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Dive into the research topics where Solvej Siedler is active.

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Featured researches published by Solvej Siedler.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2013

Recombineering in Corynebacterium glutamicum combined with optical nanosensors: a general strategy for fast producer strain generation

Stephan Binder; Solvej Siedler; Jan Marienhagen; Michael Bott; Lothar Eggeling

Recombineering in bacteria is a powerful technique for genome reconstruction, but until now, it was not generally applicable for development of small-molecule producers because of the inconspicuous phenotype of most compounds of biotechnological relevance. Here, we establish recombineering for Corynebacterium glutamicum using RecT of prophage Rac and combine this with our recently developed nanosensor technology, which enables the detection and isolation of productive mutants at the single-cell level via fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS). We call this new technology RecFACS, which we use for genomic site-directed saturation mutagenesis without relying on pre-constructed libraries to directly isolate l-lysine-producing cells. A mixture of 19 different oligonucleotides was used targeting codon 81 in murE of the wild-type, at a locus where one single mutation is known to cause l-lysine production. Using RecFACS, productive mutants were screened and isolated. Sequencing revealed 12 different amino acid exchanges in the targeted murE codon, which caused different l-lysine production titers. Apart from introducing a rapid genome construction technology for C. glutamicum, the present work demonstrates that RecFACS is suitable to simply create producers as well as genetic diversity in one single step, thus establishing a new general concept in synthetic biology.


ACS Synthetic Biology | 2014

SoxR as a Single-Cell Biosensor for NADPH-Consuming Enzymes in Escherichia coli

Solvej Siedler; Georg Schendzielorz; Stephan Binder; Lothar Eggeling; Stephanie Bringer; Michael Bott

An ultra-high-throughput screening system for NADPH-dependent enzymes, such as stereospecific alcohol dehydrogenases, was established. It is based on the [2Fe-2S] cluster-containing transcriptional regulator SoxR of Escherichia coli that activates expression of soxS in the oxidized but not in the reduced state of the cluster. As SoxR is kept in its reduced state by NADPH-dependent reductases, an increased NADPH demand of the cell counteracts SoxR reduction and increases soxS expression. We have taken advantage of these properties by placing the eyfp gene under the control of the soxS promoter and analyzed the response of E. coli cells expressing an NADPH-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase from Lactobacillus brevis (LbAdh), which reduces methyl acetoacetate to (R)-methyl 3-hydroxybutyrate. Under suitable conditions, the specific fluorescence of the cells correlated with the substrate concentration added and with LbAdh enzyme activity, supporting the NADPH responsiveness of the sensor. These properties enabled sorting of single cells harboring wild-type LbAdh from those with lowered or without LbAdh activity by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS). In a proof-of-principle application, the system was used successfully to screen a mutant LbAdh library for variants showing improved activity with the substrate 4-methyl-2-pentanone.


Metabolic Engineering | 2014

Novel biosensors based on flavonoid-responsive transcriptional regulators introduced into Escherichia coli.

Solvej Siedler; Steen Gustav Stahlhut; Sailesh Malla; Jerome Maury; Ana Rute Neves

This study describes the construction of two flavonoid biosensors, which can be applied for metabolic engineering of Escherichia coli strains. The biosensors are based on transcriptional regulators combined with autofluorescent proteins. The transcriptional activator FdeR from Herbaspirillum seropedicae SmR1 responds to naringenin, while the repressor QdoR from Bacillus subtilis is inactivated by quercetin and kaempferol. Both biosensors showed over a 7-fold increase of the fluorescent signal after addition of their specific effectors, and a linear correlation between the fluorescence intensity and externally added flavonoid concentration. The QdoR-biosensor was successfully applied for detection of kaempferol production in vivo at the single cell level by fluorescence-activated cell sorting. Furthermore, the amount of kaempferol produced highly correlated with the specific fluorescence of E. coli cells containing a flavonol synthase from Arabidopsis thaliana (fls1). We expect the designed biosensors to be applied for isolation of genes involved in flavonoid biosynthetic pathways.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2015

Highly Active and Specific Tyrosine Ammonia-Lyases from Diverse Origins Enable Enhanced Production of Aromatic Compounds in Bacteria and Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Christian Bille Jendresen; Steen Gustav Stahlhut; Mingji Li; Paula Gaspar; Solvej Siedler; Jochen Förster; Jerome Maury; Irina Borodina; Alex Toftgaard Nielsen

