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Dive into the research topics where Maciej W. Guzik is active.

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Featured researches published by Maciej W. Guzik.


Advances in Applied Microbiology | 2013

Carbon-rich wastes as feedstocks for biodegradable polymer (polyhydroxyalkanoate) production using bacteria.

Jasmina Nikodinovic-Runic; Maciej W. Guzik; Shane T. Kenny; Ramesh P. Babu; Alan Werker; Kevin E. O’Connor

Research into the production of biodegradable polymers has been driven by vision for the most part from changes in policy, in Europe and America. These policies have their origins in the Brundtland Report of 1987, which provides a platform for a more sustainable society. Biodegradable polymers are part of the emerging portfolio of renewable raw materials seeking to deliver environmental, social, and economic benefits. Polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs) are naturally-occurring biodegradable-polyesters accumulated by bacteria usually in response to inorganic nutrient limitation in the presence of excess carbon. Most of the early research into PHA accumulation and technology development for industrial-scale production was undertaken using virgin starting materials. For example, polyhydroxybutyrate and copolymers such as polyhydroxybutyrate-co-valerate are produced today at industrial scale from corn-derived glucose. However, in recent years, research has been undertaken to convert domestic and industrial wastes to PHA. These wastes in todays context are residuals seen by a growing body of stakeholders as platform resources for a biobased society. In the present review, we consider residuals from food, plastic, forest and lignocellulosic, and biodiesel manufacturing (glycerol). Thus, this review seeks to gain perspective of opportunities from literature reporting the production of PHA from carbon-rich residuals as feedstocks. A discussion on approaches and context for PHA production with reference to pure- and mixed-culture technologies is provided. Literature reports advocate results of the promise of waste conversion to PHA. However, the vast majority of studies on waste to PHA is at laboratory scale. The questions of surmounting the technical and political hurdles to industrialization are generally left unanswered. There are a limited number of studies that have progressed into fermentors and a dearth of pilot-scale demonstration. A number of fermentation studies show that biomass and PHA productivity can be increased, and sometimes dramatically, in a fermentor. The relevant application-specific properties of the polymers from the wastes studied and the effect of altered-waste composition on polymer properties are generally not well reported and would greatly benefit the progress of the research as high productivity is of limited value without the context of requisite case-specific polymer properties. The proposed use of a waste residual is advantageous from a life cycle viewpoint as it removes the direct or indirect effect of PHA production on land usage and food production. However, the question, of how economic drivers will promote or hinder advancements to demonstration scale, when wastes generally become understood as resources for a biobased society, hangs today in the balance due to a lack of shared vision and the legacy of mistakes made with first generation bioproducts.


Bioresource Technology | 2013

Conversion of grass biomass into fermentable sugars and its utilization for medium chain length polyhydroxyalkanoate (mcl-PHA) production by Pseudomonas strains

Reeta Davis; Rashmi Kataria; Federico Cerrone; Trevor Woods; Shane T. Kenny; Anthonia O’Donovan; Maciej W. Guzik; Hamid Shaikh; Gearoid Duane; Vijai Kumar Gupta; Maria G. Tuohy; Ramesh Babu Padamatti; Eoin Casey; Kevin E. O’Connor

This study investigated the potential of grass biomass as a feedstock for mcl-PHA production. Pretreatments (2% NaOH at 120°C or hot water at 120°C) of perennial ryegrass were employed alone or in combination with sodium chlorite/acetic acid (SC/AA) delignification to evaluate the enzymatic digestibility and subsequent utilization of resultant sugars by Pseudomonas strains. NaOH pretreated sample had better digestibility than raw and hot water treated samples and this hydrolysate supported good growth of all tested strains with limited mcl-PHA (6-17% of cell dry mass (CDM)) accumulation. Digestibility of both untreated and pretreated samples was improved after SC/AA delignification and produced glucose (74-77%) rich hydrolysates. Tested strains accumulated 20-34% of CDM as PHA when these hydrolysates were used as sole carbon and energy source. CDM and PHA yields obtained for these strains when tested with laboratory grade sugars was similar to that achieved with grass derived sugars.


