale; Rita Linke; Lukas Hartl; Dominik G. Sauer; Kristina M. Smith; Scott E. Baker; Michael Freitag; Christian P. Kubicek

Trichoderma reesei is an industrial producer of enzymes that degrade lignocellulosic polysaccharides to soluble monomers, which can be fermented to biofuels. Here we show that the expression of genes for lignocellulose degradation are controlled by the orthologous T. reesei protein methyltransferase LAE1. In a lae1 deletion mutant we observed a complete loss of expression of all seven cellulases, auxiliary factors for cellulose degradation, β‐glucosidases and xylanases were no longer expressed. Conversely, enhanced expression of lae1 resulted in significantly increased cellulase gene transcription. Lae1‐modulated cellulase gene expression was dependent on the function of the general cellulase regulator XYR1, but also xyr1 expression was LAE1‐dependent. LAE1 was also essential for conidiation of T. reesei. Chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by high‐throughput sequencing (‘ChIP‐seq’) showed that lae1 expression was not obviously correlated with H3K4 di‐ or trimethylation (indicative of active transcription) or H3K9 trimethylation (typical for heterochromatin regions) in CAZyme coding regions, suggesting that LAE1 does not affect CAZyme gene expression by directly modulating H3K4 or H3K9 methylation. Our data demonstrate that the putative protein methyltransferase LAE1 is essential for cellulase gene expression in T. reesei through mechanisms that remain to be identified.


Journal of Biotechnology | 2009

Gene targeting in a nonhomologous end joining deficient Hypocrea jecorina

Zhang Guangtao; Lukas Hartl; André Schuster; Stefan Polak; Monika Schmoll; Tianhong Wang; Verena Seidl; Bernhard Seiboth

The industrially applied ascomycete Hypocrea jecorina (synonym: Trichoderma reesei) exhibits a low rate of exogenous DNA integration by homologous recombination (HR). This hinders the high-throughput generation of strains by gene replacement and is therefore impeding systematic functional gene analyses towards, e.g. strain improvement for protein or enzyme production. To increase the rate of HR events during fungal transformation we identified and deleted the orthologue of the human KU70 in H. jecorina, which is required for the nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ) pathway and responsible for ectopic DNA integration. The effect of the absence of the H. jecorina tku70 on gene targeting was tested by deletion of two so far uncharacterized genes encoding a short chain dehydrogenase and a fungal specific transcription factor. Efficiency of gene targeting for both genes was >95% in a Deltatku70 strain when 1kb homologous flanking regions were used in the deletion construct. This is a significant increase in targeting efficiency compared to the parental - non-tku70 deleted - strain TU-6 where a gene knock-out frequency of only 5-10% was observed. Together with the recently annotated genomic sequence of H. jecorina, this system provides a useful tool for a genome-wide functional gene analysis on a high-throughput scale to improve the biotechnological potential of this fungus.


Eukaryotic Cell | 2011

Differential Regulation of the Cellulase Transcription Factors XYR1, ACE2, and ACE1 in Trichoderma reesei Strains Producing High and Low Levels of Cellulase

Thomas Portnoy; Antoine Margeot; Stéphane Le Crom; Fadhel Ben Chaabane; Rita Linke; Bernhard Seiboth; Christian P. Kubicek

ABSTRACT Due to its capacity to produce large amounts of cellulases, Trichoderma reesei is increasingly being investigated for second-generation biofuel production from lignocellulosic biomass. The induction mechanisms of T. reesei cellulases have been described recently, but the regulation of the genes involved in their transcription has not been studied thoroughly. Here we report the regulation of expression of the two activator genes xyr1 and ace2, and the corepressor gene ace1, during the induction of cellulase biosynthesis by the inducer lactose in T. reesei QM 9414, a strain producing low levels of cellulase (low producer). We show that all three genes are induced by lactose. xyr1 was also induced by d-galactose, but this induction was independent of d-galactose metabolism. Moreover, ace1 was carbon catabolite repressed, whereas full induction of xyr1 and ace2 in fact required CRE1. Significant differences in these regulatory patterns were observed in the high-producer strain RUT C30 and the hyperproducer strain T. reesei CL847. These observations suggest that a strongly elevated basal transcription level of xyr1 and reduced upregulation of ace1 by lactose may have been important for generating the hyperproducer strain and that thus, these genes are major control elements of cellulase production.

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Christian P. Kubicek

Vienna University of Technology

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Lukas Hartl

Vienna University of Technology

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Benjamin Metz

Vienna University of Technology

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Irina S. Druzhinina

Vienna University of Technology

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Robert Bischof

Vienna University of Technology

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Verena Seidl

Vienna University of Technology

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Jonas Ramoni

Vienna University of Technology

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Monika Schmoll

Austrian Institute of Technology

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