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Dive into the research topics where Marijke A. H. Luttik is active.

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Featured researches published by Marijke A. H. Luttik.


Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek International Journal of General and Molecular Microbiology | 2006

Alcoholic fermentation of carbon sources in biomass hydrolysates by Saccharomyces cerevisiae: Current status

Antonius J. A. van Maris; Derek A. Abbott; Eleonora Bellissimi; Joost van den Brink; Marko Kuyper; Marijke A. H. Luttik; H. Wouter Wisselink; W. Alexander Scheffers; Johannes P. van Dijken; Jack T. Pronk

Fuel ethanol production from plant biomass hydrolysates by Saccharomyces cerevisiae is of great economic and environmental significance. This paper reviews the current status with respect to alcoholic fermentation of the main plant biomass-derived monosaccharides by this yeast. Wild-type S. cerevisiae strains readily ferment glucose, mannose and fructose via the Embden–Meyerhof pathway of glycolysis, while galactose is fermented via the Leloir pathway. Construction of yeast strains that efficiently convert other potentially fermentable substrates in plant biomass hydrolysates into ethanol is a major challenge in metabolic engineering. The most abundant of these compounds is xylose. Recent metabolic and evolutionary engineering studies on S. cerevisiae strains that express a fungal xylose isomerase have enabled the rapid and efficient␣anaerobic fermentation of this pentose. l-Arabinose fermentation, based on the expression of a prokaryotic pathway in S. cerevisiae, has also been established, but needs further optimization before it can be considered for industrial implementation. In addition to these already investigated strategies, possible approaches for metabolic engineering of galacturonic acid and rhamnose fermentation by S. cerevisiae are discussed. An emerging and major challenge is to achieve the rapid transition from proof-of-principle experiments under ‘academic’ conditions (synthetic media, single substrates or simple substrate mixtures, absence of toxic inhibitors) towards efficient conversion of complex industrial substrate mixtures that contain synergistically acting inhibitors.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

The Saccharomyces cerevisiae NDE1 and NDE2 genes encode separate mitochondrial NADH dehydrogenases catalyzing the oxidation of cytosolic NADH.

Marijke A. H. Luttik; Karin M. Overkamp; Peter Kötter; Simon de Vries; Johannes P. van Dijken; Jack T. Pronk

In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, theNDI1 gene encodes a mitochondrial NADH dehydrogenase, the catalytic side of which projects to the matrix side of the inner mitochondrial membrane. In addition to this NADH dehydrogenase,S. cerevisiae exhibits another mitochondrial NADH-dehydrogenase activity, which oxidizes NADH at the cytosolic side of the inner membrane. To investigate whether open reading framesYMR145c/NDE1 and YDL 085w/NDE2, which exhibit sequence similarity with NDI1, encode the latter enzyme, NADH-dependent mitochondrial respiration was assayed in wild-type S. cerevisiae and nde deletion mutants. Mitochondria were isolated from aerobic, glucose-limited chemostat cultures grown at a dilution rate (D) of 0.10 h−1, in which reoxidation of cytosolic NADH by wild-type cells occurred exclusively by respiration. Compared with the wild type, rates of mitochondrial NADH oxidation were about 3-fold reduced in annde1Δ mutant and unaffected in an nde2Δmutant. NADH-dependent mitochondrial respiration was completely abolished in an nde1Δ nde2Δ double mutant. Mitochondrial respiration of substrates other than NADH was not affected in nde mutants. In shake flasks, an nde1Δ nde2Δ mutant exhibited reduced specific growth rates on ethanol and galactose but not on glucose. Glucose metabolism in aerobic, glucose-limited chemostat cultures (D = 0.10 h−1) of an nde1Δ nde2Δ mutant was essentially respiratory. Apparently, under these conditions alternative systems for reoxidation of cytosolic NADH could replace the role of Nde1p and Nde2p in S. cerevisiae.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

The fluxes through glycolytic enzymes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae are predominantly regulated at posttranscriptional levels

Pascale Daran-Lapujade; Sergio Rossell; Walter M. van Gulik; Marijke A. H. Luttik; Marco J. L. de Groot; Monique Slijper; Albert J. R. Heck; Jean-Marc Daran; Johannes H. de Winde; Hans V. Westerhoff; Jack T. Pronk; Barbara M. Bakker

Metabolic fluxes may be regulated “hierarchically,” e.g., by changes of gene expression that adjust enzyme capacities (Vmax) and/or “metabolically” by interactions of enzymes with substrates, products, or allosteric effectors. In the present study, a method is developed to dissect the hierarchical regulation into contributions by transcription, translation, protein degradation, and posttranslational modification. The method was applied to the regulation of fluxes through individual glycolytic enzymes when the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was confronted with the absence of oxygen and the presence of benzoic acid depleting its ATP. Metabolic regulation largely contributed to the ≈10-fold change in flux through the glycolytic enzymes. This contribution varied from 50 to 80%, depending on the glycolytic step and the cultivation condition tested. Within the 50–20% hierarchical regulation of fluxes, transcription played a minor role, whereas regulation of protein synthesis or degradation was the most important. These also contributed to 75–100% of the regulation of protein levels.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