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2015

High cell density cultivation of Pseudomonas putida KT2440 using glucose without the need for oxygen enriched air supply.

Reeta Davis; Gearoid Duane; Shane T. Kenny; Federico Cerrone; Maciej W. Guzik; Ramesh P. Babu; Eoin Casey; Kevin E. O'Connor

High Cell Density (HCD) cultivation of bacteria is essential for the majority of industrial processes to achieve high volumetric productivity (g L−1 h−1) of a bioproduct of interest. This study developed a fed batch bioprocess using glucose as sole carbon and energy source for the HCD of the well described biocatalyst Pseudomonas putida KT2440 without the supply of oxygen enriched air. Growth kinetics data from batch fermentations were used for building a bioprocess model and designing feeding strategies. An exponential followed by linearly increasing feeding strategy of glucose was found to be effective in maintaining biomass productivity while also delaying the onset of dissolved oxygen (supplied via compressed air) limitation. A final cell dry weight (CDW) of 102 g L−1 was achieved in 33 h with a biomass productivity of 3.1 g L−1 h−1 which are the highest ever reported values for P. putida strains using glucose without the supply of pure oxygen or oxygen enriched air. The usefulness of the biomass as a biocatalyst was demonstrated through the production of the biodegradable polymer polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA). When nonanoic acid (NA) was supplied to the glucose grown cells of P. putida KT2440, it accumulated 32% of CDW as PHA in 11 h (2.85 g L−1 h−1) resulting in a total of 0.56 kg of PHA in 18 L with a yield of 0.56 g PHA g NA−1. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2015;112: 725–733.


Critical Reviews in Biotechnology | 2018

Lactose esters: synthesis and biotechnological applications

Jakub Staroń; Janusz M. Dąbrowski; Ewelina Cichoń; Maciej W. Guzik

Abstract Biodegradable nonionic sugar esters-based surfactants have been gaining more and more attention in recent years due to their chemical plasticity that enables the various applications of these molecules. In this review, various synthesis methods and biotechnological implications of lactose esters (LEs) uses are considered. Several chemical and enzymatic approaches are described for the synthesis of LEs, together with their applications, i.e. function in detergents formulation and as additives that not only stabilize food products but also protect food from undesired microbial contamination. Further, this article discusses medical applications of LEs in cancer treatment, especially their uses as biosensors, halogenated anticancer drugs, and photosensitizing agents for photodynamic therapy of cancer and photodynamic inactivation of microorganisms.


Environmental Microbiology Reports | 2013

The effect of polyphosphate kinase gene deletion on polyhydroxyalkanoate accumulation and carbon metabolism in Pseudomonas putida KT2440

William T. Casey; Jasmina Nikodinovic-Runic; Pilar Fonseca Garcia; Maciej W. Guzik; John W. McGrath; John P. Quinn; Gerard Cagney; María Auxiliadora Prieto; Kevin E. O'Connor

The primary enzyme involved in polyphosphate (polyP) synthesis, polyP kinase (ppk), has been deleted in Pseudomonas putida KT2440. This has resulted in a threefold to sixfold reduction in polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) accumulation compared with the wild type under conditions of nitrogen limitation, with either temperature or oxidative (H2O2) stress, when grown on glucose. The accumulation of PHA by Δppk mutant was the same as the wild type under nitrogen-limiting growth conditions. There was no difference in polyP levels between wild-type and Δppk strains under all growth conditions tested. In the Δppk mutant proteome, polyP kinase (PPK) was undetectable, but up-regulation of the polyp-associated proteins polyP adenosine triphosphate (ATP)/nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) kinase (PpnK), a putative polyP adenosine monophosphate (AMP) phosphotransferase (PP_1752), and exopolyphosphatase was observed. Δppk strain exhibited significantly retarded growth with glycerol as carbon and energy source (42 h of lag period compared with 24 h in wild-type strain) but similar growth to the wild-type strain with glucose. Analysis of gene transcription revealed downregulation of glycerol kinase and the glycerol facilitator respectively. Glycerol kinase protein expression was also downregulated in the Δppk mutant. The deletion of ppk did not affect motility but reduced biofilm formation. Thus, the knockout of the ppk gene has resulted in a number of phenotypic changes to the mutant without affecting polyP accumulation.