ABSTRACT Phenylalanine and tyrosine ammonia-lyases form cinnamic acid and p-coumaric acid, which are precursors of a wide range of aromatic compounds of biotechnological interest. Lack of highly active and specific tyrosine ammonia-lyases has previously been a limitation in metabolic engineering approaches. We therefore identified 22 sequences in silico using synteny information and aiming for sequence divergence. We performed a comparative in vivo study, expressing the genes intracellularly in bacteria and yeast. When produced heterologously, some enzymes resulted in significantly higher production of p-coumaric acid in several different industrially important production organisms. Three novel enzymes were found to have activity exclusively for phenylalanine, including an enzyme from the low-GC Gram-positive bacterium Brevibacillus laterosporus, a bacterial-type enzyme from the amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum, and a phenylalanine ammonia-lyase from the moss Physcomitrella patens (producing 230 μM cinnamic acid per unit of optical density at 600 nm [OD600]) in the medium using Escherichia coli as the heterologous host). Novel tyrosine ammonia-lyases having higher reported substrate specificity than previously characterized enzymes were also identified. Enzymes from Herpetosiphon aurantiacus and Flavobacterium johnsoniae resulted in high production of p-coumaric acid in Escherichia coli (producing 440 μM p-coumaric acid OD600 unit−1 in the medium) and in Lactococcus lactis. The enzymes were also efficient in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, where p-coumaric acid accumulation was improved 5-fold over that in strains expressing previously characterized tyrosine ammonia-lyases.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2016

Engineering prokaryotic transcriptional activators as metabolite biosensors in yeast

Mette L. Skjoedt; Tim Snoek; Kanchana Rueksomtawin Kildegaard; Dushica Arsovska; Michael Eichenberger; Tobias J Goedecke; Arun S. Rajkumar; Jie Zhang; Mette Kristensen; Beata Joanna Lehka; Solvej Siedler; Irina Borodina; Michael Krogh Jensen; Jay D. Keasling

Whole-cell biocatalysts have proven a tractable path toward sustainable production of bulk and fine chemicals. Yet the screening of libraries of cellular designs to identify best-performing biocatalysts is most often a low-throughput endeavor. For this reason, the development of biosensors enabling real-time monitoring of production has attracted attention. Here we applied systematic engineering of multiple parameters to search for a general biosensor design in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae based on small-molecule binding transcriptional activators from the prokaryote superfamily of LysR-type transcriptional regulators (LTTRs). We identified a design supporting LTTR-dependent activation of reporter gene expression in the presence of cognate small-molecule inducers. As proof of principle, we applied the biosensors for in vivo screening of cells producing naringenin or cis,cis-muconic acid at different levels, and found that reporter gene output correlated with production. The transplantation of prokaryotic transcriptional activators into the eukaryotic chassis illustrates the potential of a hitherto untapped biosensor resource useful for biotechnological applications.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2016

Functional mining of transporters using synthetic selections

Hans Jasper Genee; Anne Pihl Bali; Søren Dalsgård Petersen; Solvej Siedler; Mads Bonde; Luisa S. Gronenberg; Mette Kristensen; Scott James Harrison; Morten Otto Alexander Sommer

Only 25% of bacterial membrane transporters have functional annotation owing to the difficulty of experimental study and of accurate prediction of their function. Here we report a sequence-independent method for high-throughput mining of novel transporters. The method is based on ligand-responsive biosensor systems that enable selective growth of cells only if they encode a ligand-specific importer. We developed such a synthetic selection system for thiamine pyrophosphate and mined soil and gut metagenomes for thiamine-uptake functions. We identified several members of a novel class of thiamine transporters, PnuT, which is widely distributed across multiple bacterial phyla. We demonstrate that with modular replacement of the biosensor, we could expand our method to xanthine and identify xanthine permeases from gut and soil metagenomes. Our results demonstrate how synthetic-biology approaches can effectively be deployed to functionally mine metagenomes and elucidate sequence-function relationships of small-molecule transport systems in bacteria.


Metabolic Engineering | 2015

Assembly of a novel biosynthetic pathway for production of the plant flavonoid fisetin in Escherichia coli

Steen Gustav Stahlhut; Solvej Siedler; Sailesh Malla; Scott James Harrison; Jerome Maury; Ana Rute Neves; Jochen Förster

Plant secondary metabolites are an underutilized pool of bioactive molecules for applications in the food, pharma and nutritional industries. One such molecule is fisetin, which is present in many fruits and vegetables and has several potential health benefits, including anti-cancer, anti-viral and anti-aging activity. Moreover, fisetin has recently been shown to prevent Alzheimers disease in mice and to prevent complications associated with diabetes type I. Thus far the biosynthetic pathway of fisetin in plants remains elusive. Here, we present the heterologous assembly of a novel fisetin pathway in Escherichia coli. We propose a novel biosynthetic pathway from the amino acid, tyrosine, utilizing nine heterologous enzymes. The pathway proceeds via the synthesis of two flavanones never produced in microorganisms before--garbanzol and resokaempferol. We show for the first time a functional biosynthetic pathway and establish E. coli as a microbial platform strain for the production of fisetin and related flavonols.


