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Featured researches published by Jennifer Chow.


PLOS ONE | 2012

The Metagenome-Derived Enzymes LipS and LipT Increase the Diversity of Known Lipases

Jennifer Chow; Filip Kovacic; Yuliya Dall Antonia; Ulrich Krauss; Francesco Fersini; Christel Schmeisser; Benjamin Lauinger; Patrick Bongen; Joerg Pietruszka; Marlen Schmidt; Ina Menyes; Uwe T. Bornscheuer; Marrit Eckstein; Oliver Thum; Andreas Liese; Jochen Mueller-Dieckmann; Karl-Erich Jaeger; Wolfgang R. Streit

Triacylglycerol lipases (EC 3.1.1.3) catalyze both hydrolysis and synthesis reactions with a broad spectrum of substrates rendering them especially suitable for many biotechnological applications. Most lipases used today originate from mesophilic organisms and are susceptible to thermal denaturation whereas only few possess high thermotolerance. Here, we report on the identification and characterization of two novel thermostable bacterial lipases identified by functional metagenomic screenings. Metagenomic libraries were constructed from enrichment cultures maintained at 65 to 75°C and screened resulting in the identification of initially 10 clones with lipolytic activities. Subsequently, two ORFs were identified encoding lipases, LipS and LipT. Comparative sequence analyses suggested that both enzymes are members of novel lipase families. LipS is a 30.2 kDa protein and revealed a half-life of 48 h at 70°C. The lipT gene encoded for a multimeric enzyme with a half-life of 3 h at 70°C. LipS had an optimum temperature at 70°C and LipT at 75°C. Both enzymes catalyzed hydrolysis of long-chain (C12 and C14) fatty acid esters and additionally hydrolyzed a number of industry-relevant substrates. LipS was highly specific for (R)-ibuprofen-phenyl ester with an enantiomeric excess (ee) of 99%. Furthermore, LipS was able to synthesize 1-propyl laurate and 1-tetradecyl myristate at 70°C with rates similar to those of the lipase CalB from Candida antarctica. LipS represents the first example of a thermostable metagenome-derived lipase with significant synthesis activities. Its X-ray structure was solved with a resolution of 1.99 Å revealing an unusually compact lid structure.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2014

Alternative hosts for functional (meta)genome analysis

Wolfgang Liebl; Angel Angelov; Julia Juergensen; Jennifer Chow; Anita Loeschcke; Thomas Drepper; Thomas Classen; Jörg Pietruzska; Armin Ehrenreich; Wolfgang R. Streit; Karl-Erich Jaeger

Microorganisms are ubiquitous on earth, often forming complex microbial communities in numerous different habitats. Most of these organisms cannot be readily cultivated in the laboratory using standard media and growth conditions. However, it is possible to gain access to the vast genetic, enzymatic, and metabolic diversity present in these microbial communities using cultivation-independent approaches such as sequence- or function-based metagenomics. Function-based analysis is dependent on heterologous expression of metagenomic libraries in a genetically amenable cloning and expression host. To date, Escherichia coli is used in most cases; however, this has the drawback that many genes from heterologous genomes and complex metagenomes are expressed in E. coli either at very low levels or not at all. This review emphasizes the importance of establishing alternative microbial expression systems consisting of different genera and species as well as customized strains and vectors optimized for heterologous expression of membrane proteins, multigene clusters encoding protein complexes or entire metabolic pathways. The use of alternative host-vector systems will complement current metagenomic screening efforts and expand the yield of novel biocatalysts, metabolic pathways, and useful metabolites to be identified from environmental samples.


PLOS ONE | 2014

A comparative metagenome survey of the fecal microbiota of a breast- and a plant-fed Asian elephant reveals an unexpectedly high diversity of glycoside hydrolase family enzymes.

