Martina Holz
University of Düsseldorf
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Featured researches published by Martina Holz.
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2009
Martina Holz; André Förster; Stephan Mauersberger; Gerold Barth
The yeast Yarrowia lipolytica secretes high amounts of various organic acids, like citric acid (CA) and isocitric acid (ICA) under an excess of carbon source and several conditions of growth limitation. Depending on the carbon source used, Y. lipolytica strains produce a mixture of CA and ICA in a characteristic ratio. To examine whether this CA/ICA product ratio can be influenced by gene–dose-dependent overexpression of aconitase (ACO)-encoding gene ACO1, a recombinant Y. lipolytica strain was constructed containing multiple copies of ACO1. The high-level expression of ACO in the ACO1 multicopy integrative transformant resulted in a shift of the CA/ICA product pattern into the direction of ICA. On sunflower oil, a striking increase of the ICA proportion from 35–49% to 66–71% was observed compared to wild-type strains without influencing the total amount of acids (CA and ICA) produced. On glycerol, glucose or sucrose, the ICA proportion increased only moderately from 10–12% to 13–17%. This moderate shift into the direction of ICA was also observed in an icl1-defective strain.
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2011
Martina Holz; Christina Otto; Anne Kretzschmar; Venelina Yovkova; Andreas Aurich; Markus Pötter; Achim Dr. Marx; Gerold Barth
The yeast Yarrowia lipolytica is one of the most intensively studied “non-conventional” yeast species. Its ability to secrete various organic acids, like pyruvic (PA), citric, isocitric, and alpha-ketoglutaric (KGA) acid, in large amounts is of interest for biotechnological applications. We have studied the effect of the alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase (KGDH) complex on the production process of KGA. Being well studied in Saccharomyces cerevisiae this enzyme complex consists of three subunits: alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase, dihydrolipoyl transsuccinylase, and lipoamide dehydrogenase. Here we report the effect of overexpression of these subunits encoding genes and resulting increase of specific KGDH activity on organic acid production under several conditions of growth limitation and an excess of carbon source in Y. lipolytica. The constructed strain containing multiple copies of all three KGDH genes showed a reduced production of KGA and an elevated production of PA under conditions of KGA production. However, an increased activity of the KGDH complex had no influence on organic acid production under citric acid production conditions.
Archive | 2013
Christina Otto; Martina Holz; Gerold Barth
Wild-type strains of Yarrowia lipolytica secrete several organic acids like citric acid, isocitric acid, α-ketoglutaric acid, fumaric acid, malic acid or pyruvic acid, under certain circumstances from different carbon sources. An excess of carbon source together with limitation of growth causes the overproduction of these acids in most cases. Very high amounts of secreted acids (up to 200 g L−1) can be reached in some cases like citric acid and α-ketoglutaric acid, but other acids like fumaric acid and succinic acid are produced in low amounts (below 10 g L−1) by wild-type strains of this yeast. Several mutants were selected and recombinant strains have been constructed to improve the amounts of accumulated acid, the productivity or to change the spectrum of secreted acids. This review summarises the present state of knowledge on this field of overproduction of organic acids by the yeast Y. lipolytica.
Journal of Biotechnology | 2017
Peter M. Kusen; Georg Wandrey; Vera Krewald; Martina Holz; Jochen Büchs; Jörg Pietruszka
The manipulation of cellular function, such as the regulation of gene expression, is of great interest to many biotechnological applications and often achieved by the addition of small effector molecules. By combining effector molecules with photolabile protecting groups that mask their biological activity until they are activated by light, precise, yet minimally invasive, photocontrol is enabled. However, applications of this trendsetting technology are limited by the small number of established caged compound-based expression systems. Supported by computational chemistry, we used the versatile photolabile chelator DMNP-EDTA, long-established in neurobiology for photolytic Ca2+ release, to control Cu2+ release upon specific UV-A irradiation. This permits light-mediated control over the widely used Cu2+-inducible pCUP1 promoter from S. cerevisiae and thus constitutes the first example of a caged metal ion to regulate recombinant gene expression. We screened our novel DMNP-EDTA-Cu system for best induction time and expression level of eYFP with a high-throughput online monitoring system equipped with an LED array for individual illumination of every single well. Thereby, we realized a minimally invasive, easy-to-control, parallel and automated optical expression regulation via caged Cu2+ allowing temporal and quantitative control as a beneficial alternative to conventional induction via pipetting CuCl2 as effector molecule.
Current Genetics | 2013
Anne Kretzschmar; Christina Otto; Martina Holz; Severine Werner; Linda Hübner; Gerold Barth
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2015
Benjamin Jost; Martina Holz; Andreas Aurich; Gerold Barth; Thomas Bley; Roland A. Müller
Sub-cellular biochemistry | 2012
Andreas Aurich; Robert Specht; Roland A. Müller; Ulrich Stottmeister; Venelina Yovkova; Christina Otto; Martina Holz; Gerold Barth; Philipp Heretsch; Franziska Thomas; Dieter Sicker; Athanassios Giannis
ACS Chemical Biology | 2016
Peter M. Kusen; Georg Wandrey; Christopher Probst; Alexander Grünberger; Martina Holz; Dietrich Kohlheyer; Jochen Büchs; Jörg Pietruszka
Archive | 2012
Andreas Aurich; Martina Holz; Anne Kretzschmar; Christina Otto; Gerold Barth; Isabel Waengler; Roland A. Müller
Archive | 2013
Andreas Aurich; Martina Holz; Anne Kretzschmar; Christina Otto; Gerold Barth; Isabel Waengler; Roland A. Müller