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Dive into the research topics where Manuel R. Plan is active.

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Featured researches published by Manuel R. Plan.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2008

Backbone cyclised peptides from plants show molluscicidal activity against the rice pest Pomacea canaliculata (golden apple snail).

Manuel R. Plan; Ivana Saska; Arsenia G. Cagauan; David J. Craik

Golden apple snails ( Pomacea canaliculata) are serious pests of rice in South East Asia. Cyclotides are backbone cyclized peptides produced by plants from Rubiaceae and Violaceae. In this study, we investigated the molluscicidal activity of cyclotides against golden apple snails. Crude cyclotide extracts from both Oldenlandia affinis and Viola odorata plants showed molluscicidal activity comparable to the synthetic molluscicide metaldehyde. Individual cyclotides from each extract demonstrated a range of molluscicidal activities. The cyclotides cycloviolacin O1, kalata B1, and kalata B2 were more toxic to golden apple snails than metaldehyde, while kalata B7 and kalata B8 did not cause significant mortality. The toxicity of the cyclotide kalata B2 on a nontarget species, the Nile tilapia ( Oreochromis niloticus), was three times lower than the common piscicide rotenone. Our findings suggest that the existing diversity of cyclotides in plants could be used to develop natural molluscicides.


ChemBioChem | 2007

The Cyclotide Fingerprint in Oldenlandia affinis: Elucidation of Chemically Modified, Linear and Novel Macrocyclic Peptides

Manuel R. Plan; Ulf Göransson; Richard J. Clark; Norelle L. Daly; Michelle L. Colgrave; David J. Craik

The complete suite of cyclotides present in Oldenlandia affinis (Rubiaceae), the plant that was originally found to contain this unique family of circular proteins, has been characterised. This study expands the number of known cyclotides in this plant to 17, of which nine new sequences (kalata B9–B17) were characterised in this work. In addition, five derivatives that contain oxidation products of the conserved tryptophan were identified, and it was shown that the formation of these derivatives is catalysed by exposure to sunlight. Furthermore, we describe two “linear” cyclotide analogues. These acyclic peptides have three intact disulfide bonds, and their N and C termini coincide with the hypothesised cleavage sites from the precursor protein. This work increases our knowledge about the sequence variation that is accommodated by the cyclic cystine knot scaffold, confirms its applicability as a template for drug design, and also shows the first natural degradation pathways for cyclotides. These pathways have important implications for the persistence and environmental fate of the cyclotides if used as crop‐protection agents.


Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology | 2016

Metabolic Engineering of Pseudomonas putida KT2440 for the Production of para-Hydroxy Benzoic Acid

Shiqin Yu; Manuel R. Plan; Gal Winter; Jens O. Krömer

para-Hydroxy benzoic acid (PHBA) is the key component for preparing parabens, a common preservatives in food, drugs, and personal care products, as well as high-performance bioplastics such as liquid crystal polymers. Pseudomonas putida KT2440 was engineered to produce PHBA from glucose via the shikimate pathway intermediate chorismate. To obtain the PHBA production strain, chorismate lyase UbiC from Escherichia coli and a feedback resistant 3-deoxy-d-arabino-heptulosonate-7-phosphate synthase encoded by gene aroGD146N were overexpressed individually and simultaneously. In addition, genes related to product degradation (pobA) or competing for the precursor chorismate (pheA and trpE) were deleted from the genome. To further improve PHBA production, the glucose metabolism repressor hexR was knocked out in order to increase erythrose 4-phosphate and NADPH supply. The best strain achieved a maximum titer of 1.73 g L−1 and a carbon yield of 18.1% (C-mol C-mol−1) in a non-optimized fed-batch fermentation. This is to date the highest PHBA concentration produced by P. putida using a chorismate lyase.


Biopolymers | 2010

Structural and biochemical characteristics of the cyclotide kalata B5 from Oldenlandia affinis

Manuel R. Plan; Lillian Sando; Norelle L. Daly; David J. Craik

Cyclotides are a large family of plant-derived proteins typified by their head-to-tail cyclic backbone and knotted arrangement of three disulfide bonds. Although they display a diverse range of biological activities, their native function is thought to be plant defense. Here we characterized the expression, three-dimensional structure, and hemolytic activity of the cyclotide kalata B5 from the African plant Oldenlandia affinis. Kalata B5 shows an interesting seasonal variation in its expression and can only be isolated during certain times of the year, when the plant is flowering. It displays a typical tightly folded cyclic Scystine knot structure. A range of pH and temperature titrations reveal that a conserved glutamic acid in loop 1 Sof the structure forms a key hydrogen bond network, similar to that reported previously for other cyclotides. However, specific line broadening in the NMR spectra of kalata B5 suggests that the hydrogen bonding network in this peptide is less rigid than in other cyclotides. Notably, the pK9a) of Glu6 of 4.5 is higher than the values for other cyclotides studied so far, which range from 3.0 to 4.0, providing a further indication of a weaker hydrogen bond network. Kalata B5 has only moderate hemolytic activity compared with other highly expressed cyclotides, and this reduced activity probably reflects its more flexible structure. As is the case with other cyclotides, kalata B5 has an exposed hydrophobic region on its surface, supporting suggestions that this hydrophobic patch is a key feature for membrane binding and biological activity of cyclotides.


