Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Peter Bergquist is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Peter Bergquist.


Gene | 2001

Degenerate oligonucleotide gene shuffling (DOGS): a method for enhancing the frequency of recombination with family shuffling.

Moreland D. Gibbs; K. M. Helena Nevalainen; Peter Bergquist

Improvement of the biochemical characteristics of enzymes has been aided by misincorporation mutagenesis and DNA shuffling. Shuffling techniques can be used on a collection of mutants of the same gene, or related families of genes can be shuffled to produce mutants encoding chimeric gene products. One difficulty with current shuffling procedures is the predominance of unshuffled (parental) molecules in the pool of mutants. We describe a procedure for gene shuffling using degenerate primers that allows control of the relative levels of recombination between the genes that are shuffled and reduces the regeneration of unshuffled parental genes. This procedure has the advantage of avoiding the use of endonucleases for gene fragmentation prior to shuffling and allows the use of random mutagenesis of selected segments of the gene as part of the procedure. We illustrate the use of the technique with a diverse family of beta-xylanase genes that possess widely different G+C contents.


Extremophiles | 2003

A gene encoding a novel extremely thermostable 1,4-beta-xylanase isolated directly from an environmental DNA sample.

Anwar Sunna; Peter Bergquist

Abstract. Small-subunit (SSU) rRNA genes (rDNA) were amplified by PCR from a hot pool environmental DNA sample using Bacteria- or Archaea-specific rDNA primers. Unique rDNA types were identified by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis and representative sequences were determined. Family 10 glycoside hydrolase consensus PCR primers were used to explore the occurrence and diversity of xylanase genes in the hot pool environmental DNA sample. Partial sequences for three different xylanases were obtained and genomic walking PCR (GWPCR), in combination with nested primer pairs, was used to obtained a unique 1,741-bp nucleotide sequence. Analysis of this sequence identified a putative XynA protein encoded by the xynA open reading frame. The single module novel xylanase shared sequence similarity to the family 10 glycoside hydrolases. The purified recombinant enzyme, XynA expressed in E. coli exhibited optimum activity at 100°C and pHxa06.0, and was extremely thermostable at 90°C. The enzyme showed high specificity toward different xylans and xylooligosaccharides.


Extremophiles | 2002

Expression of xylanase enzymes from thermophilic microorganisms in fungal hosts.

Peter Bergquist; Valentino Te’o; Moreland D. Gibbs; Angela Cziferszky; Fabricia de Faria; M.O. Azevedo; Helena Nevalainen

Abstract. Bulk production of xylanases from thermophilic microorganisms is a prerequisite for their use in industrial processes. As effective secretors of gene products, fungal expression systems provide a promising, industrially relevant alternative to bacteria for heterologous enzyme production. We are currently developing the yeast Kluyveromyces lactis and the filamentous fungus Trichoderma reesei for the extracellular production of thermophilic enzymes for the pulp and paper industry. The K. lactis system has been tested with two thermophilic xylanases and secretes gram amounts of largely pure xylanase A from Dictyoglomus thermophilum in chemostat culture. The T. reesei expression system involves the use of the cellobiohydrolase I (CBHI) promoter and gene fusions for the secretion of heterologous thermostable xylanases of both bacterial and fungal origin. We have reconstructed the AT-rich xynB gene of Dictyoglomus thermophilum according to Trichoderma codon preferences and demonstrated a dramatic increase in expression. A heterologous fungal gene, Humicola grisea xyn2, could be expressed without codon modification. Initial amounts of the XYN2 protein were of a gram per liter range in shake-flask cultivations, and the gene product was correctly processed by the heterologous host. Comparison of the expression of three thermophilic heterologous microbial xylanases in T. reesei demonstrates the need for addressing each case individually.


