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Dive into the research topics where F. Omar Holguin is active.

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Featured researches published by F. Omar Holguin.


Plant Journal | 2015

The response of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii to nitrogen deprivation: a systems biology analysis

Jeong Jin Park; Hongxia Wang; Mahmoud Gargouri; Rahul R. Deshpande; Jeremy N. Skepper; F. Omar Holguin; Matthew T. Juergens; Yair Shachar-Hill; Leslie M. Hicks; David R. Gang

Drastic alteration in macronutrients causes large changes in gene expression in the photosynthetic unicellular alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Preliminary data suggested that cells follow a biphasic response to this change hinging on the initiation of lipid accumulation, and we hypothesized that drastic repatterning of metabolism also followed this biphasic modality. To test this hypothesis, transcriptomic, proteomic, and metabolite changes that occur under nitrogen (N) deprivation were analyzed. Eight sampling times were selected covering the progressive slowing of growth and induction of oil synthesis between 4 and 6 h after N deprivation. Results of the combined, systems-level investigation indicated that C. reinhardtii cells sense and respond on a large scale within 30 min to a switch to N-deprived conditions turning on a largely gluconeogenic metabolic state, which then transitions to a glycolytic stage between 4 and 6 h after N depletion. This nitrogen-sensing system is transduced to carbon- and nitrogen-responsive pathways, leading to down-regulation of carbon assimilation and chlorophyll biosynthesis, and an increase in nitrogen metabolism and lipid biosynthesis. For example, the expression of nearly all the enzymes for assimilating nitrogen from ammonium, nitrate, nitrite, urea, formamide/acetamide, purines, pyrimidines, polyamines, amino acids and proteins increased significantly. Although arginine biosynthesis enzymes were also rapidly up-regulated, arginine pool size changes and isotopic labeling results indicated no increased flux through this pathway.


Phytochemistry | 2008

Chemotypic Variation of Essential Oils in the Medicinal Plant, Anemopsis californica

Andrea L. Medina-Holguín; F. Omar Holguin; Sandra Micheletto; Sondra Goehle; Julian A. Simon; Mary A. O’Connell

Anemopsis californica (Saururaceae) commonly called yerba mansa, is an important medicinal plant in many deserts in the southwestern region of North America. Populations of A. californica, collected throughout New Mexico, were examined for chemical variability in roots and rhizomes for select monocyclic (cymene, limonene, piperitone and thymol) and bicyclic (alpha-pinene, 1,8-cineole and myrtenol) monoterpenoid and phenylpropanoid (methyleugenol, isoeugenol and elemicin) derived essential oil components. Three distinct chemotypes were detected using a hierarchical clustering analysis on the concentration of 10 different analytes in three individuals from each of 17 populations. One chemotype was characterized by high elemicin concentrations, a second chemotype by high methyleugenol concentrations and the third by high piperitone and thymol concentrations. Steam distilled oil was used to screen for anticancer bioactivity. A. californica root oils demonstrated anti-proliferative activity against AN3CA and HeLa cells in vitro but no activity against lung, breast, prostate or colon cancer cells. The IC(50) values for the root oil were 0.056% and 0.052% (v/v) for the AN3CA and HeLa cells, respectively.


Plant Physiology | 2015

The regulation of photosynthetic structure and function during nitrogen deprivation in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii

Matthew T. Juergens; Rahul R. Deshpande; Ben F. Lucker; Jeong Jin Park; Hongxia Wang; Mahmoud Gargouri; F. Omar Holguin; Bradley Disbrow; Tanner Schaub; Jeremy N. Skepper; David M. Kramer; David R. Gang; Leslie M. Hicks; Yair Shachar-Hill

Nitrogen deprivation induces orderly, multilevel down-regulation of the photosynthetic apparatus, energy capture, and carbon fixation. The accumulation of carbon storage compounds by many unicellular algae after nutrient deprivation occurs despite declines in their photosynthetic apparatus. To understand the regulation and roles of photosynthesis during this potentially bioenergetically valuable process, we analyzed photosynthetic structure and function after nitrogen deprivation in the model alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Transcriptomic, proteomic, metabolite, and lipid profiling and microscopic time course data were combined with multiple measures of photosynthetic function. Levels of transcripts and proteins of photosystems I and II and most antenna genes fell with differing trajectories; thylakoid membrane lipid levels decreased, while their proportions remained similar and thylakoid membrane organization appeared to be preserved. Cellular chlorophyll (Chl) content decreased more than 2-fold within 24 h, and we conclude from transcript protein and 13C labeling rates that Chl synthesis was down-regulated both pre- and posttranslationally and that Chl levels fell because of a rapid cessation in synthesis and dilution by cellular growth rather than because of degradation. Photosynthetically driven oxygen production and the efficiency of photosystem II as well as P700+ reduction and electrochromic shift kinetics all decreased over the time course, without evidence of substantial energy overflow. The results also indicate that linear electron flow fell approximately 15% more than cyclic flow over the first 24 h. Comparing Calvin-Benson cycle transcript and enzyme levels with changes in photosynthetic 13CO2 incorporation rates also pointed to a coordinated multilevel down-regulation of photosynthetic fluxes during starch synthesis before the induction of high triacylglycerol accumulation rates.


