Richard Kerkman
DSM
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Publication
Featured researches published by Richard Kerkman.
Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2009
I.S. Ishtar Snoek; Z.A. van der Krogt; Hesselien Touw; Richard Kerkman; Jack T. Pronk; Roelof Ary Lans Bovenberg; M. van den Berg; J.M. Daran
The homologous recombination mechanism for DNA-repair is not predominant in most filamentous fungi, resulting in extremely low targeting efficiencies for molecular engineering. To increase the gene targeting efficiency, it is becoming common practice to inactivate the non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) pathway that causes random integration, by deleting the fungal homologs of the human KU70 and KU80 genes that encode proteins functioning in the NHEJ pathway. This has been described for several filamentous fungi, but limited knowledge on the physiological consequences is available. In this study we characterized targeting efficiency and physiology of penicillinG producing Penicillium chrysogenum strains, in which the KU70 or KU80 homologues hdfA and hdfB had been deleted. Targeting efficiency was increased from ca. 1% in the reference strain to 47% and 56% in the hdfA and hdfB mutant strains, respectively, using an ends-out construct. Physiological and transcriptome analysis of glucose-limited chemostat cultures of the hdfA deletion strain and the reference strain showed minimal differences. Although, in a direct competition experiment to assess strain fitness, the reference strain had a clear advantage over the deletion strain, the results demonstrate the potential of DeltahdfAP. chrysogenum strains for the functional analysis of the recently completed P. chrysogenum genome sequence and in further metabolic engineering of antibiotics production.
ACS Synthetic Biology | 2012
Felix Moser; Nicolette Jasmijn Broers; Sybe Hartmans; Alvin Tamsir; Richard Kerkman; Johannes Andries Roubos; Roel A. L. Bovenberg; Christopher A. Voigt
Synthetic genetic programs promise to enable novel applications in industrial processes. For such applications, the genetic circuits that compose programs will require fidelity in varying and complex environments. In this work, we report the performance of two synthetic circuits in Escherichia coli under industrially relevant conditions, including the selection of media, strain, and growth rate. We test and compare two transcriptional circuits: an AND and a NOR gate. In E. coli DH10B, the AND gate is inactive in minimal media; activity can be rescued by supplementing the media and transferring the gate into the industrial strain E. coli DS68637 where normal function is observed in minimal media. In contrast, the NOR gate is robust to media composition and functions similarly in both strains. The AND gate is evaluated at three stages of early scale-up: 100 mL shake flask experiments, a 1 mL MTP microreactor, and a 10 L bioreactor. A reference plasmid that constitutively produces a GFP reporter is used to make comparisons of circuit performance across conditions. The AND gate function is quantitatively different at each scale. The output deteriorates late in fermentation after the shift from exponential to constant feed rates, which induces rapid resource depletion and changes in growth rate. In addition, one of the output states of the AND gate failed in the bioreactor, effectively making it only responsive to a single input. Finally, cells carrying the AND gate show considerably less accumulation of biomass. Overall, these results highlight challenges and suggest modified strategies for developing and characterizing genetic circuits that function reliably during fermentation.
ACS Synthetic Biology | 2014
Thomas E. Gorochowski; Eric van den Berg; Richard Kerkman; Johannes Andries Roubos; Roel A. L. Bovenberg
Synthetic biology has developed numerous parts for the precise control of protein expression. However, relatively little is known about the burden these place on a host, or their reliability under varying environmental conditions. To address this, we made use of synthetic transcriptional and translational elements to create a combinatorial library of constructs that modulated expression strength of a green fluorescent protein. Combining this library with a microbioreactor platform, we were able to perform a detailed large-scale assessment of transient expression and growth characteristics of two Escherichia coli strains across several temperatures. This revealed significant differences in the robustness of both strains to differing types of protein expression, and a complex response of transcriptional and translational elements to differing temperatures. This study supports the development of reliable synthetic biological systems capable of working across different hosts and environmental contexts. Plasmids developed during this work have been made publicly available to act as a reference set for future research.
Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2010
Paulo de Boer; Jeroen Bastiaans; Hesselien Touw; Richard Kerkman; Jurian Bronkhof; Marco van den Berg; Remko Offringa
Inactivating the non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) pathway is a well established method to increase gene targeting (GT) efficiencies in filamentous fungi. In this study we have compared the effect of inactivating the NHEJ genes ku70 or lig4 on GT in the industrial penicillin producer Penicillium chrysogenum. Deletion of both genes resulted in strongly increased GT efficiencies at three different loci but not higher than 70%, implying that other, yet uncharacterized, recombination pathways are still active causing a part of the DNA to be integrated via non-homologous recombination. To further increase the GT efficiency we applied the bi-partite approach, in which the DNA fragment for integration was split in two non-functional overlapping parts that via homologous recombination invivo can form a functional selection marker. The combined NHEJ mutant and bi-partite approach further increased GT frequencies up to approximately 90%, which will enable the efficient high throughput engineering of the P. chrysogenum genome. We expect that this combined approach will function with similar high efficiencies in other filamentous fungi.
Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2013
Paulo de Boer; Jurian Bronkhof; Karolina Dukiќ; Richard Kerkman; Hesselien Touw; Marco van den Berg; Remko Offringa
The industrial production of β-lactam antibiotics by Penicillium chrysogenum has increased tremendously over the last decades, however, further optimization via classical strain and process improvement has reached its limits. The availability of the genome sequence provides new opportunities for directed strain improvement, but this requires the establishment of an efficient gene targeting (GT) system. Recently, mutations affecting the non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) pathway were shown to increase GT efficiencies following PEG-mediated DNA transfer in P. chrysogenum from 1% to 50%. Apart from direct DNA transfer many fungi can efficiently be transformed using the T-DNA transfer system of the soil bacterium Agrobacterium tumefaciens, however, for P. chrysogenum no robust system for Agrobacterium-mediated transformation was available. We obtained efficient AMT of P. chrysogenum spores with the nourseothricin acetyltransferase gene as selection marker, and using this system we investigated if AMT in a NHEJ mutant background could further enhance GT efficiencies. In general, AMT resulted in higher GT efficiencies than direct DNA transfer, although the final frequencies depended on the Agrobacterium strain and plasmid backbone used. Providing overlapping and complementing fragments on two different plasmid backbones via the same Agrobacterium host was shown to be most effective. This so-called split-marker or bi-partite method resulted in highly efficient GT (>97%) almost exclusively without additional ectopic T-DNA insertions. As this method provides for an efficient GT method independent of protoplasts, it can be applied to other fungi for which no protoplasts can be generated or for which protoplast transformation leads to varying results.
Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2007
Marco van den Berg; Ilja Westerlaken; Chris Leeflang; Richard Kerkman; Roel A. L. Bovenberg
Archive | 2002
Roelof Ary Lans Bovenberg; Richard Kerkman
Archive | 2007
Van Den Marco Alexander Berg; Richard Kerkman; Hesselien Touw-Riel
Archive | 2009
Van Der Jan Metske Laan; Harold Monro Moody; Richard Kerkman; Van Der Thomas Does
Archive | 1991
Rudol Gijsbertus Marie Luiten; Richard Kerkman; Leendert Bosch; Erik Vijgenboom; Pieter Wilhelmus Hendrikus Heinstra; Lambertus P. Woudt