Juan Diego Rojas
University of São Paulo
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Featured researches published by Juan Diego Rojas.
BMC Biotechnology | 2013
Diogo Robl; Priscila da Silva Delabona; Carla Montanari Mergel; Juan Diego Rojas; Patrícia dos Santos Costa; Ida Chapaval Pimentel; Vania A. Vicente; José Geraldo da Cruz Pradella; Gabriel Padilla
BackgroundThere is an imperative necessity for alternative sources of energy able to reduce the world dependence of fossil oil. One of the most successful options is ethanol obtained mainly from sugarcane and corn fermentation. The foremost residue from sugarcane industry is the bagasse, a rich lignocellulosic raw material uses for the production of ethanol second generation (2G). New cellulolytic and hemicellulytic enzymes are needed, in order to optimize the degradation of bagasse and production of ethanol 2G.ResultsThe ability to produce hemicellulases and related enzymes, suitable for lignocellulosic biomass deconstruction, was explored using 110 endophytic fungi and 9 fungi isolated from spoiled books in Brazil. Two initial selections were performed, one employing the esculin gel diffusion assay, and the other by culturing on agar plate media with beechwood xylan and liquor from the hydrothermal pretreatment of sugar cane bagasse. A total of 56 isolates were then grown at 29°C on steam-exploded delignified sugar cane bagasse (DEB) plus soybean bran (SB) (3:1), with measurement of the xylanase, pectinase, β-glucosidase, CMCase, and FPase activities. Twelve strains were selected, and their enzyme extracts were assessed using different substrates. Finally, the best six strains were grown under xylan and pectin, and several glycohydrolases activities were also assessed. These strains were identified morphologically and by sequencing the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions and the partial β-tubulin gene (BT2). The best six strains were identified as Aspergillus niger DR02, Trichoderma atroviride DR17 and DR19, Alternaria sp. DR45, Annulohypoxylon stigyum DR47 and Talaromyces wortmannii DR49. These strains produced glycohydrolases with different profiles, and production was highly influenced by the carbon sources in the media.ConclusionsThe selected endophytic fungi Aspergillus niger DR02, Trichoderma atroviride DR17 and DR19, Alternaria sp. DR45, Annulohypoxylon stigyum DR47 and Talaromyces wortmannii DR49 are excellent producers of hydrolytic enzymes to be used as part of blends to decompose sugarcane biomass at industrial level.
Microbial Ecology | 2012
Juan Diego Rojas; Lara Durães Sette; Welington Luiz Araújo; Mateus Schreiner Garcez Lopes; Luiziana Ferreira da Silva; Renata L. A. Furlan; Gabriel Padilla
The chemical ecology and biotechnological potential of metabolites from endophytic and rhizosphere fungi are receiving much attention. A collection of 17 sugarcane-derived fungi were identified and assessed by PCR for the presence of polyketide synthase (PKS) genes. The fungi were all various genera of ascomycetes, the genomes of which encoded 36 putative PKS sequences, 26 shared sequence homology with β-ketoacyl synthase domains, while 10 sequences showed homology to known fungal C-methyltransferase domains. A neighbour–joining phylogenetic analysis of the translated sequences could group the domains into previously established chemistry-based clades that represented non-reducing, partially reducing and highly reducing fungal PKSs. We observed that, in many cases, the membership of each clade also reflected the taxonomy of the fungal isolates. The functional assignment of the domains was further confirmed by in silico secondary and tertiary protein structure predictions. This genome mining study reveals, for the first time, the genetic potential of specific taxonomic groups of sugarcane-derived fungi to produce specific types of polyketides. Future work will focus on isolating these compounds with a view to understanding their chemical ecology and likely biotechnological potential.
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2008
Celine Kelso; Vanessa Tillott; Juan Diego Rojas; Renata L. A. Furlan; Gabriel Padilla; Jennifer L. Beck
Cosmomycin D (CosD) is an anthracycline that has two trisaccharide chains linked to its ring system. Gel electrophoresis showed that CosD formed stable complexes with plasmid DNA under conditions where daunorubicin (Dn) and doxorubicin (Dx) dissociated to some extent during the experiments. The footprint and stability of CosD complexed with 10- and 16 mer DNA was investigated using several applications of electrospray ionisation mass spectrometry (ESI-MS). ESI-MS binding profiles showed that fewer CosD molecules bound to the sequences than Dn or Dx. In agreement with this, ESI-MS analysis of nuclease digestion products of the complexes showed that CosD protected the DNA to a greater extent than Dn or Dx. In tandem MS experiments, all CosD-DNA complexes were more stable than Dn- and Dx-DNA complexes. These results support that CosD binds more tightly to DNA and exerts a larger footprint than Dn or Dx. ESI-MS investigations of the binding properties of CosD could be carried out rapidly and using only small amounts of sample.
European Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 2009
Celine Kelso; Juan Diego Rojas; Renata L. A. Furlan; Gabriel Padilla; Jennifer L. Beck
Cultures of cosmomycin D-producing Streptomyces olindensis ICB20 that were propagated for many generations underwent mutations that resulted in production of a range of related anthracyclines by the bacteria. The anthracyclines that retained the two trisaccharide chains of the parent compound were separated by HPLC. Exact mass determination of these compounds revealed that they differed from cosmomycin D (CosD) in that they contained one to three fewer oxygen atoms (loss of hydroxyl groups). Some of the anthracyclines that were separated by HPLC had the same mass. The location from which the hydroxyl groups had been lost relative to CosD (on the aglycone and/or on the sugar residues) was probed by collisionally-activated dissociation using an electrospray ionisation linear quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometer. The presence of anthracyclines with the same mass, but different structure, was confirmed using an electrospray ionisation travelling wave ion mobility mass spectrometer.
Forest Ecology and Management | 2010
Robert M. Hubbard; José Luiz Stape; Michael G. Ryan; Auro C. Almeida; Juan Diego Rojas
Food Technology and Biotechnology | 2013
Daslav Hranueli; Antonio Starcevic; Jurica Zucko; Juan Diego Rojas; Janko Diminic; Damir Baranasic; Ranko Gacesa; Gabriel Padilla; Paul F. Long; John Cullum
Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, and Oral Radiology | 2015
Tania Regina Tozetto Mendoza; Adriana Fumie Tateno; Felix Drexler; Juan Diego Rojas; Laura Masami Sumita; Wilton Santos Freire; Karim Yaqub Ibrahim; Ligia Pierroti; Vanda Ueda Fick De Souza; Camila Malta Romano; Paulo Henrique Braz Silva; Claudio S. Pannuti
New Biotechnology | 2012
Carla Montanari Mergel; Diogo Robl; Zita Maria de Oliveira Gregório; Juan Diego Rojas; Sindélia Freitas Azzoni; Gabriel Padilla Maldonado
Archive | 2010
Otávio Camargo Campoe; Juan Diego Rojas; Jose Luiz Stape; Jean-Paul Laclau; Guerric Le Maire; William L. Bauerle; Claire Marsden; Yann Nouvellon
Forest Ecology and Management | 2010
Robert M. Hubbard; José Luiz Stape; Michael G. Ryan; Auro C. Almeida; Juan Diego Rojas