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Featured researches published by Meike Baumgart.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2013

Construction of a Prophage-Free Variant of Corynebacterium glutamicum ATCC 13032 for Use as a Platform Strain for Basic Research and Industrial Biotechnology

Meike Baumgart; Simon Unthan; Christian Rückert; Jasintha Sivalingam; Alexander Grünberger; Jörn Kalinowski; Michael Bott; Stephan Noack; Julia Frunzke

ABSTRACT The activity of bacteriophages and phage-related mobile elements is a major source for genome rearrangements and genetic instability of their bacterial hosts. The genome of the industrial amino acid producer Corynebacterium glutamicum ATCC 13032 contains three prophages (CGP1, CGP2, and CGP3) of so far unknown functionality. Several phage genes are regularly expressed, and the large prophage CGP3 (∼190 kbp) has recently been shown to be induced under certain stress conditions. Here, we present the construction of MB001, a prophage-free variant of C. glutamicum ATCC 13032 with a 6% reduced genome. This strain does not show any unfavorable properties during extensive phenotypic characterization under various standard and stress conditions. As expected, we observed improved growth and fitness of MB001 under SOS-response-inducing conditions that trigger CGP3 induction in the wild-type strain. Further studies revealed that MB001 has a significantly increased transformation efficiency and produced about 30% more of the heterologous model protein enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (eYFP), presumably as a consequence of an increased plasmid copy number. These effects were attributed to the loss of the restriction-modification system (cg1996-cg1998) located within CGP3. The deletion of the prophages without any negative effect results in a novel platform strain for metabolic engineering and represents a useful step toward the construction of a C. glutamicum chassis genome of strain ATCC 13032 for biotechnological applications and synthetic biology.


Biotechnology Journal | 2015

Chassis organism from Corynebacterium glutamicum--a top-down approach to identify and delete irrelevant gene clusters.

Simon Unthan; Meike Baumgart; Andreas Radek; Marius Herbst; Daniel Siebert; Natalie Brühl; Anna Bartsch; Michael Bott; Wolfgang Wiechert; Kay Marin; Stephan Hans; Reinhard Krämer; Gerd M. Seibold; Julia Frunzke; Jörn Kalinowski; Christian Rückert; Volker F. Wendisch; Stephan Noack

For synthetic biology applications, a robust structural basis is required, which can be constructed either from scratch or in a top-down approach starting from any existing organism. In this study, we initiated the top-down construction of a chassis organism from Corynebacterium glutamicum ATCC 13032, aiming for the relevant gene set to maintain its fast growth on defined medium. We evaluated each native gene for its essentiality considering expression levels, phylogenetic conservation, and knockout data. Based on this classification, we determined 41 gene clusters ranging from 3.7 to 49.7 kbp as target sites for deletion. 36 deletions were successful and 10 genome-reduced strains showed impaired growth rates, indicating that genes were hit, which are relevant to maintain biological fitness at wild-type level. In contrast, 26 deleted clusters were found to include exclusively irrelevant genes for growth on defined medium. A combinatory deletion of all irrelevant gene clusters would, in a prophage-free strain, decrease the size of the native genome by about 722 kbp (22%) to 2561 kbp. Finally, five combinatory deletions of irrelevant gene clusters were investigated. The study introduces the novel concept of relevant genes and demonstrates general strategies to construct a chassis suitable for biotechnological application.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

RosR (Cg1324), a Hydrogen Peroxide-sensitive MarR-type Transcriptional Regulator of Corynebacterium glutamicum

Michael Bussmann; Meike Baumgart; Michael Bott

The cg1324 gene (rosR) of Corynebacterium glutamicum encodes a MarR-type transcriptional regulator. By a comparative transcriptome analysis with DNA microarrays of a ΔrosR mutant and the wild type and subsequent EMSAs with purified RosR protein, direct target genes of RosR were identified. The narKGHJI operon, which encodes a nitrate/nitrite transporter and the dissimilatory nitrate reductase complex, was activated by RosR. All other target genes were repressed by RosR. They encode four putative monooxygenases, two putative FMN reductases, a protein of the glutathione S-transferase family, a putative polyisoprenoid-binding protein, and RosR itself. The DNA binding site of RosR was characterized as an 18-bp inverted repeat with the consensus sequence TTGTTGAYRYRTCAACWA. The in vitro DNA binding activity of RosR was reversibly inhibited by the oxidant H2O2. Mutational analysis of the three cysteine residues present in RosR (Cys-64, Cys-92, and Cys-151) showed that these are responsible for the inhibition of DNA binding by H2O2. A deletion mutant (Δcg1322) lacking the putative polyisoprenoid-binding protein showed an increased sensitivity to H2O2, supporting the role of RosR in the oxidative stress response of C. glutamicum.