Bioresource Technology | 2013

In situ ethyl ester production from wet algal biomass under microwave-mediated supercritical ethanol conditions

Prafulla D. Patil; Harvind K. Reddy; Tapaswy Muppaneni; Tanner Schaub; F. Omar Holguin; Peter Cooke; Peter J. Lammers; Nagamany Nirmalakhandan; Yin Li; Xiuyang Lu; Shuguang Deng

An in situ transesterification approach was demonstrated for converting lipid-rich wet algae (Nannochloropsis salina) into fatty acid ethyl esters (FAEE) under microwave-mediated supercritical ethanol conditions, while preserving the nutrients and other valuable components in the algae. This single-step process can simultaneously and effectively extract the lipids from wet algae and transesterify them into crude biodiesel. Experimental runs were designed to optimize the process parameters and to evaluate their effects on algal biodiesel yield. The algal biomass characterization and algal biodiesel analysis were carried out by using various analytical instruments such as FTIR, SEM-EDS, TLC, GC-MS and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) under nitrogen and oxygen environments was also performed to examine the thermal and oxidative stability of ethyl esters produced from wet algae. This simple in situ transesterification process using a green solvent and catalyst-free approach can be a potentially efficient route for algal biodiesel production.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2015

Identification of regulatory network hubs that control lipid metabolism in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii

Mahmoud Gargouri; Jeong Jin Park; F. Omar Holguin; Min-Jeong Kim; Hongxia Wang; Rahul R. Deshpande; Yair Shachar-Hill; Leslie M. Hicks; David R. Gang

Highlight Characterization of regulatory networks in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii led to the identification of regulatory hubs that control the repatterning of cellular metabolism that leads to triacylglycerol accumulation in microalgae.


Bioresource Technology | 2017

Hydrothermal liquefaction of Cyanidioschyzon merolae and the influence of catalysts on products.

Tapaswy Muppaneni; Harvind K. Reddy; Thinesh Selvaratnam; Kodanda Phani Raj Dandamudi; Barry Dungan; Nagamany Nirmalakhandan; Tanner Schaub; F. Omar Holguin; Wayne A. Van Voorhies; Peter J. Lammers; Shuguang Deng

This work investigates the hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL) of Cyanidioschyzon merolae algal species under various reaction temperatures and catalysts. Liquefaction of microalgae was performed with 10% solid loading for 30min at temperatures of 180-300°C to study the influences of two base and two acid catalysts on HTL product fractions. Maximum biocrude oil yield of 16.98% was obtained at 300°C with no catalyst. The biocrude oil yield increased to 22.67% when KOH was introduced into the reaction mixture as a catalyst. The algal biocrude and biochar has a higher heating values (HHV) of 32.22MJkg-1 and 20.78MJkg-1 respectively when no catalyst was used. Gas chromatography time of flight mass spectrometry (GC/TOFMS) was employed to analyze the biocrude oil composition, and elemental analysis was performed on the algae, biocrude and biochar samples. Analysis of the HTL aqueous phase revealed the presence of valuable products.


Bioresource Technology | 2017

Co-liquefaction of mixed culture microalgal strains under sub-critical water conditions

Kodanda Phani Raj Dandamudi; Tapaswy Muppaneni; Nilusha Sudasinghe; Tanner Schaub; F. Omar Holguin; Peter J. Lammers; Shuguang Deng

We report the co-liquefaction performance of unicellular, red alga Cyanidioschyzon merolae and Galdieria sulphuraria under sub-critical water conditions within a stainless-steel batch reactor under different temperatures (150-300°C), residence time (15-60min), and Cyanidioschyzon merolae to Galdieria sulphuraria mass loading (0-100%). Individual liquefaction of C. merolae and G. sulphuraria at 300°C achieved maximum biocrude oil yield of 18.9 and 14.0%, respectively. The yield of biocrude oil increased to 25.5%, suggesting a positive synergistic effect during the co-liquefaction of 80-20mass loading of C. merolae to G. sulphuraria. The biocrude oils were analyzed by FT-ICR MS which showed that co-liquefaction did not significantly affect the distribution of product compounds compared to individual oils. The co-liquefied biocrude and biochar have a higher-heating-value of 35.28 and 7.96MJ/kg. Ultimate and proximate analysis were performed on algae biomass, biocrude and biochar.


