Michael Seibert
Colorado School of Mines
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Michael Seibert.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2012
Jonathan E. Meuser; Sarah D’Adamo; Robert E. Jinkerson; Florence Mus; Wenqiang Yang; Maria L. Ghirardi; Michael Seibert; Arthur R. Grossman; Matthew C. Posewitz
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Chlamydomonas throughout) encodes two [FeFe]-hydrogenases, designated HYDA1 and HYDA2. While HYDA1 is considered the dominant hydrogenase, the role of HYDA2 is unclear. To study the individual functions of each hydrogenase and provide a platform for future bioengineering, we isolated the Chlamydomonas hydA1-1, hydA2-1 single mutants and the hydA1-1 hydA2-1 double mutant. A reverse genetic screen was used to identify a mutant with an insertion in HYDA2, followed by mutagenesis of the hydA2-1 strain coupled with a H(2) chemosensor phenotypic screen to isolate the hydA1-1 hydA2-1 mutant. Genetic crosses of the hydA1-1 hydA2-1 mutant to wild-type cells allowed us to also isolate the single hydA1-1 mutant. Fermentative, photosynthetic, and in vitro hydrogenase activities were assayed in each of the mutant genotypes. Surprisingly, analyses of the hydA1-1 and hydA2-1 single mutants, as well as the HYDA1 and HYDA2 rescued hydA1-1 hydA2-1 mutant demonstrated that both hydrogenases are able to catalyze H(2) production from either fermentative or photosynthetic pathways. The physiology of both mutant and complemented strains indicate that the contribution of HYDA2 to H(2) photoproduction is approximately 25% that of HYDA1, which corresponds to similarly low levels of in vitro hydrogenase activity measured in the hydA1-1 mutant. Interestingly, enhanced in vitro and fermentative H(2) production activities were observed in the hydA1-1 hydA2-1 strain complemented with HYDA1, while maximal H(2)-photoproduction rates did not exceed those of wild-type cells.
The Plant Cell | 2012
Claudia Catalanotti; Alexandra Dubini; Venkataramanan Subramanian; Wenqiang Yang; Leonardo Magneschi; Florence Mus; Michael Seibert; Matthew C. Posewitz; Arthur R. Grossman
This article describes novel ways that algae may adjust metabolite trafficking when specific branches of fermentation metabolism are blocked. This rerouting of metabolites allows for continued glycolytic energy production under anoxic conditions, which is critical for the cell’s survival. Mechanisms associated with this reengineering of metabolism are almost completely unexplored. Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, a unicellular green alga, often experiences hypoxic/anoxic soil conditions that activate fermentation metabolism. We isolated three Chlamydomonas mutants disrupted for the pyruvate formate lyase (PFL1) gene; the encoded PFL1 protein catalyzes a major fermentative pathway in wild-type Chlamydomonas cells. When the pfl1 mutants were subjected to dark fermentative conditions, they displayed an increased flux of pyruvate to lactate, elevated pyruvate decarboxylation, ethanol accumulation, diminished pyruvate oxidation by pyruvate ferredoxin oxidoreductase, and lowered H2 production. The pfl1-1 mutant also accumulated high intracellular levels of lactate, succinate, alanine, malate, and fumarate. To further probe the system, we generated a double mutant (pfl1-1 adh1) that is unable to synthesize both formate and ethanol. This strain, like the pfl1 mutants, secreted lactate, but it also exhibited a significant increase in the levels of extracellular glycerol, acetate, and intracellular reduced sugars and a decrease in dark, fermentative H2 production. Whereas wild-type Chlamydomonas fermentation primarily produces formate and ethanol, the double mutant reroutes glycolytic carbon to lactate and glycerol. Although the metabolic adjustments observed in the mutants facilitate NADH reoxidation and sustained glycolysis under dark, anoxic conditions, the observed changes could not have been predicted given our current knowledge of the regulation of fermentation metabolism.
Archive | 2012
Venkataramanan Subramanian; Alexandra Dubini; Michael Seibert
This chapter examines the basic metabolic pathways in algae that might be developed to produce advanced biofuels in the next 20 years as viable alternatives to currently exploited ethanol pathways used in the production of first- and second-generation biofuels.
Archive | 2009
Paul W. King; Maria L. Ghirardi; Michael Seibert
Archive | 2002
Maria L. Ghirardi; Sergey Kosourov; Anatoly Tsygankov; Andrew B. Rubin; Michael Seibert
Handbook of Microalgal Culture: Applied Phycology and Biotechnology, Second Edition | 2013
Giuseppe Torzillo; Michael Seibert
Archive | 2016
Jianping Yu; Troy Paddock; Damian Carrieri; Pin-Ching Maness; Michael Seibert
Archive | 2002
Michael Seibert; Paul W. King; Liping Zhang; Lauren Mets; Maria L. Ghirardi
Archive | 2007
Michael Seibert; Wade Amos; Maria L. Ghirardi; Daniel Blake
Archive | 1995
Maria L. Ghirardi; Timothy Flynn; Marc Forestier; Michael Seibert