ACS Synthetic Biology | 2017

Development of a Bacterial Biosensor for Rapid Screening of Yeast p-Coumaric Acid Production

Solvej Siedler; Narendar K. Khatri; Andrea Zsohár; Inge Kjærbølling; Michael Vogt; Petter Hammar; Christian Førgaard Nielsen; Jan Marienhagen; Morten Otto Alexander Sommer; Haakan N. Joensson

Transcription factor-based biosensors are used to identify producer strains, a critical bottleneck in cell factory engineering. Here, we address two challenges with this methodology: transplantation of heterologous transcriptional regulators into new hosts to generate functional biosensors and biosensing of the extracellular product concentration that accurately reflects the effective cell factory production capacity. We describe the effects of different translation initiation rates on the dynamic range of a p-coumaric acid biosensor based on the Bacillus subtilis transcriptional repressor PadR by varying its ribosomal binding site. Furthermore, we demonstrate the functionality of this p-coumaric acid biosensor in Escherichia coli and Corynebacterium glutamicum. Finally, we encapsulate yeast p-coumaric acid-producing cells with E. coli-biosensing cells in picoliter droplets and, in a microfluidic device, rapidly sort droplets containing yeast cells producing high amounts of extracellular p-coumaric acid using the fluorescent E. coli biosensor signal. As additional biosensors become available, such approaches will find broad applications for screening of an extracellular product.


Metabolic Engineering | 2017

Assessing glycolytic flux alterations resulting from genetic perturbations in E. coli using a biosensor

Christina Eva Lehning; Solvej Siedler; Mostafa M Hashim Ellabaan; Morten Otto Alexander Sommer

We describe the development of an optimized glycolytic flux biosensor and its application in detecting altered flux in a production strain and in a mutant library. The glycolytic flux biosensor is based on the Cra-regulated ppsA promoter of E. coli controlling fluorescent protein synthesis. We validated the glycolytic flux dependency of the biosensor in a range of different carbon sources in six different E. coli strains and during mevalonate production. Furthermore, we studied the flux-altering effects of genome-wide single gene knock-outs in E. coli in a multiplex FlowSeq experiment. From a library consisting of 2126 knock-out mutants, we identified 3 mutants with high-flux and 95 mutants with low-flux phenotypes that did not have severe growth defects. This approach can improve our understanding of glycolytic flux regulation improving metabolic models and engineering efforts.


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2014

NADPH‐dependent reductive biotransformation with Escherichia coli and its pfkA deletion mutant: Influence on global gene expression and role of oxygen supply

Solvej Siedler; Stephanie Bringer; Tino Polen; Michael Bott

An Escherichia coli ΔpfkA mutant lacking the major phosphofructokinase possesses a partially cyclized pentose phosphate pathway leading to an increased NADPH per glucose ratio. This effect decreases the amount of glucose required for NADPH regeneration in reductive biotransformations, such as the conversion of methyl acetoacetate (MAA) to (R)‐methyl 3‐hydroxybutyrate (MHB) by an alcohol dehydrogenase from Lactobacillus brevis. Here, global transcriptional analyses were performed to study regulatory responses during reductive biotransformation. DNA microarray analysis revealed amongst other things increased expression of soxS, supporting previous results indicating that a high NADPH demand contributes to the activation of SoxR, the transcriptional activator of soxS. Furthermore, several target genes of the ArcAB two‐component system showed a lower mRNA level in the reference strain than in the ΔpfkA mutant, pointing to an increased QH2/Q ratio in the reference strain. This prompted us to analyze yields and productivities of MAA reduction to MHB under different oxygen regimes in a bioreactor. Under anaerobic conditions, the specific MHB production rates of both strains were comparable (7.4 ± 0.2 mmolMHB h−1 gcdw−1) and lower than under conditions of 15% dissolved oxygen, where those of the reference strain (12.8 mmol h−1 gcdw−1) and of the ΔpfkA mutant (11.0 mmol h−1 gcdw−1) were 73% and 49% higher. While the oxygen transfer rate (OTR) of the reference strain increased after the addition of MAA, presumably due to the oxidation of the acetate accumulated before MAA addition, the OTR of the ΔpfkA strain strongly decreased, indicating a very low respiration rate despite sufficient oxygen supply. The latter effect can likely be attributed to a restricted conversion of NADPH into NADH via the soluble transhydrogenase SthA, as the enzyme is outcompeted in the presence of MAA by the recombinant NADPH‐dependent alcohol dehydrogenase. The differences in respiration rates can explain the suggested higher ArcAB activity in the reference strain. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2014;111: 2067–2075.

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Michael Bott

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Steen Gustav Stahlhut

Technical University of Denmark

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Jerome Maury

Technical University of Denmark

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Lothar Eggeling

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Stephan Binder

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Irina Borodina

Technical University of Denmark

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