Suiping Zheng
South China University of Technology
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Featured researches published by Suiping Zheng.
Bioresource Technology | 2013
Zi Jin; Shuangyan Han; Li Zhang; Suiping Zheng; Yong Wang; Ying Lin
Lipase-displaying whole cells appear to be efficient biocatalysts because of their low preparation costs and simple recycling procedure. The combined utilization of Candida antarctica lipase B (CALB) and Rhizomucor miehei lipase (RML), separately displayed on Pichia pastoris whole cells, to produce biodiesel in co-solvent media was investigated. A response surface methodology incorporating a D-optimal design was employed to obtain the optimum reaction conditions for methyl ester (ME) synthesis. The synergistic effect of the two displayed lipases and the use of tert-butanol and isooctane as the co-solvent media were found to significantly improve the transesterification reaction. Scaled-up reactions using various types of feedstock were carried out in a 0.5-l stirred reactor under optimum conditions, affording ME yields over 90% in 12h. Moreover, the ME yields remained above 85% after 20 repeated batch cycles. In conclusion, this biocatalyst affords a promising route to efficient biodiesel production.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2009
Lili Li; Yanrui Ye; Li Pan; Yi Zhu; Suiping Zheng; Ying Lin
Trehalose and glycerol have been implicated as potential stress protectants that accumulate in yeasts during various stress conditions. We investigated the levels of glycerol and trehalose and the expression profiles of genes involved in their metabolism to determine their involvement in the response of Saccharomyces cerevisiae XQ1 to thermal, sorbitol and ethanol stresses. The results showed that the genes involved in the synthesis and degradation of trehalose and glycerol were stress induced, and that trehalose and glycerol were synthesized simultaneously during the initial stages (a sensitive response period) of diverse stress treatments. Trehalose accumulated markedly under heat treatment, but not under sorbitol or ethanol stress, whereas glycerol accumulated strikingly under sorbitol stress conditions. Interestingly, extracellular trehalose seemed to be involved in protecting cells from damage under unfavorable conditions. Moreover, our results suggest that the stress-activated futile ATP cycles of trehalose and glycerol turnover are of general importance during cellular stress adaptation.
Journal of Biotechnology | 2012
Zi Jin; Janvier Ntwali; Shuangyan Han; Suiping Zheng; Ying Lin
Candida antarctica lipase B (CALB) has been employed as an efficient catalyst in the preparation of many flavor esters. A CALB-displaying yeast whole-cell biocatalyst could be an attractive alternative to commercial immobilized CALB because of its low-cost preparation and high enzymatic activity. We investigated the potential application of CALB-displaying Pichia pastoris cells for the production of flavor esters. The optimal conditions for flavor esters synthesis by this biocatalyst were determined in 50-ml shake flasks. Under optimized conditions, the synthesis of 12 kinds flavor esters were scaled up in a 5-l batch stirred reactor. Among these, the mole conversions of 10 exceeded 95% after reactions for 4h. In addition, this biocatalyst showed good tolerance for high substrates concentration and excellent operational stability. Repeated use of the cells in 10 batches resulted in an activity loss of less than 10%. Thus, CALB-displaying P. pastoris whole cells are robust biocatalysts with potential commercial application in the large-scale production of flavor esters in non-aqueous media.
BMC Genomics | 2012
Shuli Liang; Bin Wang; Li Pan; Yanrui Ye; Minghui He; Shuangyan Han; Suiping Zheng; Xiaoning Wang; Ying Lin
BackgroundThe methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris is widely used as a bioengineering platform for producing industrial and biopharmaceutical proteins, studying protein expression and secretion mechanisms, and analyzing metabolite synthesis and peroxisome biogenesis. With the development of DNA microarray and mRNA sequence technology, the P. pastoris transcriptome has become a research hotspot due to its powerful capability to identify the transcript structures and gain insights into the transcriptional regulation model of cells under protein production conditions. The study of the P. pastoris transcriptome helps to annotate the P. pastoris transcript structures and provide useful information for further improvement of the production of recombinant proteins.ResultsWe used a massively parallel mRNA sequencing platform (RNA-Seq), based on next-generation sequencing technology, to map and quantify the dynamic transcriptome of P. pastoris at the genome scale under growth conditions with glycerol and methanol as substrates. The results describe the transcription landscape at the whole-genome level and provide annotated transcript structures, including untranslated regions (UTRs), alternative splicing (AS) events, novel transcripts, new exons, alternative upstream initiation codons (uATGs), and upstream open reading frames (uORFs). Internal ribosome entry sites (IRESes) were first identified within the UTRs of genes from P. pastoris, encoding kinases and the proteins involved in the control of growth. We also provide a transcriptional regulation model for P. pastoris grown on different carbon sources.ConclusionsWe suggest that the IRES-dependent translation initiation mechanism also exists in P. pastoris. Retained introns (RIs) are determined as the main AS event and are produced predominantly by an intron definition (ID) mechanism. Our results describe the metabolic characteristics of P. pastoris with heterologous protein production under methanol induction and provide rich information for further in-depth studies of P. pastoris protein expression and secretion mechanisms.
Journal of Proteomics | 2013
Xiaoqiong Lin; Shuli Liang; Shuangyan Han; Suiping Zheng; Yanrui Ye; Ying Lin
UNLABELLED The methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris is an attractive platform for a plethora of recombinant proteins. There is growing evidence that host cells producing recombinant proteins are exposed to a variety of cellular stresses resulting in the induction of the unfolded protein response (UPR) pathway. At present, there is only limited information about the cellular reactions of the host cells at the level of the proteome, especially with regard to recombinant protein secretion. Here we monitored xylanase A secretion from Bacillus halodurans C-125 (xynA) in P. pastoris, using strains containing different copy numbers of the gene encoding xylanase A and co-overexpressing the gene encoding the UPR-regulating transcription factor HAC1 by applying a quantitative proteomics approach (iTRAQ-LC-MS/MS). Many important cellular processes, including carbon metabolism, stress response and protein folding are affected in the investigated conditions. Notably, the analysis revealed that strong over-expression of xynA can efficiently improve protein production but simultaneously cause an unfolded protein burden with a subsequent induction of the UPR. This limits the further improvement of protein production levels. Remarkably, constitutive expression of the gene encoding HAC1 lessens the unfolded protein burden by attenuating protein synthesis and increasing ER protein folding efficiency which is beneficial for protein secretion. BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE Pichia pastoris expression systems have been successfully used for over 20years in basic research and in the biotechnology industry for the production and secretion of a wide range of recombinant proteins. In particular, secretion of recombinant proteins is still one of the main reasons for using P. pastoris. It has become obvious that many protein products can lead to severe stress on the host cell when being over-expressed, thus limiting the potential yield. Detailed understanding of the physiological responses to such stresses gives rise to engineering of host cells that can better cope with the stress factors. Therefore, the regulatory mechanism of heterologous protein secretion by quantitative mass-spectrometry (MS) proteomics is a growing field and an important endeavor in improving protein annotation. Many important cellular processes, including carbon and amino acid metabolism, stress response and protein folding are affected in the over-expression strains. This data represent a first step towards a systems wide approach to assess the response with recombinant protein induced stress in P. pastoris.
Enzyme and Microbial Technology | 2013
Xiaoqiong Lin; Shuangyan Han; Na Zhang; Hui Hu; Suiping Zheng; Yanrui Ye; Ying Lin
Past studies have revealed major difficulties in applications of xylanase in the pulp and paper industry as enzymes isolated from many different species could not tolerate high temperatures or highly alkaline conditions. The thermostable xylanase A from Bacillus halodurans C-125 (C-125 xylanase A) was successfully cloned and expressed in Pichia pastoris with a yield as high as 3361 U/mL in a 2 L reactor. Its thermophilic and basophilic properties (optimal activity at 70 °C and pH 9.0), together with the fact it is cellulase-free, render this enzyme attractive for compatible applications in the pulp and paper industry. The pretreatment of wheat straw pulp with C-125 xylanase A at pH 9.0 and 70 °C for 90 min induced the release of both chromophores (Ab(237), Ab(254), Ab(280)) and hydrophobic compounds (Ab(465)) into the filtrate as well as sugar degradation. Moreover, the addition of 10 U xylanase to 1 g wheat straw pulp (dry weight) as pretreatment improved brightness by 5.2% ISO and decreased the kappa number by 5.0% when followed by hydrogen peroxide bleaching. In addition, compared with two commercial enzymes, Pulpzyme HC and AU-PE89, which are normally incorporated in ECF bleaching of wheat straw pulp, C-125 xylanase A proved to be more effective in enhancing brightness as well as preserving paper strength properties. When evaluating the physical properties of pulp samples, such as tensile index, tearing index, bursting index, and post-color (PC) number, the enzymes involved in pretreating pulps exhibited better or the same performances as chemical treatment. Compared with chemical bleaching, chlorine consumption can be significantly reduced by 10% for xylanase-pretreated wheat straw pulp while maintaining the brightness together with the kappa number at the same level. Scanning electron microscopy revealed significant surface modification of enzyme-pretreated pulp fibers with no marked fiber disruptions.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2013
Li Zhang; Shuli Liang; Xinying Zhou; Zi Jin; Fengchun Jiang; Shuangyan Han; Suiping Zheng; Ying Lin
ABSTRACT Glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored glycoproteins have various intrinsic functions in yeasts and different uses in vitro. In the present study, the genome of Pichia pastoris GS115 was screened for potential GPI-modified cell wall proteins. Fifty putative GPI-anchored proteins were selected on the basis of (i) the presence of a C-terminal GPI attachment signal sequence, (ii) the presence of an N-terminal signal sequence for secretion, and (iii) the absence of transmembrane domains in mature protein. The predicted GPI-anchored proteins were fused to an alpha-factor secretion signal as a substitute for their own N-terminal signal peptides and tagged with the chimeric reporters FLAG tag and mature Candida antarctica lipase B (CALB). The expression of fusion proteins on the cell surface of P. pastoris GS115 was determined by whole-cell flow cytometry and immunoblotting analysis of the cell wall extracts obtained by β-1,3-glucanase digestion. CALB displayed on the cell surface of P. pastoris GS115 with the predicted GPI-anchored proteins was examined on the basis of potential hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl butyrate. Finally, 13 proteins were confirmed to be GPI-modified cell wall proteins in P. pastoris GS115, which can be used to display heterologous proteins on the yeast cell surface.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2012
Yangyong Lv; Juanjun Liao; Zhanhong Wu; Shuangyan Han; Ying Lin; Suiping Zheng
We report the genome sequence of Corynebacterium glutamicum ATCC 14067 (once named Brevibacterium flavum), which is useful for taxonomy research and further molecular breeding in amino acid production. Preliminary comparison with those of the reported coryneform strains revealed some notable differences that might be related to the difficulties in molecular manipulation.
Biotechnology and Bioprocess Engineering | 2013
Zi Jin; Shuli Liang; Xiuqin Zhang; Shuangyan Han; Changqiong Ren; Ying Lin; Suiping Zheng
Earlier studies on fructose laurate ester products have shown that recombinant Pichia pastoris displaying Candida antarctica lipase B (CALB) on the cell surface acts as an efficient whole-cell biocatalyst for sugar ester production from fructose and lauric acid in an organic solvent. The effects of various reaction factors, including solvent composition, substrate molar ratio, enzyme dose, temperature and water activity, on esterification catalyzed by the CALB-displaying P. pastoris whole-cell biocatalyst were examined in the present study. Under the preferred reaction conditions, specifically, 5 mL organic solvent mixture of 2-methyl-2-butanol/DMSO (20% v/v), 2 mmol fructose with a lauric acid to fructose molar ratio of 2:1, 0.3 g whole-cell biocatalyst (1,264 U/g dry cell) with an initial water activity of 0.11, 1.2 g 4Å molecular sieve, reaction temperature of 55oC and 200 rpm stirring speed, the fructose mono laurate ester yield was 78% (w/w). The CALBdisplaying P. pastoris whole-cell biocatalyst exhibited good operational stability, with an evident increase, rather than decrease, in relative activity after the continuous recover and reuse cycle. The relative activity of the biocatalyst remained 50% higher than that of the first batch, even following reuse for 15 batches. Our results collectively indicate that the CALB-displaying P. pastoris whole-cell biocatalyst may be potentially utilized in lieu of free or immobilized enzyme to effectively produce non-ionic surfactants such as fatty acid sugar esters, offering the significant advantages of cost-effectiveness, good operational stability and mild reaction conditions.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2011
Yangyong Lv; Zhanhong Wu; Shuangyan Han; Ying Lin; Suiping Zheng
Here we report the genome sequence of Corynebacterium glutamicum S9114, an industrial producer widely used in production of glutamate in China. Preliminary comparison with the sequences of the Corynebacterium glutamicum strains ATCC 13032 and R revealed some notable mutagenesis that might be related to the high yield of glutamate.