Metabolic Engineering | 2017

A squalene synthase protein degradation method for improved sesquiterpene production in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Bingyin Peng; Manuel R. Plan; Panagiotis Chrysanthopoulos; Mark P. Hodson; Lars K. Nielsen; Claudia E. Vickers

Sesquiterpenes are C15 isoprenoids with utility as fragrances, flavours, pharmaceuticals, and potential biofuels. Microbial fermentation is being examined as a competitive approach for bulk production of these compounds. Competition for carbon allocation between synthesis of endogenous sterols and production of the introduced sesquiterpene limits yields. Achieving balance between endogenous sterols and heterologous sesquiterpenes is therefore required to achieve economical yields. In the current study, the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was used to produce the acyclic sesquiterpene alcohol, trans-nerolidol. Nerolidol production was first improved by enhancing the upstream mevalonate pathway for the synthesis of the precursor farnesyl pyrophosphate (FPP). However, excess FPP was partially directed towards squalene by squalene synthase (Erg9p), resulting in squalene accumulation to 1% biomass; moreover, the specific growth rate declined. In order to re-direct carbon away from sterol production and towards the desired heterologous sesquiterpene, a novel protein destabilisation approach was developed for Erg9p. It was shown that Erg9p is located on endoplasmic reticulum and lipid droplets through a C-terminal ER-targeted transmembrane peptide. A PEST (rich in Pro, Glu/Asp, Ser, and Thr) sequence-dependent endoplasmic reticulum-associated protein degradation (ERAD) mechanism was established to decrease cellular levels of Erg9p without relying on inducers, repressors or specific repressing conditions. This improved nerolidol titre by 86% to ~100mgL-1. In this strain, squalene levels were similar to the wild-type control strain, and downstream ergosterol levels were slightly decreased relative to the control, indicating redirection of carbon away from sterols and towards sesquiterpene production. There was no negative effect on cell growth under these conditions. Protein degradation is an efficient mechanism to control carbon allocation at flux-competing nodes in metabolic engineering applications. This study demonstrates that an engineered ERAD mechanism can be used to balance flux competition between the endogenous sterol pathway and an introduced bio-product pathways at the FPP node. The approach of protein degradation in general might be more widely applied to improve metabolic engineering outcomes.


Journal of Toxicology-toxin Reviews | 2002

STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF PLANT TOXINS (WITH EMPHASIS ON CYSTINE KNOT TOXINS)

David J. Craik; Norelle L. Daly; Manuel R. Plan; Angela A. Salim; Lillian Sando

Plant toxins are substances produced and secreted by plants to defend themselves against predators. In a broad sense, this includes all substances that have a toxic effect on targeted organisms, whether they are microbes, other plants, insects, or higher animals. Plant toxins have a diverse range of structures, from small organic molecules through to proteins. This review gives an overview of the various classes of plant toxins but focuses on an interesting class of protein-based plant toxins containing a cystine knot motif. This structural motif confers exceptional stability on proteins containing it and is associated with a wide range of biological activities. The biological activities and structural stability offer many potential applications in the pharmaceutical and agricultural fields. One particularly exciting prospect is in the use of protein-based plant toxins as molecular scaffolds for displaying pharmaceutically important bioactivities. Future applications of plant toxins are likely to involve genetic engineering techniques and “molecular pharming” approaches.


Molecular Microbiology | 2014

Increased sensitivity to tryptophan bioavailability is a positive adaptation by the human strains of Chlamydia pneumoniae

Anu Chacko; Christopher J. Barker; Kenneth W. Beagley; Mark P. Hodson; Manuel R. Plan; Peter Timms; Wilhelmina M. Huston

One of the most significant activities induced by interferon‐gamma against intracellular pathogens is the induction of IDO (indoleamine 2,3‐dioxygenase) expression, which subsequently results in the depletion of tryptophan. We tested the hypothesis that human strains of Chlamydia pneumoniae are more sensitive to tryptophan limitation than animal C. pneumoniae strains. The human strains were significantly more sensitive to IFN‐γ than the animal strains in a lung epithelia cell model (BEAS‐2B), with exposure to 1 U ml−1 IFN‐γ resulting in complete loss of infectious yield of human strains, compared to the animal strains where reductions in infectious progeny were around 3.5–4.0 log. Strikingly, the IFN‐γ induced loss of ability to form infectious progeny production was completely rescued by removal of the IFN‐γ and addition of exogenous tryptophan for the human strains, but not the animal strains. In fact, a human heart strain was more capable of entering a non‐infectious, viable persistent stage when exposed to IFN‐γ and was also more effectively rescued, compared to a human respiratory strain. Exquisite susceptibility to IFN‐γ, specifically due to tryptophan availability appears to be a core adaptation of the human C. pneumoniae strains, which may reflect the chronic nature of their infections in this host.


