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Dive into the research topics where Claudia Glück is active.

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Featured researches published by Claudia Glück.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2016

Production Strategies and Applications of Microbial Single Cell Oils.

Katrin Ochsenreither; Claudia Glück; Timo Stressler; Lutz Fischer; Christoph Syldatk

Polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) of the ω-3 and ω-6 class (e.g., α-linolenic acid, linoleic acid) are essential for maintaining biofunctions in mammalians like humans. Due to the fact that humans cannot synthesize these essential fatty acids, they must be taken up from different food sources. Classical sources for these fatty acids are porcine liver and fish oil. However, microbial lipids or single cell oils, produced by oleaginous microorganisms such as algae, fungi and bacteria, are a promising source as well. These single cell oils can be used for many valuable chemicals with applications not only for nutrition but also for fuels and are therefore an ideal basis for a bio-based economy. A crucial point for the establishment of microbial lipids utilization is the cost-effective production and purification of fuels or products of higher value. The fermentative production can be realized by submerged (SmF) or solid state fermentation (SSF). The yield and the composition of the obtained microbial lipids depend on the type of fermentation and the particular conditions (e.g., medium, pH-value, temperature, aeration, nitrogen source). From an economical point of view, waste or by-product streams can be used as cheap and renewable carbon and nitrogen sources. In general, downstream processing costs are one of the major obstacles to be solved for full economic efficiency of microbial lipids. For the extraction of lipids from microbial biomass cell disruption is most important, because efficiency of cell disruption directly influences subsequent downstream operations and overall extraction efficiencies. A multitude of cell disruption and lipid extraction methods are available, conventional as well as newly emerging methods, which will be described and discussed in terms of large scale applicability, their potential in a modern biorefinery and their influence on product quality. Furthermore, an overview is given about applications of microbial lipids or derived fatty acids with emphasis on food applications.


International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 2016

Pseudomonas helleri sp. nov. and Pseudomonas weihenstephanensis sp. nov., isolated from raw cow's milk.

M. von Neubeck; Christopher Huptas; Claudia Glück; Manuel Krewinkel; Marina Stoeckel; Timo Stressler; Lutz Fischer; Jörg Hinrichs; Siegfried Scherer; Mareike Wenning

Analysis of the microbiota of raw cows milk and semi-finished milk products yielded seven isolates assigned to the genus Pseudomonas that formed two individual groups in a phylogenetic analysis based on partial rpoD and 16S rRNA gene sequences. The two groups could be differentiated from each other and also from their closest relatives as well as from the type species Pseudomonas aeruginosa by phenotypic and chemotaxonomic characterization and average nucleotide identity (ANIb) values calculated from draft genome assemblies. ANIb values within the groups were higher than 97.3 %, whereas similarity values to the closest relatives were 85 % or less. The major cellular lipids of strains WS4917T and WS4993T were phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylglycerol and diphosphatidylglycerol; the major quinone was Q-9 in both strains, with small amounts of Q-8 in strain WS4917T. The DNA G+C contents of strains WS4917T and WS4993T were 58.08 and 57.30 mol%, respectively. Based on these data, strains WS4917T, WS4995 ( = DSM 29141 = LMG 28434), WS4999, WS5001 and WS5002 should be considered as representatives of a novel species of the genus Pseudomonas, for which the name Pseudomonas helleri sp. nov. is proposed. The type strain of Pseudomonas helleri is strain WS4917T ( = DSM 29165T = LMG 28433T). Strains WS4993T and WS4994 ( = DSM 29140 = LMG 28438) should be recognized as representing a second novel species of the genus Pseudomonas, for which the name Pseudomonas weihenstephanensis sp. nov. is proposed. The type strain of Pseudomonas weihenstephanensis is strain WS4993T ( = DSM 29166T = LMG 28437T).


