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Featured researches published by Janine Fan.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Influence of Redox Molecules on the Electronic Conductance of Single-Walled Carbon Nanotube Field-Effect Transistors : Application to Chemical and Biological Sensing

Salah Boussaad; Bruce A. Diner; Janine Fan

In an effort to develop sensitive nanoscale devices for chemical and biological sensing, we have examined, using liquid gating, the conductance of semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotube-based field-effect transistors (SWCNT-FETs) in the presence of redox mediators. As examples, redox couples K3Fe(CN)6/K4Fe(CN)6 and K2IrCl6/K3IrCl6 are shown to modulate the SWCNT-FET conductance in part through their influence via the electrolyte gate on the electrostatic potential of the solution, as described by Larrimore et al. (Nano Lett. 2006, 6, 3129-1333) and in part through electron transfer between the redox mediators and the nanotubes. In the latter case, the rate of electron transfer is determined by the difference in chemical potential between the redox mediator and the SWCNTs and by the concentrations of the oxidized and reduced forms of the redox couple. Furthermore, these devices can detect the activity of redox enzymes through their sensitivity to the change in oxidation state of the enzyme substrate. An example is given for the blue copper oxidase, Trametes versicolor laccase, in which the rate of change of the SWCNT device conductance is linearly proportional to the rate of oxidation of the substrate 10-(2-hydroxyethyl)phenoxazine, varied over 2 orders of magnitude by the laccase concentration in the picomolar range. The behavior described in this work provides a highly sensitive means with which to do chemical and biological sensing using SWCNTs that is different from the amperometric, capacitive, and field-effect type sensing methods previously described in the literature for this material.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2018

Synthesis of Heterologous Mevalonic Acid Pathway Enzymes in Clostridium ljungdahlii for the Conversion of Fructose and of Syngas to Mevalonate and Isoprene

Bruce A. Diner; Janine Fan; Miles C. Scotcher; Derek H. Wells; Gregory M. Whited

ABSTRACT There is a growing interest in the use of microbial fermentation for the generation of high-demand, high-purity chemicals using cheap feedstocks in an environmentally friendly manner. One example explored here is the production of isoprene (C5H8), a hemiterpene, which is primarily polymerized to polyisoprene in synthetic rubber in tires but which can also be converted to C10 and C15 biofuels. The strictly anaerobic, acetogenic bacterium Clostridium ljungdahlii, used in all of the work described here, is capable of glycolysis using the Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas pathway and of carbon fixation using the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway. Clostridium-Escherichia coli shuttle plasmids, each bearing either 2 or 3 different heterologous genes of the eukaryotic mevalonic acid (MVA) pathway or eukaryotic isopentenyl pyrophosphate isomerase (Idi) and isoprene synthase (IspS), were constructed and electroporated into C. ljungdahlii. These plasmids, one or two of which were introduced into the host cells, enabled the synthesis of mevalonate and of isoprene from fructose and from syngas (H2, CO2, and CO) and the conversion of mevalonate to isoprene. All of the heterologous enzymes of the MVA pathway, as well as Idi and IspS, were shown to be synthesized at high levels in C. ljungdahlii, as demonstrated by Western blotting, and were enzymatically active, as demonstrated by in vivo product synthesis. The quantities of mevalonate and isoprene produced here are far below what would be required of a commercial production strain. However, proposals are made that could enable a substantial increase in the mass yield of product formation. IMPORTANCE This study demonstrates the ability to synthesize a heterologous metabolic pathway in C. ljungdahlii, an organism capable of metabolizing either simple sugars or syngas or both together (mixotrophy). Syngas, an inexpensive source of carbon and reducing equivalents, is produced as a major component of some industrial waste gas, and it can be generated by gasification of cellulosic biowaste and of municipal solid waste. Its conversion to useful products therefore offers potential cost and environmental benefits. The ability of C. ljungdahlii to grow mixotrophically also enables the recapture, should there be sufficient reducing equivalents available, of the CO2 released upon glycolysis, potentially increasing the mass yield of product formation. Isoprene is the simplest of the terpenoids, and so the demonstration of its production is a first step toward the synthesis of higher-value products of the terpenoid pathway.


Archive | 2009

Organic solvent pretreatment of biomass to enhance enzymatic saccharification

Bruce A. Diner; Janine Fan


Archive | 2005

Redox potential mediated, heterogeneous, carbon nanotube biosensing

Salah Boussaad; Bruce A. Diner; Janine Fan; Vsevolod Rostovtsev; Ajit Krishnan


Archive | 2011

Anhydrous ammonia treatment for improved milling of biomass

Carl E. Camp; Jelena Cirakovic; Bruce A. Diner; Janine Fan


Archive | 2005

Small molecule mediated, heterogeneous, carbon nanotube biosensing

Salah Boussaad; Bruce A. Diner; Janine Fan; Vsevolod Rostovtsev


Archive | 2013

Recombinant anaerobic acetogenic bacteria for production of isoprene and/or industrial bio-products using synthesis gas

Zachary Q. Beck; Marguerite A. Cervin; Gopal K. Chotani; Bruce A. Diner; Janine Fan; Caroline Peres; Karl Sanford; Miles C. Scotcher; Derek H. Wells; Gregory M. Whited


Archive | 2005

Redox potential mediated carbon nanotubes biosensing in homogeneous format

Salah Boussaad; Bruce A. Diner; Janine Fan; Vsevolod Rostovtsev; Ajit Krishnan


Biotechnology for Biofuels | 2015

Gaseous ammonia pretreatment lowers the required energy input for fine milling-enhanced enzymatic saccharification of switchgrass

Bruce A. Diner; Jelena Lasio; Carl E. Camp; H. David Rosenfeld; Janine Fan; Bradley Curt Fox


Archive | 2005

Small molecule mediated biosensing using carbon nanotubes in homogeneous format

Salah Boussaad; Bruce A. Diner; Janine Fan; Vsevolod Rostovtsev

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