Metabolic Engineering | 2017

Arginine deiminase pathway provides ATP and boosts growth of the gas-fermenting acetogen Clostridium autoethanogenum

Kaspar Valgepea; Kim Q. Loi; James B. Y. H. Behrendorff; Renato de Souza Pinto Lemgruber; Manuel R. Plan; Mark P. Hodson; Michael Köpke; Lars K. Nielsen; Esteban Marcellin

Acetogens are attractive organisms for the production of chemicals and fuels from inexpensive and non-food feedstocks such as syngas (CO, CO2 and H2). Expanding their product spectrum beyond native compounds is dictated by energetics, particularly ATP availability. Acetogens have evolved sophisticated strategies to conserve energy from reduction potential differences between major redox couples, however, this coupling is sensitive to small changes in thermodynamic equilibria. To accelerate the development of strains for energy-intensive products from gases, we used a genome-scale metabolic model (GEM) to explore alternative ATP-generating pathways in the gas-fermenting acetogen Clostridium autoethanogenum. Shadow price analysis revealed a preference of C. autoethanogenum for nine amino acids. This prediction was experimentally confirmed under heterotrophic conditions. Subsequent in silico simulations identified arginine (ARG) as a key enhancer for growth. Predictions were experimentally validated, and faster growth was measured in media containing ARG (tD~4h) compared to growth on yeast extract (tD~9h). The growth-boosting effect of ARG was confirmed during autotrophic growth. Metabolic modelling and experiments showed that acetate production is nearly abolished and fast growth is realised by a three-fold increase in ATP production through the arginine deiminase (ADI) pathway. The involvement of the ADI pathway was confirmed by metabolomics and RNA-sequencing which revealed a ~500-fold up-regulation of the ADI pathway with an unexpected down-regulation of the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway. The data presented here offer a potential route for supplying cells with ATP, while demonstrating the usefulness of metabolic modelling for the discovery of native pathways for stimulating growth or enhancing energy availability.


Biotechnology Journal | 2017

Quantitative analysis of aromatics for synthetic biology using liquid chromatography

Bin Lai; Manuel R. Plan; Nils Averesch; Shiqin Yu; Frauke Kracke; Nicolas Lekieffre; Sarah F. Bydder; Mark P. Hodson; Gal Winter; Jens O. Krömer

The replacement of petrochemical aromatics with bio‐based molecules is a key area of current biotechnology research. To date, a small number of aromatics have been produced by recombinant bacteria in laboratory scale while industrial production still requires further strain development. While each study includes some distinct analytical methodology to quantify certain aromatics, a method that can reliably quantify a great number of aromatic products and relevant pathway intermediates is needed to accelerate strain development. In this study, we developed a robust reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography method to quantify a wide range of aromatic metabolites present in host microorganisms using the shikimate pathway, which is the major metabolic pathway for biosynthesis of aromatics. Twenty‐three metabolites can be quantified precisely with the optimized method using standard HPLC equipment and UV detection, with the mobile phase used for chromatography also compatible with mass spectrometry (MS). The limit of quantification/detection is as low as 10−10 to 10−13 mol, respectively, which makes this method feasible for quantification of intracellular metabolites. This method covers most metabolic routes for aromatics biosynthesis, it is inexpensive, robust, simple, precise and sensitive, and has been demonstrated on cell extracts from S. cerevisiae genetically engineered to overproduce aromatics.


Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture | 2002

Mango stem-end rot (Botryosphaeria dothidea) disease control by partial-pressure infiltration of fungicides

Manuel R. Plan; D. C. Joyce; H. J. Ogle; G. I. Johnson

The in vitro efficacy of several fungicides against Botryosphaeria dothidea (syn. Dothiorella dominicana) and their in vivo efficacy in controlling mango cv. Kensington Pride stem-end rot on partial-pressure infiltration v. dip treatment of green mature fruit was evaluated. In vitro sensitivity of B. dothidea to Benlate (benomyl), Sportak (prochloraz) and Scala (pyrimethanil) at 10 dilutions of the manufacturers recommended rate was first determined at typical cold (13°C) and shelf (23°C) storage temperatures. The effectiveness of partial-pressure infiltration and conventional hot (52°C) or cold (26°C) dipping of fruit after harvest was then evaluated using the commercially recommended rate for each fungicide. In vitro, Benlate and Sportak prevented the growth of B. dothidea at both storage temperatures and at all concentrations, while Scala partially controlled growth of the pathogen. Benlate was the most effective fungicide for stem-end rot control. Sportak and Scala resulted in stem-end rot control when applied by partial-pressure infiltration, but not as dips. Partial-pressure infiltration holds promise for enhancing the efficacy of otherwise less effective but alternative fungicides for control of stem-end rot diseases.

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Mark P. Hodson

University of Queensland

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David J. Craik

University of Queensland

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Leigh Gebbie

University of Queensland

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S. M. Brumbley

University of Queensland

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