Glucose uptake kinetics and transcription of HXT genes in chemostat cultures of Saccharomyces cerevisae

Jasper A. Diderich; M.G.J. Schepper; P. van Hoek; Marijke A. H. Luttik; J.P. Van Dijken; Jacobus Thomas Pronk; P. Klaassen; H.F.M. Boelens; M.J. Teixeira De Mattos; K. van Dam; A.L. Kruckeberg

The kinetics of glucose transport and the transcription of all 20 members of the HXT hexose transporter gene family were studied in relation to the steady statein situ carbon metabolism of Saccharomyces cerevisiae CEN.PK113-7D grown in chemostat cultures. Cells were cultivated at a dilution rate of 0.10 h−1 under various nutrient-limited conditions (anaerobically glucose- or nitrogen-limited or aerobically glucose-, galactose-, fructose-, ethanol-, or nitrogen-limited), or at dilution rates ranging between 0.05 and 0.38 h−1 in aerobic glucose-limited cultures. Transcription ofHXT1–HXT7 was correlated with the extracellular glucose concentration in the cultures. Transcription of GAL2, encoding the galactose transporter, was only detected in galactose-limited cultures. SNF3 and RGT2, two members of the HXT family that encode glucose sensors, were transcribed at low levels. HXT8–HXT17 transcripts were detected at very low levels. A consistent relationship was observed between the expression of individual HXT genes and the glucose transport kinetics determined from zero-transinflux of 14C-glucose during 5 s. This relationship was in broad agreement with the transport kinetics of Hxt1–Hxt7 and Gal2 deduced in previous studies on single-HXT strains. At lower dilution rates the glucose transport capacity estimated from zero-trans influx experiments and the residual glucose concentration exceeded the measured in situ glucose consumption rate. At high dilution rates, however, the estimated glucose transport capacity was too low to account for the in situ glucose consumption rate.


Microbial Cell Factories | 2012

De novo sequencing, assembly and analysis of the genome of the laboratory strain Saccharomyces cerevisiae CEN.PK113-7D, a model for modern industrial biotechnology.

Jurgen F. Nijkamp; Marcel van den Broek; Erwin Datema; Stefan de Kok; Lizanne Bosman; Marijke A. H. Luttik; Pascale Daran-Lapujade; Wanwipa Vongsangnak; Jens Nielsen; Wilbert H. M. Heijne; Paul Klaassen; Chris J. Paddon; Darren M. Platt; Peter Kötter; Roeland C. H. J. van Ham; Marcel J. T. Reinders; Jack T. Pronk; Dick de Ridder; Jean-Marc Daran

Saccharomyces cerevisiae CEN.PK 113-7D is widely used for metabolic engineering and systems biology research in industry and academia. We sequenced, assembled, annotated and analyzed its genome. Single-nucleotide variations (SNV), insertions/deletions (indels) and differences in genome organization compared to the reference strain S. cerevisiae S288C were analyzed. In addition to a few large deletions and duplications, nearly 3000 indels were identified in the CEN.PK113-7D genome relative to S288C. These differences were overrepresented in genes whose functions are related to transcriptional regulation and chromatin remodelling. Some of these variations were caused by unstable tandem repeats, suggesting an innate evolvability of the corresponding genes. Besides a previously characterized mutation in adenylate cyclase, the CEN.PK113-7D genome sequence revealed a significant enrichment of non-synonymous mutations in genes encoding for components of the cAMP signalling pathway. Some phenotypic characteristics of the CEN.PK113-7D strains were explained by the presence of additional specific metabolic genes relative to S288C. In particular, the presence of the BIO1 and BIO6 genes correlated with a biotin prototrophy of CEN.PK113-7D. Furthermore, the copy number, chromosomal location and sequences of the MAL loci were resolved. The assembled sequence reveals that CEN.PK113-7D has a mosaic genome that combines characteristics of laboratory strains and wild-industrial strains.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2000

The Mitochondrial Alcohol Dehydrogenase Adh3p Is Involved in a Redox Shuttle in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Barbara M. Bakker; Christoffer Bro; Peter Kötter; Marijke A. H. Luttik; Johannes P. van Dijken; Jack T. Pronk

