Publications by authors named "Nancy Da Silva"

The non-conventional yeast Kluyveromyces marxianus is a promising microbial host for industrial biomanufacturing. With the recent development of Cas9-based genome editing systems and other novel synthetic biology tools for K. marxianus, engineering of this yeast has become far more accessible.

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Many desired biobased chemicals exhibit a range of toxicity to microbial cell factories, making industry-level biomanufacturing more challenging. Separating microbial growth and production phases is known to be beneficial for improving production of toxic products. Here, we developed a novel synthetic carbon-responsive promoter for use in the rapidly growing, stress-tolerant yeast , by fusing carbon-source responsive elements of the native promoter to the strong or native promoter cores.

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The efficient hydrolysis of lignocellulosic biomass into fermentable sugars is key for viable economic production of biofuels and biorenewable chemicals from second-generation feedstocks. Consolidated bioprocessing (CBP) combines lignocellulose saccharification and chemical production in a single step. To avoid wasting valuable resources during CBP, the selective secretion of enzymes (independent or attached to the surface) based on the carbon source available is advantageous.

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Cells often localize pathway enzymes in close proximity to reduce substrate loss via diffusion and to ensure that carbon flux is directed toward the desired product. To emulate this strategy for the biosynthesis of heterologous products in yeast, we have taken advantage of the highly specific Cas6-RNA interaction and the predictability of RNA hybridizations to demonstrate Cas6-mediated RNA-guided protein assembly within the yeast cytosol. The feasibility of this synthetic scaffolding technique for protein localization was first demonstrated using a split luciferase reporter system with each part fused to a different Cas6 protein.

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Colocalization of enzymes is a proven approach to increase pathway flux and the synthesis of nonnative products. Here, we develop a method for enzyme colocalization using the yeast peroxisomal membrane as an anchor point. Pathway enzymes were fused to the native Pex15 anchoring motif to enable display on the surface of the peroxisome facing the cytosol.

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The thermotolerant yeast has gained significant attention in recent years as a promising microbial candidate for industrial biomanufacturing. Despite several contributions to the expanding molecular toolbox for gene expression and metabolic engineering of , there remains a need for a more efficient and versatile genome editing platform. To address this, we developed a CRISPR-based editing system that enables high efficiency marker-less gene disruptions and integrations using only 40 bp homology arms in NHEJ functional and non-functional strains.

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Yeast cell factories, particularly , have proven valuable for the synthesis of non-native compounds, ranging from commodity chemicals to complex natural products. One significant challenge has been ensuring sufficient carbon flux to the desired product. Traditionally, this has been addressed by strategies involving "pushing" and "pulling" the carbon flux toward the products by overexpression while "blocking" competing pathways via downregulation or gene deletion.

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Background: 2-phenylethanol (2-PE) is a rose-scented flavor and fragrance compound that is used in food, beverages, and personal care products. Compatibility with gasoline also makes it a potential biofuel or fuel additive. A biochemical process converting glucose or other fermentable sugars to 2-PE can potentially provide a more sustainable and economical production route than current methods that use chemical synthesis and/or isolation from plant material.

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is an emerging host for metabolic engineering. This thermotolerant yeast is the fastest growing eukaryote, has high flux through the TCA cycle, and can metabolize a broad range of C5, C6, and C12 carbon sources. In comparison to the common host , this non-conventional yeast suffers from a lack of metabolic engineering tools to control gene expression over a wide transcriptional range.

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The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is a valuable host for the production of heterologous proteins with a wide array of applications, ranging from cellulose saccharification enzymes to biopharmaceuticals. Efficient protein secretion may be critical for economic viability; however previous efforts have shown limited improvements that are often protein-specific. By enhancing transit through the early secretory pathway, we have successfully improved extracellular levels of three different proteins from variety of origins: a bacterial endoglucanase (CelA), a fungal β-glucosidase (BglI) and a single-chain antibody fragment (4-4-20 scFv).