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2015

The manganese-responsive regulator MntR represses transcription of a predicted ZIP family metal ion transporter in Corynebacterium glutamicum.

Meike Baumgart; Julia Frunzke

Manganese is an important trace element required as an enzyme cofactor and for protection against oxidative stress. In this study, we characterized the DtxR-type transcriptional regulator MntR (cg0741) of Corynebacterium glutamicum ATCC 13032 as a manganese-dependent repressor of the predicted ZIP family metal transporter Cg1623. Comparative transcriptome analysis of a ΔmntR strain and the wild type led to the identification of cg1623 as potential target gene of MntR which was about 50-fold upregulated when cells were grown in glucose minimal medium. Using electrophoretic mobility shift assays, a conserved 18 bp inverted repeat (TGTTCAATGCGTTGAACA) was identified as binding motif of MntR in the cg1623 promoter and confirmed by mutational analysis. Promoter fusion of Pcg1623 to eyfp confirmed that the MntR-dependent repression is only abolished in the absence of manganese. However, neither deletion of mntR nor cg1623 resulted in a significant growth phenotype in comparison to the wild type--strongly suggesting the presence of further manganese uptake and efflux systems in C. glutamicum. The control of cg1623 by the DtxR-type regulator MntR represents the first example of a predicted ZIP family protein that is regulated in a manganese-dependent manner in bacteria.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2011

Deletion of the Aconitase Gene in Corynebacterium glutamicum Causes Strong Selection Pressure for Secondary Mutations Inactivating Citrate Synthase

Meike Baumgart; Nurije Mustafi; Andreas Krug; Michael Bott

The aconitase gene acn of Corynebacterium glutamicum is regulated by four transcriptional regulators, indicating that the synthesis of this enzyme is carefully controlled. To understand the causes for this elaborate regulation, the properties of the Δacn-1 deletion mutant were analyzed in detail. The mutant was glutamate auxotrophic in glucose minimal medium, showed a strong growth defect, and secreted large amounts of acetate. None of these phenotypes could be complemented by plasmid-encoded aconitase, suggesting the presence of a secondary mutation. In fact, a point mutation within the gltA gene encoding citrate synthase was identified that caused the instability of the protein and an almost complete lack of its enzymatic activity. Subsequently, 27 further, independent Δacn clones were isolated, and 15 of them were found to contain distinct mutations in gltA, causing the loss of citrate synthase activity. A similar result was observed for mutants lacking the isocitrate dehydrogenase gene icd. In this case, 8 of 24 Δicd clones contained additional mutations in gltA. Indirect evidence was obtained that elevated intracellular citrate concentrations could be the cause of this selection pressure. Accordingly, the careful control of aconitase synthesis might have evolved due to the necessity to avoid inhibitory cytoplasmic citrate levels on the one hand and to prevent the excessive synthesis of an oxygen-sensitive protein requiring both iron and sulfur on the other hand.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2010

Analysis of Lipid Export in Hydrocarbonoclastic Bacteria of the Genus Alcanivorax: Identification of Lipid Export-Negative Mutants of Alcanivorax borkumensis SK2 and Alcanivorax jadensis T9

Efraín Manilla-Pérez; Christina Reers; Meike Baumgart; Stephan Hetzler; Rudolf Reichelt; Ursula Malkus; Rainer Kalscheuer; Marc Wältermann; Alexander Steinbüchel