NDI1 is the unique gene encoding the internal mitochondrial NADH dehydrogenase of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The enzyme catalyzes the transfer of electrons from intramitochondrial NADH to ubiquinone. Surprisingly, NDI1 is not essential for respiratory growth. Here we demonstrate that this is due to in vivo activity of an ethanol-acetaldehyde redox shuttle, which transfers the redox equivalents from the mitochondria to the cytosol. Cytosolic NADH can be oxidized by the external NADH dehydrogenases. Deletion of ADH3, encoding mitochondrial alcohol dehydrogenase, did not affect respiratory growth in aerobic, glucose-limited chemostat cultures. Also, an ndi1Delta mutant was capable of respiratory growth under these conditions. However, when both ADH3 and NDI1 were deleted, metabolism became respirofermentative, indicating that the ethanol-acetaldehyde shuttle is essential for respiratory growth of the ndi1 delta mutant. In anaerobic batch cultures, the maximum specific growth rate of the adh3 delta mutant (0.22 h(-1)) was substantially reduced compared to that of the wild-type strain (0.33 h(-1)). This is consistent with the hypothesis that the ethanol-acetaldehyde shuttle is also involved in maintenance of the mitochondrial redox balance under anaerobic conditions. Finally, it is shown that another mitochondrial alcohol dehydrogenase is active in the adh3 delta ndi1 delta mutant, contributing to residual redox-shuttle activity in this strain.


Yeast | 1998

Regulation of alcoholic fermentation in batch and chemostat cultures of Kluyveromyces lactis CBS 2359

Janine Kiers; Anne-Marie Zeeman; Marijke A. H. Luttik; Claudia Thiele; Juan I. Castrillo; H. Y. Steensma; Johannes P. van Dijken; Jack T. Pronk

Kluyveromyces lactis is an important industrial yeast, as well as a popular laboratory model. There is currently no consensus in the literature on the physiology of this yeast, in particular with respect to aerobic alcoholic fermentation (‘Crabtree effect’). This study deals with regulation of alcoholic fermentation in K. lactis CBS 2359, a proposed reference strain for molecular studies. In aerobic, glucose‐limited chemostat cultures (D=0·05–0·40 h−1) growth was entirely respiratory, without significant accumulation of ethanol or other metabolites. Alcoholic fermentation occurred in glucose‐grown shake‐flask cultures, but was absent during batch cultivation on glucose in fermenters under strictly aerobic conditions. This indicated that ethanol formation in the shake‐flask cultures resulted from oxygen limitation. Indeed, when the oxygen feed to steady‐state chemostat cultures (D=0·10 h−1) was lowered, a mixed respirofermentative metabolism only occurred at very low dissolved oxygen concentrations (less than 1% of air saturation). The onset of respirofermentative metabolism as a result of oxygen limitation was accompanied by an increase of the levels of pyruvate decarboxylase and alcohol dehydrogenase. When aerobic, glucose‐limited chemostat cultures (D=0·10 h−1) were pulsed with excess glucose, ethanol production did not occur during the first 40 min after the pulse. However, a slow aerobic ethanol formation was invariably observed after this period. Since alcoholic fermentation did not occur in aerobic batch cultures this is probably a transient response, caused by an imbalanced adjustment of enzyme levels during the transition from steady‐state growth at μ=0·10 h−1 to growth at μmax. It is concluded that in K. lactis, as in other Crabtree‐negative yeasts, the primary environmental trigger for occurrence of alcoholic fermentation is oxygen limitation.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2002

Metabolic Engineering of Glycerol Production in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Karin M. Overkamp; Barbara M. Bakker; Peter Kötter; Marijke A. H. Luttik; Johannes P. van Dijken; Jack T. Pronk

ABSTRACT Inactivation of TPI1, the Saccharomyces cerevisiae structural gene encoding triose phosphate isomerase, completely eliminates growth on glucose as the sole carbon source. In tpi1-null mutants, intracellular accumulation of dihydroxyacetone phosphate might be prevented if the cytosolic NADH generated in glycolysis by glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase were quantitatively used to reduce dihydroxyacetone phosphate to glycerol. We hypothesize that the growth defect of tpi1-null mutants is caused by mitochondrial reoxidation of cytosolic NADH, thus rendering it unavailable for dihydroxyacetone-phosphate reduction. To test this hypothesis, a tpi1Δ nde1Δ nde2Δ gut2Δ quadruple mutant was constructed. NDE1 and NDE2 encode isoenzymes of mitochondrial external NADH dehydrogenase; GUT2 encodes a key enzyme of the glycerol-3-phosphate shuttle. It has recently been demonstrated that these two systems are primarily responsible for mitochondrial oxidation of cytosolic NADH in S. cerevisiae. Consistent with the hypothesis, the quadruple mutant grew on glucose as the sole carbon source. The growth on glucose, which was accompanied by glycerol production, was inhibited at high-glucose concentrations. This inhibition was attributed to glucose repression of respiratory enzymes as, in the quadruple mutant, respiratory pyruvate dissimilation is essential for ATP synthesis and growth. Serial transfer of the quadruple mutant on high-glucose media yielded a spontaneous mutant with much higher specific growth rates in high-glucose media (up to 0.10 h−1 at 100 g of glucose · liter−1). In aerated batch cultures grown on 400 g of glucose · liter−1, this engineered S. cerevisiae strain produced over 200 g of glycerol · liter−1, corresponding to a molar yield of glycerol on glucose close to unity.


