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Dive into the research topics where Hassan Hajjaj is active.

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Featured researches published by Hassan Hajjaj.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2001

Lovastatin Biosynthesis by Aspergillus terreus in a Chemically Defined Medium

Hassan Hajjaj; Peter Niederberger; Philippe Duboc

ABSTRACT Lovastatin is a secondary metabolite produced by Aspergillus terreus. A chemically defined medium was developed in order to investigate the influence of carbon and nitrogen sources on lovastatin biosynthesis. Among several organic and inorganic defined nitrogen sources metabolized by A. terreus, glutamate and histidine gave the highest lovastatin biosynthesis level. For cultures on glucose and glutamate, lovastatin synthesis initiated when glucose consumption levelled off. When A. terreus was grown on lactose, lovastatin production initiated in the presence of residual lactose. Experimental results showed that carbon source starvation is required in addition to relief of glucose repression, while glutamate did not repress biosynthesis. A threefold-higher specific productivity was found with the defined medium on glucose and glutamate, compared to growth on complex medium with glucose, peptonized milk, and yeast extract.


Enzyme and Microbial Technology | 2000

Kinetic analysis of red pigment and citrinin production by Monascus ruber as a function of organic acid accumulation.

Hassan Hajjaj; Philippe J. Blanc; Evelyne Groussac; Jean-Louis Uribelarrea; G. Goma; Pascal Loubiere

In submerged cultures performed in synthetic medium containing glucose and glutamate, the filamentous fungus Monascus ruber produced a red pigment and a mycotoxin, citrinin. In oxygen-limiting conditions, the production of these two metabolites was growth-associated, as was the production of primary metabolites. In oxygen-excess conditions, the profile of citrinin production was typical of a secondary metabolite, since it was produced mostly during the stationary phase. In contrast, the production of the pigment decreased rapidly throughout the culture, showing a profile characteristic of an inhibitory mechanism. The organic acids produced during the culture, L-malate and succinate, were shown to be slightly inhibitory against pigment production, while citrinin production was unaffected. However, this inhibition could not account for the observed profile of pigment production in batch cultures. Other dicarboxylic acids such as fumarate or tartrate showed a similar effect to that provoked by malate and succinate as regards pigment production. It was concluded that the decrease in red pigment production during the culture was due to the inhibitory effect of an unknown product whose accumulation was favored in aerobic conditions.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2000

Medium-Chain Fatty Acids Affect Citrinin Production in the Filamentous Fungus Monascus ruber

Hassan Hajjaj; Alain Klaébé; G. Goma; Philippe J. Blanc; Estelle Barbier; Jean François

ABSTRACT During submerged culture in the presence of glucose and glutamate, the filamentous fungus Monascus ruber produces water-soluble red pigments together with citrinin, a mycotoxin with nephrotoxic and hepatoxic effects on animals. Analysis of the13C-pigment molecules from mycelia cultivated with [1-13C]-, [2-13C]-, or [1,2-13C]acetate by 13C nuclear magnetic resonance indicated that the biosynthesis of the red pigments used both the polyketide pathway, to generate the chromophore structure, and the fatty acid synthesis pathway, to produce a medium-chain fatty acid (octanoic acid) which was then bound to the chromophore by atrans-esterification reaction. Hence, to enhance pigment production, we tried to short-circuit the de novo synthesis of medium-chain fatty acids by adding them to the culture broth. Of fatty acids with carbon chains ranging from 6 to 18 carbon atoms, only octanoic acid showed a 30 to 50% stimulation of red pigment production, by a mechanism which, in contrast to expectation, did not involve its direct trans-esterification on the chromophore backbone. However, the medium- and long-chain fatty acids tested were readily assimilated by the fungus, and in the case of fatty acids ranging from 8 to 12 carbon atoms, 30 to 40% of their initial amount transiently accumulated in the growth medium in the form of the corresponding methylketone 1 carbon unit shorter. Very interestingly, these fatty acids or their corresponding methylketones caused a strong reduction in, or even a complete inhibition of, citrinin production byM. ruber when they were added to the medium. Several data indicated that this effect could be due to the degradation of the newly synthesized citrinin (or an intermediate in the citrinin pathway) by hydrogen peroxide resulting from peroxisome proliferation induced by medium-chain fatty acids or methylketones.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2005

Effect of 26-Oxygenosterols from Ganoderma lucidum and Their Activity as Cholesterol Synthesis Inhibitors

Hassan Hajjaj; Catherine Mace; Matthew Alan Roberts; Peter Niederberger; Laurent B. Fay

ABSTRACT Ganoderma lucidum is a medicinal fungus belonging to the Polyporaceae family which has long been known in Japan as Reishi and has been used extensively in traditional Chinese medicine. We report the isolation and identification of the 26-oxygenosterols ganoderol A, ganoderol B, ganoderal A, and ganoderic acid Y and their biological effects on cholesterol synthesis in a human hepatic cell line in vitro. We also investigated the site of inhibition in the cholesterol synthesis pathway. We found that these oxygenated sterols from G. lucidum inhibited cholesterol biosynthesis via conversion of acetate or mevalonate as a precursor of cholesterol. By incorporation of 24,25-dihydro-[24,25-3H2]lanosterol and [3-3H]lathosterol in the presence of ganoderol A, we determined that the point of inhibition of cholesterol synthesis is between lanosterol and lathosterol. These results demonstrate that the lanosterol 14α-demethylase, which converts 24,25-dihydrolanosterol to cholesterol, can be inhibited by the 26-oxygenosterols from G. lucidum. These 26-oxygenosterols could lead to novel therapeutic agents that lower blood cholesterol.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 1999

Biosynthetic pathway of citrinin in the filamentous fungus monascus ruber as revealed by 13C nuclear magnetic resonance

Hassan Hajjaj; Alain Klaébé; Marie Odile Loret; G. Goma; Philippe J. Blanc; Jean François


Fems Microbiology Letters | 1998

Sampling techniques and comparative extraction procedures for quantitative determination of intra- and extracellular metabolites in filamentous fungi

Hassan Hajjaj; Philippe J. Blanc; G. Goma; Jean François


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 1997

Production and identification of N-glucosylrubropunctamine and N-glucosylmonascorubramine from Monascus ruber and occurrence of electron donor-acceptor complexes in these red pigments

Hassan Hajjaj; Alain Klaébé; Marie Odile Loret; T Tzedakis; G. Goma; Philippe J. Blanc


Archive | 2002

Cholesterol-lowering agent

Hassan Hajjaj; Catherine Mace; Peter Niederberger; Laurent B. Fay


International Journal of Food Science and Technology | 2015

Effect of the cultivation mode on red pigments production from Monascus ruber

Hassan Hajjaj; Gérard Goma; Jean François


Archive | 2003

Koji molds for preparing cholesterol lowering products

Hassan Hajjaj; Peter Van Den Broek; Peter Niederberger; Laurent-Bernard Fay; Catherine Mace; Jean-Richard Neeser

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G. Goma

Institut national des sciences appliquées

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Philippe J. Blanc

Institut national des sciences appliquées

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Evelyne Groussac

Institut national des sciences appliquées

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Jean-Louis Uribelarrea

Institut national des sciences appliquées

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