Triacylglycerols (TAGs), wax esters (WEs), and polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs) are the major hydrophobic compounds synthesized in bacteria and deposited as cytoplasmic inclusion bodies when cells are cultivated under imbalanced growth conditions. The intracellular occurrence of these compounds causes high costs for downstream processing. Alcanivorax species are able to produce extracellular lipids when the cells are cultivated on hexadecane or pyruvate as the sole carbon source. In this study, we developed a screening procedure to isolate lipid export-negative transposon-induced mutants of bacteria of the genus Alcanivorax for identification of genes required for lipid export by employing the dyes Nile red and Solvent Blue 38. Three transposon-induced mutants of A. jadensis and seven of A. borkumensis impaired in lipid secretion were isolated. All isolated mutants were still capable of synthesizing and accumulating these lipids intracellularly and exhibited no growth defect. In the A. jadensis mutants, the transposon insertions were mapped in genes annotated as encoding a putative DNA repair system specific for alkylated DNA (Aj17), a magnesium transporter (Aj7), and a transposase (Aj5). In the A. borkumensis mutants, the insertions were mapped in genes encoding different proteins involved in various transport processes, like genes encoding (i) a heavy metal resistance (CZCA2) in mutant ABO_6/39, (ii) a multidrug efflux (MATE efflux) protein in mutant ABO_25/21, (iii) an alginate lyase (AlgL) in mutants ABO_10/30 and ABO_19/48, (iv) a sodium-dicarboxylate symporter family protein (GltP) in mutant ABO_27/29, (v) an alginate transporter (AlgE) in mutant ABO_26/1, or (vi) a two-component system protein in mutant ABO_27/56. Site-directed MATE, algE, and algL gene disruption mutants, which were constructed in addition, were also unable to export neutral lipids and confirmed the phenotype of the transposon-induced mutants. The putative localization of the different gene products and their possible roles in lipid excretion are discussed. Beside this, the composition of the intra- and extracellular lipids in the wild types and mutants were analyzed in detail.


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2017

Metabolic profile of 1,5-diaminopentane producing Corynebacterium glutamicum under scale-down conditions: Blueprint for robustness to bioreactor inhomogeneities

Michael H. Limberg; Julia Schulte; Tita Aryani; Regina Mahr; Meike Baumgart; Michael Bott; Wolfgang Wiechert; Marco Oldiges

Performance losses during scale‐up are described since decades, but are still one of the major obstacles for industrial bioprocess development. Consequently, robustness to inhomogeneous cultivation environments is an important quality of industrial production organisms. Especially, Corynebacterium glutamicum was proven to have an outstanding resistance against rapid changes of oxygen and substrate availability as occurring in industrial scale bioreactors. This study focuses on the identification of metabolic key mechanisms for this robustness to get a deeper insight and provide future targets for process orientated strain development. A 1,5‐diaminopentane producing C. glutamicum strain was cultivated in a two compartment scale‐down device to create short‐term environmental changes simulating industrial scale cultivation conditions. Using multi omics based methods, it is shown, that central metabolism is flexibly rearranged under short‐term oxygen depletion and carbon source excess to overcome shortage in NAD+ recycling. In order to balance the redox state, key enzymes for the non‐oxygen dependent fermentative NAD+ regeneration were significantly up‐regulated while parts of non‐essential pathways were down‐regulated. The transfer of the cells back into the well aerated zones with low substrate concentration triggers an additional upregulation of genes for the re‐assimilation of previously formed side products, showing L‐lactate forming and utilizing reactions being active at the same time. Especially L‐lactate as reversible and flexible external buffer for carbon and redox equivalents puts C. glutamicum in a robust position to deal with inhomogeneity in large scale processes. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2017;114: 560–575.


BMC Biology | 2013

IpsA, a novel LacI-type regulator, is required for inositol-derived lipid formation in Corynebacteria and Mycobacteria

Meike Baumgart; Kerstin Luder; Shipra Grover; Cornelia Gätgens; Gurdyal S. Besra; Julia Frunzke

BackgroundThe development of new drugs against tuberculosis and diphtheria is focused on disrupting the biogenesis of the cell wall, the unique architecture of which confers resistance against current therapies. The enzymatic pathways involved in the synthesis of the cell wall by these pathogens are well understood, but the underlying regulatory mechanisms are largely unknown.ResultsHere, we characterize IpsA, a LacI-type transcriptional regulator conserved among Mycobacteria and Corynebacteria that plays a role in the regulation of cell wall biogenesis. IpsA triggers myo-inositol formation by activating ino1, which encodes inositol phosphate synthase. An ipsA deletion mutant of Corynebacterium glutamicum cultured on glucose displayed significantly impaired growth and presented an elongated cell morphology. Further studies revealed the absence of inositol-derived lipids in the cell wall and a complete loss of mycothiol biosynthesis. The phenotype of the C. glutamicum ipsA deletion mutant was complemented to different extend by homologs from Corynebacterium diphtheriae (dip1969) and Mycobacterium tuberculosis (rv3575), indicating the conserved function of IpsA in the pathogenic species. Additional targets of IpsA with putative functions in cell wall biogenesis were identified and IpsA was shown to bind to a conserved palindromic motif within the corresponding promoter regions. Myo-inositol was identified as an effector of IpsA, causing the dissociation of the IpsA-DNA complex in vitro.ConclusionsThis characterization of IpsA function and of its regulon sheds light on the complex transcriptional control of cell wall biogenesis in the mycolata taxon and generates novel targets for drug development.