Current Microbiology | 2000

Multidomain and Multifunctional Glycosyl Hydrolases from the Extreme Thermophile Caldicellulosiruptor Isolate Tok7B.1

Gibbs; Rosalind A. Reeves; Graham K. Farrington; Paige Anderson; Diane P Williams; Peter Bergquist

Abstract. DNA sequencing techniques have revealed widespread molecular diversity of the genomic organization of apparently closely related bacteria (as judged from SSU rDNA sequence similarity). We have previously described the extreme thermophile Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus, which is unusual in possessing multi-catalytic, multidomain arrangements for the majority of its glycosyl hydrolases. We report here the sequencing of three gene clusters of glycosyl hydrolases from Caldicellulosiruptor sp. strain Tok7B.1. These clusters are not closely linked, and each is different in its organization from any described for Cs. saccharolyticus. The catalytic domains of the enzymes belong to glycosyl hydrolase families 5, 9, 10, 43, 44, and 48. The cellulose binding domains (CBDs) of these enzymes from Caldicellulosiruptor sp. Tok7B.1 are types IIIb, IIIc, or VI. A number of individual catalytic and binding domains have been expressed in Escherichia coli, and biochemical data are reported on the purified enzymes for cellulose degradation encoded by engineered derivatives of celB and celE.


Letters in Applied Microbiology | 2000

Rapid transformation of high cellulase‐producing mutant strains of Trichoderma reesei by microprojectile bombardment

Bw Hazell; Vsj Te'o; Bradner; Peter Bergquist; Kmh Nevalainen

Intact conidia of three industrially relevant strains of Trichoderma reesei were effectively transformed by particle bombardment. Transformations were carried out individually with plasmids carrying either the fungal amdS or bacterial hph gene as a selectable marker and by cotransformation with both plasmids. Transformant yields with single plasmids were up to 11 stable transformants per µg DNA at the bombardment distance of 6u2003cm. Mitotic stability of the transformants was 75–100% and the cotransformation efficiency averaged 92% when the first selection was performed on hygromycin B plates. The entire procedure could be completed in 1u2003week with the hph marker.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2000

A Gene Encoding a Novel Multidomain β-1,4-Mannanase from Caldibacillus cellulovorans and Action of the Recombinant Enzyme on Kraft Pulp

Anwar Sunna; Moreland D. Gibbs; Charles W. J. Chin; Peter J. Nelson; Peter Bergquist

ABSTRACT Genomic walking PCR was used to obtained a 4,567-bp nucleotide sequence from Caldibacillus cellulovorans. Analysis of this sequence revealed that there were three open reading frames, designated ORF1, ORF2, and ORF3. Incomplete ORF1 encoded a putative C-terminal cellulose-binding domain (CBD) homologous to members of CBD family IIIb, while putative ORF3 encoded a protein of unknown function. The putative ManA protein encoded by complete manA ORF2 was an enzyme with a novel multidomain structure and was composed of four domains in the following order: a putative N-terminal domain (D1) of unknown function, an internal CBD (D2), a β-mannanase catalytic domain (D3), and a C-terminal CBD (D4). All four domains were linked via proline-threonine-rich peptides. Both of the CBDs exhibited sequence similarity to family IIIb CBDs, while the mannanase catalytic domain exhibited homology to the family 5 glycosyl hydrolases. The purified recombinant enzyme ManAd3 expressed from the cloned catalytic domain (D3) exhibited optimum activity at 85°C and pH 6.0 and was extremely thermostable at 70°C. This enzyme exhibited high specificity with the substituted galactomannan locust bean gum, while more substituted galacto- and glucomannans were poorly hydrolyzed. Preliminary studies to determine the effect of the recombinant ManAd3 and a recombinant thermostable β-xylanase on oxygen-delignifiedPinus radiata kraft pulp revealed that there was an increase in the brightness of the bleached pulp.


Extremophiles | 1999

Family 10 and 11 xylanase genes from Caldicellulosiruptor sp. strain Rt69B.1.

Daniel D. Morris; Moreland D. Gibbs; Michelle Ford; Justin Thomas; Peter Bergquist

Abstract Three family 10 xylanase genes (xynA, xynB, and xynC) and a single family 11 xylanase gene (xynD) were identified from the extreme thermophile Caldicellulosiruptor strain Rt69B.1 through the use of consensus PCR in conjunction with sequencing and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. These genes appear to comprise the complete endoxylanase system of Rt69B.1. The xynA gene was found to be homologous to the xynA gene of the closely related Caldicellulosiruptor strain Rt8B.4, and primers designed previously to amplify the Rt8B.4 xynA gene could amplify homologous full-length xynA gene fragments from Rt69B.1. The complete nucleotide sequences of the Rt69B.1 xynB, xynC, and xynD genes were obtained using genomic walking PCR. The full-length xynB and xynC genes are more than 5 kb in length and encode highly modular enzymes that are the largest xylanases reported to date. XynB has an architecture similar to the family 10 xylanases from Thermoanaerobacterium saccharolyticum (XynA) and Clostridium thermocellum (XynX) and may be cell wall associated, while XynC is a bifunctional enzyme with an architecture similar to the bifunctional β-glycanases from Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus. The xynD gene encodes a two-domain family 11 xylanase that is identical in architecture to the XynB family 11 xylanase from the unrelated extreme thermophile Dictyoglomus thermophilum strain Rt46B.1. The sequence similarities between the Rt69B.1 xylanases with respect to their evolution are discussed.