Nele Ilmberger; Simon Güllert; Joana Dannenberg; Ulrich Rabausch; Jeremy Torres; Bernd Wemheuer; Malik Alawi; Anja Poehlein; Jennifer Chow; Dimitrij Turaev; Thomas Rattei; Christel Schmeisser; Jesper Salomon; Peter Bjarke Olsen; Rolf Daniel; Adam Grundhoff; Martin Borchert; Wolfgang R. Streit

A phylogenetic and metagenomic study of elephant feces samples (derived from a three-weeks-old and a six-years-old Asian elephant) was conducted in order to describe the microbiota inhabiting this large land-living animal. The microbial diversity was examined via 16S rRNA gene analysis. We generated more than 44,000 GS-FLX+454 reads for each animal. For the baby elephant, 380 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were identified at 97% sequence identity level; in the six-years-old animal, close to 3,000 OTUs were identified, suggesting high microbial diversity in the older animal. In both animals most OTUs belonged to Bacteroidetes and Firmicutes. Additionally, for the baby elephant a high number of Proteobacteria was detected. A metagenomic sequencing approach using Illumina technology resulted in the generation of 1.1 Gbp assembled DNA in contigs with a maximum size of 0.6 Mbp. A KEGG pathway analysis suggested high metabolic diversity regarding the use of polymers and aromatic and non-aromatic compounds. In line with the high phylogenetic diversity, a surprising and not previously described biodiversity of glycoside hydrolase (GH) genes was found. Enzymes of 84 GH families were detected. Polysaccharide utilization loci (PULs), which are found in Bacteroidetes, were highly abundant in the dataset; some of these comprised cellulase genes. Furthermore the highest coverage for GH5 and GH9 family enzymes was detected for Bacteroidetes, suggesting that bacteria of this phylum are mainly responsible for the degradation of cellulose in the Asian elephant. Altogether, this study delivers insight into the biomass conversion by one of the largest plant-fed and land-living animals.


Genome Announcements | 2013

Complete Genome Sequence of Geobacillus sp. Strain GHH01, a Thermophilic Lipase-Secreting Bacterium.

Sandra Wiegand; Ulrich Rabausch; Jennifer Chow; Rolf Daniel; Wolfgang R. Streit; Heiko Liesegang

ABSTRACT Geobacillus sp. strain GHH01 was isolated during a screening for producers of extracellular thermostable lipases. The completely sequenced and annotated 3.6-Mb genome encodes 3,478 proteins. The strain is genetically equipped to utilize a broad range of different substrates and might develop natural competence.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2018

New insights into the function and global distribution of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) degrading bacteria and enzymes in marine and terrestrial metagenomes

Dominik Danso; Christel Schmeisser; Jennifer Chow; Wolfgang Zimmermann; Ren Wei; Christian Leggewie; Xiangzhen Li; Terry C. Hazen; Wolfgang R. Streit

ABSTRACT Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) is one of the most important synthetic polymers used today. Unfortunately, the polymers accumulate in nature and to date no highly active enzymes are known that can degrade it at high velocity. Enzymes involved in PET degradation are mainly α- and β-hydrolases, like cutinases and related enzymes (EC 3.1.1). Currently, only a small number of such enzymes are well characterized. In this work, a search algorithm was developed that identified 504 possible PET hydrolase candidate genes from various databases. A further global search that comprised more than 16 Gb of sequence information within 108 marine and 25 terrestrial metagenomes obtained from the Integrated Microbial Genome (IMG) database detected 349 putative PET hydrolases. Heterologous expression of four such candidate enzymes verified the function of these enzymes and confirmed the usefulness of the developed search algorithm. In this way, two novel and thermostable enzymes with high potential for downstream application were partially characterized. Clustering of 504 novel enzyme candidates based on amino acid similarities indicated that PET hydrolases mainly occur in the phyla of Actinobacteria, Proteobacteria, and Bacteroidetes. Within the Proteobacteria, the Betaproteobacteria, Deltaproteobacteria, and Gammaproteobacteria were the main hosts. Remarkably enough, in the marine environment, bacteria affiliated with the phylum Bacteroidetes appear to be the main hosts of PET hydrolase genes, rather than Actinobacteria or Proteobacteria, as observed for the terrestrial metagenomes. Our data further imply that PET hydrolases are truly rare enzymes. The highest occurrence of 1.5 hits/Mb was observed in sequences from a sample site containing crude oil. IMPORTANCE Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) accumulates in our environment without significant microbial conversion. Although a few PET hydrolases are already known, it is still unknown how frequently they appear and with which main bacterial phyla they are affiliated. In this study, deep sequence mining of protein databases and metagenomes demonstrated that PET hydrolases indeed occur at very low frequencies in the environment. Furthermore, it was possible to link them to phyla that were previously not known to harbor such enzymes. This work contributes novel knowledge on the phylogenetic relationships, the recent evolution, and the global distribution of PET hydrolases. Finally, we describe the biochemical traits of four novel PET hydrolases.