Journal of Biotechnology | 2011

Biochemical characterisation of aconitase from Corynebacterium glutamicum.

Meike Baumgart; Michael Bott

In this work, aconitase of the biotechnologically relevant microorganism Corynebacterium glutamicum was characterised. The specific activity of aconitase in extracts of glucose-grown cells was determined by four different assays. In three of them the formation or disappearance of cis-aconitate was measured, whereas in the fourth assay the aconitase reaction was coupled with isocitrate dehydrogenase. The highest activity was determined with cis-aconitate as substrate (0.433 ± 0.054 Umg(-1)) and the lowest one with the coupled assay and citrate as substrate (0.134 ± 0.026 Umg(-1)). Only the latter assay covers the complete aconitase reaction and thus gives the most relevant information on in vivo activity. For the determination of kinetic constants, aconitase was heterologously overproduced, purified, reactivated and biochemically characterised. Size exclusion chromatography indicated that the protein is monomeric. The enzyme showed Michaelis-Menten kinetics with K(m) values of 480 ± 200 μM for citrate, 552 ± 302 μM for isocitrate and 18.5 ± 3.4 μM for cis-aconitate. The highest V(max) was observed for the hydration of cis-aconitate with 40.6 Umg(-1). Aconitase was active over a wide pH and temperature range with maximal activity between pH 7.5 and 7.75 and at about 50 °C.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2016

Impact of LytR-CpsA-Psr Proteins on Cell Wall Biosynthesis in Corynebacterium glutamicum

Meike Baumgart; Karin Schubert; Marc Bramkamp; Julia Frunzke

Proteins of the LCP (LytR, CpsA, Psr) family have been shown to inherit important roles in bacterial cell wall biosynthesis. However, their exact function in the formation of the complex cell wall structures of the Corynebacteriales, including the prominent pathogens Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Corynebacterium diphtheriae, remains unclear. Here, we analyzed the role of the LCP proteins LcpA and LcpB of Corynebacterium glutamicum, both of which localize at regions of nascent cell wall biosynthesis. A strain lacking lcpB did not show any growth-related or morphological phenotype under the tested conditions. In contrast, conditional silencing of the essential lcpA gene resulted in severe growth defects and drastic morphological changes. Compared to the wild-type cell wall, the cell wall of this mutant contained significantly less mycolic acids and a reduced amount of arabinogalactan. In particular, rhamnose, a specific sugar component of the linker that connects arabinogalactan and peptidoglycan, was decreased. Complementation studies of the lcpA-silencing strain with several mutated and truncated LcpA variants suggested that both periplasmic domains are essential for function whereas the cytoplasmic N-terminal part is dispensable. Successful complementation experiments with proteins of M. tuberculosis and C. diphtheriae revealed a conserved function of LCP proteins in these species. Finally, pyrophosphatase activity of LcpA was shown in an in vitro assay. Taken together, our results suggest that LCP proteins are responsible for the transfer of arabinogalactan onto peptidoglycan in actinobacterial species and support a crucial function of a so-far-uncharacterized C-terminal domain (LytR_C domain) which is frequently found at the C terminus of the LCP domain in this prokaryotic phylum. IMPORTANCE About one-third of the worlds population is infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and multiple-antibiotic resistance provokes the demand for novel antibiotics. The special cell wall architecture of Corynebacteriales is critical for treatments because it is either a direct target or a barrier that the drug has to cross. Here, we present the analysis of LcpA and LcpB of the closely related Corynebacterium glutamicum, the first of which is an essential protein involved in cell wall biogenesis. Our work provides a comprehensive characterization of the impact of LCP proteins on cell wall biogenesis in this medically and biotechnologically important class of bacteria. Special focus is set on the two periplasmic LcpA domains and their contributions to physiological function.

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Michael Bott

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Julia Frunzke

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Stephan Noack

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Simon Unthan

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Andreas Radek

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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