Journal of Natural Products | 2011

Dinoxin B, a Withanolide from Datura inoxia Leaves with Specific Cytotoxic Activities

Karl E. Vermillion; F. Omar Holguin; Mark A. Berhow; Richard D. Richins; Thurman Redhouse; Mary A. O’Connell; Jeff Posakony; Sumit S. Mahajan; Sean M. Kelly; Julian A. Simon

A new withanolide, dinoxin B (12,21-dihydroxy-1-oxowitha-2,5,24-trienolide-27-O-β-D-glucopyranoside, 1), was isolated from a methanol extract of Datura inoxia leaves, using bioassay-guided fractionation. The structure was determined by spectroscopic techniques, including (1)H, (13)C, and 2D NMR experiments as well as by HRMS. Extracts and the purified compound were tested for their antiproliferative activities toward a panel of human normal and cancer cell lines. Dinoxin B (1) and its aglycone (2) exhibited submicromolar IC(50) values against multiple human cancer cell lines. Among the most sensitive were several breast cancer cell lines. Dinoxin B (1) was found only in D. inoxia and was not detected in D. metel or D. stramonium. The accumulation of this compound was limited largely to leaf tissue, with little to none detected in extracts from the flowers, fruits, roots, or stems of D. inoxia.


Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture | 2016

Quantitative and qualitative evaluation of kernel anthocyanins from southwestern United States blue corn.

Amol Nankar; Barry Dungan; Neil Paz; Nilusha Sudasinghe; Tanner Schaub; F. Omar Holguin; Richard C. Pratt

BACKGROUND Anthocyanin-rich blue corn is an emerging specialty crop in the USA. The antioxidant properties of blue corn offer health benefits in the human diet. The objectives of this study were to identify, characterize and quantify the anthocyanins from blue corn. Hypotheses tested were that total anthocyanin content was similar among southwestern US accessions and that it would vary across locations. It was also examined whether different anthocyanin components were unique to certain genotypes. RESULTS Across all locations and accessions, an average of 0.43 g kg(-1) total anthocyanin content (TAC) was observed. Accessions Santa Clara Blue and Ohio Blue displayed the highest TAC. The TAC of accession Flor del Rio was lower by nearly a factor of six. A total of five anthocyanin components were identified. Cyanidin 3-glucoside was the most abundant, followed by pelargonidin and peonidin 3-glucoside. Succinyl and disuccinyl glycosidic forms of cyanidin were also identified. Cyanidin 3-disuccinylglucoside was newly identified as a novel form of anthocyanin. CONCLUSION Quantitative and qualitative anthocyanin expression was determined to be relatively stable across multiple southwestern environments. Increased expression of red and purple pigmentation in accession Flor del Rio appeared to be associated more with reduced TAC and cyanidin 3-glucoside than with elevated pelargonidin per se. A previously unreported anthocyanin component in blue corn, cyanidin 3-disuccinylglucoside, is present in southwestern landraces.


Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering | 2014

Evaluation of internally illuminated photobioreactor for improving energy ratio

Ambica Koushik Pegallapati; Nagamany Nirmalakhandan; Barry Dungan; F. Omar Holguin; Tanner Schaub

The internally illuminated photobioreactor (IIPBR) design has been shown to be more efficient in utilizing the incident light energy than the externally illuminated designs. This study evaluated (i) optimal sparging of the IIPBR with CO2-enriched air (CEA) to enhance biomass productivity; and, (ii) single-stage and two-stage operation of the IIPBR to enhance lipid productivity. Growth data from two algal cultures-Scenedesmus sp. and Nannochloropsis salina, cultivated in an 18-L prototype version of the IIPBR were used to establish the optimal conditions for the two goals in terms of the energy ratio. Based on the optimized results under sparging with CEA, the energy ratio in the IIPBR in the first stage with Nannochloropsis salina was at least 6 times higher due to optimal performance of the IIPBR at lower energy input than typical literature results for other PBR designs, whereas the energy ratios in the second stage were comparable to literature results.

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Tanner Schaub

New Mexico State University

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Barry Dungan

New Mexico State University

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Peter J. Lammers

New Mexico State University

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Shuguang Deng

New Mexico State University

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Tapaswy Muppaneni

New Mexico State University

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Harvind K. Reddy

New Mexico State University

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Nilusha Sudasinghe

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Mary O'Connell

New Mexico State University

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