ChemBioChem | 2017

Biocatalytic Asymmetric Phosphorylation catalyzed by recombinant Glycerate‐2‐kinase

Norman Hardt; Birhanu M. Kinfu; Jennifer Chow; Bernhard Schoenenberger; Wolfgang R. Streit; Markus Obkircher; Roland Wohlgemuth

The efficient synthesis of pure d‐glycerate‐2‐phosphate is of great interest due to its importance as an enzyme substrate and metabolite. Therefore, we investigated a straightforward one‐step biocatalytic phosphorylation of glyceric acid. Glycerate‐2‐kinase from Thermotoga maritima was expressed in Escherichia coli, allowing easy purification. The selective glycerate‐2‐kinase‐catalyzed phosphorylation was followed by 31P NMR and showed excellent enantioselectivity towards phosphorylation of the d‐enantiomer of glyceric acid. This straightforward phosphorylation reaction and subsequent product isolation enabled the preparation of enantiomerically pure d‐glycerate 2‐phosphate. This phosphorylation reaction, using recombinant glycerate‐2‐kinase, yielded d‐glycerate 2‐phosphate in fewer reaction steps and with higher purity than chemical routes.


Biotechnology Journal | 2017

Bioreaction Engineering Leading to Efficient Synthesis of L‐Glyceraldehyd‐3‐Phosphate

Getachew Shibabaw Molla; Birhanu M. Kinfu; Jennifer Chow; Wolfgang R. Streit; Roland Wohlgemuth; Andreas Liese

Enantiopure L-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate (L-GAP) is a useful building block in natural biological and synthetic processes. A biocatalytic process using glycerol kinase from Cellulomonas sp. (EC 2.7.1.30) catalyzed phosphorylation of L-glyceraldehyde (L-GA) by ATP is used for the synthesis of L-GAP. L-GAP has a half-life of 6.86 h under reaction conditions. The activity of this enzyme depends on the Mg2+ to ATP molar ratio showing maximum activity at the optimum molar ratio of 0.7. A kinetic model is developed and validated showing a 2D correlation of 99.9% between experimental and numerical data matrices. The enzyme exhibits inhibition by ADP, AMP, methylglyoxal and Ca2+ , but not by L-GAP and inorganic orthophosphate. Moreover, equal amount of Ca2+ exerts a different degree of inhibition relative to the activity without the addition of Ca2+ depending on the Mg2+ to ATP molar ratio. If the Mg2+ to ATP molar ratio is set to be at the optimum value or less, inorganic hexametaphosphate (PPi6) suppresses the enzyme activity; otherwise PPi6 enhances the enzyme activity. Based on reaction engineering parameters such as conversion, selectivity and specific productivity, evaluation of different reactor types reveals that batchwise operation via stirred-tank reactor is the most efficient process for the synthesis of L-GAP.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2016

Sequence-Based Screening for Rare Enzymes: New Insights into the World of AMDases Reveal a Conserved Motif and 58 Novel Enzymes Clustering in Eight Distinct Families

Janine Maimanakos; Jennifer Chow; Sarah Gaßmeyer; Simon Güllert; Florian Busch; Robert Kourist; Wolfgang R. Streit