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2017

Hidden Reaction: Mesophilic Cellobiose 2-Epimerases Produce Lactulose

Beatrice Kuschel; Ines Seitl; Claudia Glück; Wanmeng Mu; Bo Jiang; Timo Stressler; Lutz Fischer

Lactulose (4-O-β-d-galactopyranosyl-d-fructofuranose) is a prebiotic sugar derived from the milk sugar lactose (4-O-β-d-galactopyranosyl-d-glucopyranose). In our study we observed for the first time that known cellobiose 2-epimerases (CEs; EC 5.1.3.11) from mesophilic microorganisms were generally able to catalyze the isomerization reaction of lactose into lactulose. Commonly, CEs catalyze the C2-epimerization of d-glucose and d-mannose moieties at the reducing end of β-1,4-glycosidic-linked oligosaccharides. Thus, epilactose (4-O-β-d-galactopyranosyl-d-mannopyranose) is formed with lactose as substrate. So far, only four CEs, exclusively from thermophilic microorganisms, have been reported to additionally catalyze the isomerization reaction of lactose into lactulose. The specific isomerization activity of the seven CEs in this study ranged between 8.7 ± 0.1 and 1300 ± 37 pkat/mg. The results indicate that very likely all CEs are able to catalyze both the epimerization as well as the isomerization reaction, whereby the latter is performed at a comparatively much lower reaction rate.


International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 2017

Pseudomonas lactis sp. nov. and Pseudomonas paralactis sp. nov., isolated from bovine raw milk

Mario von Neubeck; Christopher Huptas; Claudia Glück; Manuel Krewinkel; Marina Stoeckel; Timo Stressler; Lutz Fischer; Jörg Hinrichs; Siegfried Scherer; Mareike Wenning

Five strains, designated WS 4672T, WS 4998, WS 4992T, WS 4997 and WS 5000, isolated from bovine raw milk formed two individual groups in a phylogenetic analysis. The most similar species on the basis of 16S rRNA gene sequences were Pseudomonas azotoformans IAM 1603T, Pseudomonas gessardii CIP 105469T and Pseudomonas libanensis CIP 105460T showing 99.7-99.6 % similarity. Using rpoD gene sequences Pseudomonas veronii LMG 17761T (93.3 %) was most closely related to strain WS 4672T and Pseudomonas libanensis CIP 105460T to strain WS 4992T (93.3 %). The five strains could be differentiated from their closest relatives and from each other by phenotypic and chemotaxonomic characterization and ANIb values calculated from draft genome assemblies. ANIb values of strains WS 4992T and WS4671T to the closest relatives are lower than 90 %. The major cellular polar lipids of both strains are phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylglycerol, a phospholipid and diphosphatidylglycerol, and their major quinone is Q-9. The DNA G+C content of strains WS 4992T and WS 4672T were 60.0  and 59.7  mol%, respectively. Based on these genotypic and phenotypic traits two novel species of the genus Pseudomonas are proposed: Pseudomonas lactis sp. nov. [with type strain WS 4992T (=DSM 29167T=LMG 28435T) and the additional strains WS 4997 and WS 5000], and Pseudomonasparalactis sp. nov. [with type strain WS 4672T (=DSM 29164T=LMG 28439T) and additional strain WS 4998].


Enzyme and Microbial Technology | 2018

Influence of the metal ion on the enzyme activity and kinetics of PepA from Lactobacillus delbrueckii

Jacob Ewert; Claudia Glück; Henry Strasdeit; Lutz Fischer; Timo Stressler

The aminopeptidase A (PepA; EC 3.4.11.7) belongs to the group of metallopeptidases with two bound metal ions per subunit (M1M2(PepA)) and is specific for the cleavage of N-terminal glutamic (Glu) and aspartic acid (Asp) and, in low amounts, serine (Ser) residues. Our group recently characterized the first PepA from a Lactobacillus strain. However, the characterization was performed using synthetic para-nitroaniline substrates and not original peptide substrates, as was done in the current study. Prior to the characterization using original peptide substrates, the PepA purified was converted to its inactive apo-form and eight different metal ions were tested to restore its activity. It was found that five of the metal ions were able to reactivate apo-PepA: Co2+, Cu2+, Mn2+, Ni2+ and Zn2+. Interestingly, depending on the metal ion used for reactivation, the activity and the pH and temperature profile differed. Exemplarily, MnMn(PepA), NiNi(PepA) and ZnZn(PepA) had an activity optimum using MES buffer (50mM, pH 6.0) and 60°C, whereas the activity optimum changed to Na/K-phosphate-buffer (50mM, pH 7.0) and 55°C for CuCu(PepA). However, more important than the changes in optimum pH and temperature, the kinetic properties of PepA were affected by the metal ion used. While all PepA variants could release N-terminal Glu or Asp, only CoCo(PepA), NiNi(PepA) and CuCu(PepA) could release Ser from the particular peptide substrate. In addition, it was found that the enzyme efficiency (Vmax/KM) and catalytic mechanism (positive cooperative binding (Hill coefficent; n), substrate inhibition (KIS)) were influenced by the metal ion. Exemplarily, a high cooperativity (n>2),KIS value >20mM and preference for N-terminal Glu were detected for CuCu(PepA). In summary, the results suggested that an exchange of the metal ion can be used for tailoring the properties of PepA for specific hydrolysis requirements.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2018

A natural variant of arylsulfatase from Kluyveromyces lactis shows no formylglycine modification and has no enzyme activity

Timo Stressler; Katrin Reichenberger; Claudia Glück; Sebastian Leptihn; Jens Pfannstiel; Paul Swietalski; Andreas Kuhn; Ines Seitl; Lutz Fischer

Kluyveromyces lactis is a common fungal microorganism used for the production of enzyme preparations such as β-galactosidases (native) or chymosin (recombinant). It is generally important that enzyme preparations have no unwanted side activities. In the case of β-galactosidase preparations produced from K. lactis, an unwanted side activity could be the presence of arylsulfatase (EC 3.1.6.1). Due to the action of arylsulfatase, an unpleasant “cowshed-like” off-flavor would occur in the final product. The best choice to avoid this is to use a yeast strain without this activity. Interestingly, we found that certain natural K. lactis strains express arylsulfatases, which only differ in one amino acid at position 139. The result of this difference is that K. lactis DSM 70799 (expressing R139 variant) shows no arylsulfatase activity, unlike K. lactis GG799 (expressing S139 variant). After recombinant production of both variants in Escherichia coli, the R139 variant remains inactive, whereas the S139 variant showed full activity. Mass spectrometric analyses showed that the important posttranslational modification of C56 to formylglycine was not found in the R139 variant. By contrast, the C56 residue of the S139 variant was modified. We further investigated the packing and secondary structure of the arylsulfatase variants using optical spectroscopy, including fluorescence and circular dichroism. We found out that the inactive R139 variant exhibits a different structure regarding folding and packing compared to the active S139 variant. The importance of the amino acid residue 139 was documented further by the construction of 18 more variants, whereof only ten showed activity but always reduced compared to the native S139 variant.


International Dairy Journal | 2016

Growth of Pseudomonas weihenstephanensis, Pseudomonas proteolytica and Pseudomonas sp. in raw milk: Impact of residual heat-stable enzyme activity on stability of UHT milk during shelf-life

Marina Stoeckel; Melanie Lidolt; Veronika Achberger; Claudia Glück; Manuel Krewinkel; Timo Stressler; Mario von Neubeck; Mareike Wenning; Siegfried Scherer; Lutz Fischer; Jörg Hinrichs


Food Analytical Methods | 2016

Quantification of Lactulose and Epilactose in the Presence of Lactose in Milk using a dual HPLC analysis

Eva Rentschler; Beatrice Kuschel; Manuel Krewinkel; Wolfgang Claaßen; Claudia Glück; Bo Jiang; Wanmeng Mu; Timo Stressler; Lutz Fischer


International Dairy Journal | 2016

Thermostability of peptidases secreted by microorganisms associated with raw milk

Claudia Glück; Eva Rentschler; Manuel Krewinkel; Michael Merz; Mario von Neubeck; Mareike Wenning; Siegfried Scherer; Marina Stoeckel; Jörg Hinrichs; Timo Stressler; Lutz Fischer


International Dairy Journal | 2016

A non-invasive method for the characterisation of milk protein foams by image analysis

Jacob Ewert; Wolfgang Claaßen; Claudia Glück; Benjamin Zeeb; Jochen Weiss; Jörg Hinrichs; Timo Stressler; Lutz Fischer

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Lutz Fischer

University of Hohenheim

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Jacob Ewert

University of Hohenheim

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