Metabolic Engineering | 2008

Alleviation of feedback inhibition in Saccharomyces cerevisiae aromatic amino acid biosynthesis: Quantification of metabolic impact

Marijke A. H. Luttik; Zeynep Vuralhan; Erwin Suir; G.H. Braus; Jack T. Pronk; J.M. Daran

A quantitative analysis of the impact of feedback inhibition on aromatic amino acid biosynthesis was performed in chemostat cultures of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Introduction of a tyrosine-insensitive allele of ARO4 (encoding 3-deoxy-d-arabino-heptulosonate-7-phosphate synthase) caused a three-fold increase of intracellular phenylalanine and tyrosine concentrations. These amino acids were not detected extracellularly. However, an over 100-fold increase of the extracellular levels of phenylacetate, phenylethanol and their para-hydroxyl analogues was observed. The total increase of the flux through the aromatic pathway was estimated to be over four-fold. Individual overexpression of either the wild-type or feedback insensitive allele of ARO7 (encoding chorismate mutase had no significant impact. However when they were combined with the Tyr-insensitive ARO4 allele in combination with the Tyr-insensitive ARO4 allele, extracellular concentrations of aromatic compounds were increased by over 200-fold relative to the reference strain, corresponding to a 4.5-fold increase of the flux through the aromatic amino acid biosynthesis pathway. Elimination of allosteric control on these two key reactions in aromatic amino acid metabolism significantly affected intracellular concentrations of several non-aromatic amino acids. This broader impact of amino acid biosynthesis presents a challenge in rational optimization of the production of specific amino acids and derived flavour compounds.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2005

Physiological Characterization of the ARO10-Dependent, Broad-Substrate-Specificity 2-Oxo Acid Decarboxylase Activity of Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Zeynep Vuralhan; Marijke A. H. Luttik; Siew Leng Tai; Viktor M. Boer; Marcos Antonio de Morais; Dick Schipper; Marinka J.H. Almering; Peter Kötter; J. Richard Dickinson; Jean-Marc Daran; Jack T. Pronk

ABSTRACT Aerobic, glucose-limited chemostat cultures of Saccharomyces cerevisiae CEN.PK113-7D were grown with different nitrogen sources. Cultures grown with phenylalanine, leucine, or methionine as a nitrogen source contained high levels of the corresponding fusel alcohols and organic acids, indicating activity of the Ehrlich pathway. Also, fusel alcohols derived from the other two amino acids were detected in the supernatant, suggesting the involvement of a common enzyme activity. Transcript level analysis revealed that among the five thiamine-pyrophospate-dependent decarboxylases (PDC1, PDC5, PDC6, ARO10, and THI3), only ARO10 was transcriptionally up-regulated when phenylalanine, leucine, or methionine was used as a nitrogen source compared to growth on ammonia, proline, and asparagine. Moreover, 2-oxo acid decarboxylase activity measured in cell extract from CEN.PK113-7D grown with phenylalanine, methionine, or leucine displayed similar broad-substrate 2-oxo acid decarboxylase activity. Constitutive expression of ARO10 in ethanol-limited chemostat cultures in a strain lacking the five thiamine-pyrophosphate-dependent decarboxylases, grown with ammonia as a nitrogen source, led to a measurable decarboxylase activity with phenylalanine-, leucine-, and methionine-derived 2-oxo acids. Moreover, even with ammonia as the nitrogen source, these cultures produced significant amounts of the corresponding fusel alcohols. Nonetheless, the constitutive expression of ARO10 in an isogenic wild-type strain grown in a glucose-limited chemostat with ammonia did not lead to any 2-oxo acid decarboxylase activity. Furthermore, even when ARO10 was constitutively expressed, growth with phenylalanine as the nitrogen source led to increased decarboxylase activities in cell extracts. The results reported here indicate the involvement of posttranscriptional regulation and/or a second protein in the ARO10-dependent, broad-substrate-specificity decarboxylase activity.

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Jack T. Pronk

Delft University of Technology

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Johannes P. van Dijken

Delft University of Technology

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Jean-Marc Daran

Delft University of Technology

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Peter Kötter

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Pascale Daran-Lapujade

Delft University of Technology

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J.P. Van Dijken

Delft University of Technology

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Marinka J.H. Almering

Delft University of Technology

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Barbara M. Bakker

University Medical Center Groningen

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J.M. Daran

Delft University of Technology

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