Current Microbiology | 1999

Sequencing and Expression of a β-Mannanase Gene from the Extreme Thermophile Dictyoglomus thermophilum Rt46B.1, and Characteristics of the Recombinant Enzyme

Moreland D. Gibbs; Rosalind A. Reeves; Anwar Sunna; Peter Bergquist

Abstract. A β-mannanase gene (manA) was isolated from the extremely thermophilic bacterium Dictyoglomus thermophilum Rt46B.1. ManA is a single-domain enzyme related to one group of β-mannanases (glycosyl hydrolase family 26). The manA gene was expressed in the heat-inducible vector pJLA602 and the expression product, ManA, purified to homogeneity. The recombinant ManA is a monomeric enzyme with a molecular mass of 40 kDa and an optimal temperature and pH for activity of 80°C and 5.0. In the absence of substrate, the enzyme showed no loss of activity at 80°C over 16 h, while at 90°C the enzyme had a half-life of 5.4 min. Hydrolysis of the galactomannan locust bean gum (LBG) by purified ManA released mainly mannose, mannobiose, and mannotriose, confirming that ManA is an endo-acting β-mannanase. Sequence comparisons with related β-mannanases has allowed the design of consensus PCR primers for the identification and isolation of related genes.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2001

Degenerate oligonucleotide gene shuffling

Moreland D. Gibbs; Peter Bergquist; Kaisu Milja Helena Nevalainen

Improvement of the biochemical characteristics of enzymes has been aided by misincorporation mutagenesis and DNA shuffling. Shuffling techniques can be used on a collection of mutants of the same gene, or related families of genes can be shuffled to produce mutants encoding chimeric gene products. One difficulty with current shuffling procedures is the predominance of unshuffled (parental) molecules in the pool of mutants. We describe a procedure for gene shuffling using degenerate primers that allows control of the relative levels of recombination between the genes that are shuffled and reduces the regeneration of unshuffled parental genes. This procedure has the advantage of avoiding the use of endonucleases for gene fragmentation before shuffling and allows the use of random mutagenesis of selected segments of the gene as part of the procedure. We illustrate the use of the technique with a diverse family of beta-xylanase genes that possess widely different G and C contents.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 1996

Cloning, sequencing and overexpression in Escherichia coli of a xylanase gene, xynA from the thermophilic bacterium Rt8B.4 genus Caldicellulosiruptor

P. P. Dwivedi; Moreland D. Gibbs; David J. Saul; Peter Bergquist

A genomic library of the extremely thermophilic eubacterial strain Rt8B.4 was constructed in λZapII and screened for the expression of xylanase activity. One recombinant bacteriophage showed xylanase, xylosidase and arabinosidase activity. Sequence analysis and homology comparisons showed that this plasmid derivative, pNZ2011, was composed of 6.7 kb thermophilic DNA and contained what appeared to be an operon-like structure involving genes associated with xylose metabolism. The xylanase gene, xynA was shown to code for a multi-domain protein. Xylanase activity was shown to be associated with the carboxy-terminal domain (domain 2) by deletion analysis and also by selezctive polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification and expression of the individual domains. Denaturing polyacrylamide gel analysis of the protein encoded by the PCR product showed three main overexpressed proteins to be present in cell extracts, presumably caused by proteolytic degradation in the Escherichia coli host. The xylanase activity from domain 2 is associated with a 36-kDa protein, which is stable at 70°C for at least 12 h at pH 7. The small size of this active enzymatic domain and its temperature stability suggest that it may be of value in the enzyme-enhanced bleaching of kraft pulp.

Collaboration


Dive into the Peter Bergquist's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Valentino Setoa Junior Te'o

Queensland University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

N Curach

Macquarie University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Belinda C. Ferrari

University of New South Wales

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge