Vaskar Mukherjee
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
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Publication
Featured researches published by Vaskar Mukherjee.
Fems Yeast Research | 2015
Dorota Radecka; Vaskar Mukherjee; Raquel Quintilla Mateo; Marija Stojiljkovic; Maria R. Foulquié-Moreno; Johan M. Thevelein
Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been used for millennia in the production of food and beverages and is by far the most studied yeast species. Currently, it is also the most used microorganism in the production of first-generation bioethanol from sugar or starch crops. Second-generation bioethanol, on the other hand, is produced from lignocellulosic feedstocks that are pretreated and hydrolyzed to obtain monomeric sugars, mainly D-glucose, D-xylose and L-arabinose. Recently, S. cerevisiae recombinant strains capable of fermenting pentose sugars have been generated. However, the pretreatment of the biomass results in hydrolysates with high osmolarity and high concentrations of inhibitors. These compounds negatively influence the fermentation process. Therefore, robust strains with high stress tolerance are required. Up to now, more than 2000 yeast species have been described and some of these could provide a solution to these limitations because of their high tolerance to the most predominant stress conditions present in a second-generation bioethanol reactor. In this review, we will summarize what is known about the non-conventional yeast species showing unusual tolerance to these stresses, namely Zygosaccharomyces rouxii (osmotolerance), Kluyveromyces marxianus and Ogataea (Hansenula) polymorpha (thermotolerance), Dekkera bruxellensis (ethanol tolerance), Pichia kudriavzevii (furan derivatives tolerance) and Z. bailii (acetic acid tolerance).
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2014
Vaskar Mukherjee; Jan Steensels; Bart Lievens; Ilse Van De Voorde; Alex Verplaetse; Guido Aerts; Kris Willems; Johan M. Thevelein; Kevin J. Verstrepen; Stefan Ruyters
Saccharomyces cerevisiae is the organism of choice for many food and beverage fermentations because it thrives in high-sugar and high-ethanol conditions. However, the conditions encountered in bioethanol fermentation pose specific challenges, including extremely high sugar and ethanol concentrations, high temperature, and the presence of specific toxic compounds. It is generally considered that exploring the natural biodiversity of Saccharomyces strains may be an interesting route to find superior bioethanol strains and may also improve our understanding of the challenges faced by yeast cells during bioethanol fermentation. In this study, we phenotypically evaluated a large collection of diverse Saccharomyces strains on six selective traits relevant for bioethanol production with increasing stress intensity. Our results demonstrate a remarkably large phenotypic diversity among different Saccharomyces species and among S. cerevisiae strains from different origins. Currently applied bioethanol strains showed a high tolerance to many of these relevant traits, but several other natural and industrial S. cerevisiae strains outcompeted the bioethanol strains for specific traits. These multitolerant strains performed well in fermentation experiments mimicking industrial bioethanol production. Together, our results illustrate the potential of phenotyping the natural biodiversity of yeasts to find superior industrial strains that may be used in bioethanol production or can be used as a basis for further strain improvement through genetic engineering, experimental evolution, or breeding. Additionally, our study provides a basis for new insights into the relationships between tolerance to different stressors.
Biotechnology for Biofuels | 2017
Vaskar Mukherjee; Dorota Radecka; Guido Aerts; Kevin J. Verstrepen; Bart Lievens; Johan M. Thevelein
BackgroundNon-conventional yeasts present a huge, yet barely exploited, resource of yeast biodiversity for industrial applications. This presents a great opportunity to explore alternative ethanol-fermenting yeasts that are more adapted to some of the stress factors present in the harsh environmental conditions in second-generation (2G) bioethanol fermentation. Extremely tolerant yeast species are interesting candidates to investigate the underlying tolerance mechanisms and to identify genes that when transferred to existing industrial strains could help to design more stress-tolerant cell factories. For this purpose, we performed a high-throughput phenotypic evaluation of a large collection of non-conventional yeast species to identify the tolerance limits of the different yeast species for desirable stress tolerance traits in 2G bioethanol production. Next, 12 multi-tolerant strains were selected and used in fermentations under different stressful conditions. Five strains out of which, showing desirable fermentation characteristics, were then evaluated in small-scale, semi-anaerobic fermentations with lignocellulose hydrolysates.ResultsOur results revealed the phenotypic landscape of many non-conventional yeast species which have not been previously characterized for tolerance to stress conditions relevant for bioethanol production. This has identified for each stress condition evaluated several extremely tolerant non-Saccharomyces yeasts. It also revealed multi-tolerance in several yeast species, which makes those species good candidates to investigate the molecular basis of a robust general stress tolerance. The results showed that some non-conventional yeast species have similar or even better fermentation efficiency compared to S. cerevisiae in the presence of certain stressful conditions.ConclusionPrior to this study, our knowledge on extreme stress-tolerant phenotypes in non-conventional yeasts was limited to only few species. Our work has now revealed in a systematic way the potential of non-Saccharomyces species to emerge either as alternative host species or as a source of valuable genetic information for construction of more robust industrial S. serevisiae bioethanol production yeasts. Striking examples include yeast species like Pichia kudriavzevii and Wickerhamomyces anomalus that show very high tolerance to diverse stress factors. This large-scale phenotypic analysis has yielded a detailed database useful as a resource for future studies to understand and benefit from the molecular mechanisms underlying the extreme phenotypes of non-conventional yeast species.
Journal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology | 2015
Stefan Ruyters; Vaskar Mukherjee; Kevin J. Verstrepen; Johan M. Thevelein; Kris Willems; Bart Lievens
Food Microbiology | 2018
Sylvester Holt; Vaskar Mukherjee; Bart Lievens; Kevin J. Verstrepen; Johan M. Thevelein
Yeast | 2013
Vaskar Mukherjee; Jan Steensels; Ilse Van De Voorde; Alex Verplaetse; Guido Aerts; Johan M. Thevelein; Kris Willems; Bart Lievens; Kevin J. Verstrepen; Stefan Ruyters
Yeast | 2015
Vaskar Mukherjee; Maria Remedios Foulquié Moreno; Françoise Dumortier; Guido Aerts; Bart Lievens; Kevin J. Verstrepen; Johan M. Thevelein
Yeast | 2015
Dorota Radecka; Vaskar Mukherjee; Guido Aerts; Kevin J. Verstrepen; Bart Lievens; Johan M. Thevelein
Archive | 2014
Stefan Ruyters; Vaskar Mukherjee; Ilse Van De Voorde; Guido Aerts; Kevin Verstrepen; Kris Willems; Bart Lievens
Archive | 2014
Stefan Ruyters; Vaskar Mukherjee; Ilse Van De Voorde; Guido Aerts; Kevin Verstrepen; Kris Willems; Bart Lievens