Microbiology | 2014

Identification and characterization of an acyl-CoA dehydrogenase from Pseudomonas putida KT2440 that shows preference towards medium to long chain length fatty acids

Maciej W. Guzik; Tanja Narancic; Tatjana Ilic-Tomic; Sandra Vojnovic; Shane T. Kenny; William T. Casey; Gearoid Duane; Eoin Casey; Trevor Woods; Ramesh P. Babu; Jasmina Nikodinovic-Runic; Kevin E. O'Connor

Diverse and elaborate pathways for nutrient utilization, as well as mechanisms to combat unfavourable nutrient conditions make Pseudomonas putida KT2440 a versatile micro-organism able to occupy a range of ecological niches. The fatty acid degradation pathway of P. putida is complex and correlated with biopolymer medium chain length polyhydroxyalkanoate (mcl-PHA) biosynthesis. Little is known about the second step of fatty acid degradation (β-oxidation) in this strain. In silico analysis of its genome sequence revealed 21 putative acyl-CoA dehydrogenases (ACADs), four of which were functionally characterized through mutagenesis studies. Four mutants with insertionally inactivated ACADs (PP_1893, PP_2039, PP_2048 and PP_2437) grew and accumulated mcl-PHA on a range of fatty acids as the sole source of carbon and energy. Their ability to grow and accumulate biopolymer was differentially negatively affected on various fatty acids, in comparison to the wild-type strain. Inactive PP_2437 exhibited a pattern of reduced growth and PHA accumulation when fatty acids with lengths of 10 to 14 carbon chains were used as substrates. Recombinant expression and biochemical characterization of the purified protein allowed functional annotation in P. putida KT2440 as an ACAD showing clear preference for dodecanoyl-CoA ester as a substrate and optimum activity at 30 °C and pH 6.5-7.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2014

Medium chain length polyhydroxyalkanoate (mcl-PHA) production from volatile fatty acids derived from the anaerobic digestion of grass

Federico Cerrone; Santosh K. Choudhari; Reeta Davis; Denise Cysneiros; Vincent O’Flaherty; Gearoid Duane; Eoin Casey; Maciej W. Guzik; Shane T. Kenny; Ramesh P. Babu; Kevin E. O’Connor


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2014

Conversion of post consumer polyethylene to the biodegradable polymer polyhydroxyalkanoate

Maciej W. Guzik; Shane T. Kenny; Gearoid Duane; Eoin Casey; Trevor Woods; Ramesh P. Babu; Jasmina Nikodinovic-Runic; Michael Murray; Kevin E. O’Connor


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2016

Polyhydroxyalkanoate-based 3-hydroxyoctanoic acid and its derivatives as a platform of bioactive compounds.

Jelena Radivojevic; Sanja Skaro; Lidija Senerovic; Branka Vasiljevic; Maciej W. Guzik; Shane T. Kenny; Veselin Maslak; Jasmina Nikodinovic-Runic; Kevin E. O’Connor


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2014

Fed-batch strategies using butyrate for high cell density cultivation of Pseudomonas putida and its use as a biocatalyst

Federico Cerrone; Gearoid Duane; Eoin Casey; Reeta Davis; Ian Belton; Shane T. Kenny; Maciej W. Guzik; Trevor Woods; Ramesh P. Babu; Kevin E. O’Connor

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Shane T. Kenny

University College Dublin

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Eoin Casey

University College Dublin

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Gearoid Duane

University College Dublin

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Reeta Davis

University College Dublin

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