Arylmalonate Decarboxylases (AMDases, EC 4.1.1.76) are very rare and mostly underexplored enzymes. Currently only four known and biochemically characterized representatives exist. However, their ability to decarboxylate α-disubstituted malonic acid derivatives to optically pure products without cofactors makes them attractive and promising candidates for the use as biocatalysts in industrial processes. Until now, AMDases could not be separated from other members of the aspartate/glutamate racemase superfamily based on their gene sequences. Within this work, a search algorithm was developed that enables a reliable prediction of AMDase activity for potential candidates. Based on specific sequence patterns and screening methods 58 novel AMDase candidate genes could be identified in this work. Thereby, AMDases with the conserved sequence pattern of Bordetella bronchiseptica’s prototype appeared to be limited to the classes of Alpha-, Beta-, and Gamma-proteobacteria. Amino acid homologies and comparison of gene surrounding sequences enabled the classification of eight enzyme clusters. Particularly striking is the accumulation of genes coding for different transporters of the tripartite tricarboxylate transporters family, TRAP transporters and ABC transporters as well as genes coding for mandelate racemases/muconate lactonizing enzymes that might be involved in substrate uptake or degradation of AMDase products. Further, three novel AMDases were characterized which showed a high enantiomeric excess (>99%) of the (R)-enantiomer of flurbiprofen. These are the recombinant AmdA and AmdV from Variovorax sp. strains HH01 and HH02, originated from soil, and AmdP from Polymorphum gilvum found by a data base search. Altogether our findings give new insights into the class of AMDases and reveal many previously unknown enzyme candidates with high potential for bioindustrial processes.


Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2012

Cloning, expression, purification and preliminary X-ray analysis of a putative metagenome-derived lipase

Francesco Fersini; Yuliya Dall'Antonia; Jennifer Chow; Wolfgang R. Streit; Jochen Mueller-Dieckmann

LipS is a novel thermostable putative lipase that was isolated from a metagenomic library using functional screening methods. The corresponding gene shows high similarity to that encoding a putative but uncharacterized esterase from Symbiobacterium thermophilum IAM14863 (99% nucleotide-sequence similarity). Two different constructs of the recombinant lipase were crystallized. Crystals belonging to space group P4(2)2(1)2 diffracted X-ray radiation to 2.8 Å resolution and crystals belonging to space group P4 diffracted to 2.0 Å resolution. The most probable content of their asymmetric units were two molecules (P4(2)2(1)2) and four or five molecules (P4), respectively.


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2017

Recombinant RNA Polymerase from Geobacillus sp. GHH01 as tool for rapid generation of metagenomic RNAs using in vitro technologies

Birhanu M. Kinfu; Maike Jahnke; Mareike Janus; Volkan Besirlioglu; Michael Roggenbuck; Richard A. Meurer; Ljubica Vojcic; Martin Borchert; Ulrich Schwaneberg; Jennifer Chow; Wolfgang R. Streit

The exciting promises of functional metagenomics for the efficient discovery of novel biomolecules from nature are often hindered by factors associated with expression hosts. Aiming to shift functional metagenomics to a host independent innovative system, we here report on the cloning, heterologous expression, and reconstitution of an RNA polymerase (RNAP) from the thermophilic Geobacillus sp. GHH01 and in vitro transcription thereafter. The five genes coding for RNAP subunits, a house keeping sigma factor and two transcription elongation factors were cloned and over expressed as His6‐tagged and/ or tag‐free proteins. Purified subunits were reconstituted into a functional polymerase through either the classical method of denaturation and subsequent renaturation or through a new resource and time efficient thermo‐reconstitution method which takes advantage of the subunits’ temperature stability. Additionally, all subunits were cloned into a single vector system for a co‐expression and in vivo reconstitution to the RNAP core enzyme. Both the core and holoenzyme form of the RNAP exhibited a robust transcription activity and were stable up to a temperature of 55°C close to their fullest activity. The Geobacillus RNAP showed a remarkable in vitro transcription profile recognizing DNA template sequences of diverse bacteria and archaea as well as metagenomic samples. Coupled with a subsequent in vitro translation step, this recombinant transcription system could allow a new, clone‐free, and functional metagenomic screening approach.

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Andreas Liese

Hamburg University of Technology

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Rolf Daniel

University of Göttingen

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Jochen Mueller-Dieckmann

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Manuel Ferrer

Spanish National Research Council

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