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Kluyveromyces marxianus is a promising nonconventional yeast for biobased chemical production due to its rapid growth rate, high TCA cycle flux, and tolerance to low pH and high temperature. Unlike Saccharomyces cerevisiae, K. marxianus grows on low-cost substrates to cell densities that equal or surpass densities in glucose, which can be beneficial for utilization of lignocellulosic biomass (xylose), biofuel production waste (glycerol), and whey (lactose).

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Collagen is the most abundant protein in the extracellular matrix (ECM), and it can direct the behavior of the neighboring cells. By customizing properties of collagen, it is possible to control the cells that interact with it. Utilizing a bottom-up strategy, modular gene fragments are assembled and recombinantly processed to create collagen-mimetic variants that modulate proteolytic degradation, cell adhesion, and mechanical characteristics.

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Polyketides are attractive compounds for uses ranging from biorenewable chemical precursors to high-value therapeutics. In many cases, synthesis in a heterologous host is required to produce these compounds in industrially relevant quantities. The type III polyketide synthase 2-pyrone synthase (2-PS) from Gerbera hybrida was used for the production of triacetic acid lactone (TAL) in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

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Adhesion to the microenvironment profoundly affects stem cell functions, including proliferation and differentiation, and understanding the interaction of stem cells with the microenvironment is important for controlling their behavior. In this study, we investigated the effects of the integrin binding epitopes GFOGER and IKVAV (natively present in collagen I and laminin, respectively) on human neural stem/progenitor cells (hNSPCs). To test the specificity of these epitopes, GFOGER or IKVAV were placed within the context of recombinant triple-helical collagen III engineered to be devoid of native integrin binding sites.

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Molecular tools for the regulation of protein expression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae have contributed to rapid advances in pathway engineering for this yeast. This review considers new and enhanced additions to this toolbox, focusing on experimental approaches to modulate enzyme synthesis and enzyme fate. Methods for genome engineering, regulation of transcription, post-translational protein localization, and combinatorial screening and sensing in S.

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Fatty acids and fatty acid derivatives are important biorenewable products, as well as precursors for further transformation via chemical catalysis. This minireview focuses on recent advances in increasing the production of fatty acids and derived products in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The engineering of upstream pathways to increase levels of the required precursors, fatty acid synthase systems to increase expression and to modify chain length, and downstream pathways to produce free fatty acids, fatty acid ethyl esters, fatty alcohols and alkanes are highlighted, and current challenges are discussed.

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Biorenewable chemicals such as short and medium chain fatty acids enable functional or direct substitution of petroleum-derived building blocks, allowing reduction of anthropogenic greenhouse gases while meeting market needs of high-demand products like aliphatic alcohols and alpha olefins. However, producing these fatty acids in microorganisms can be challenging due to toxicity issues. Octanoic acid (C8) can disrupt the integrity of the cell membrane in yeast, and exogenous supplementation of oleic acid has been shown to help alleviate this.

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Synthesis of polyketides at high titer and yield is important for producing pharmaceuticals and biorenewable chemical precursors. In this work, we engineered cofactor and transport pathways in Saccharomyces cerevisiae to increase acetyl-CoA, an important polyketide building block. The highly regulated yeast pyruvate dehydrogenase bypass pathway was supplemented by overexpressing a modified Escherichia coli pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDHm) that accepts NADP(+) for acetyl-CoA production.

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Biologically derived fatty acids have gained tremendous interest as an alternative to petroleum-derived fuels and chemical precursors. We previously demonstrated the synthesis of short chain fatty acids in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by introduction of the Homo sapiens fatty acid synthase (hFAS) with heterologous phosphopantetheine transferases and heterologous thioesterases. In this study, short chain fatty acid production was improved by combining a variety of novel enzyme and metabolic engineering strategies.

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The native yeast type I fatty acid synthase (FAS) is a complex, rigid enzyme, and challenging to engineer for the production of medium- or short-chain fatty acids. Introduction of a type II FAS is a promising alternative as it allows expression control for each discrete enzyme and the addition of heterologous thioesterases. In this study, the native Saccharomyces cerevisiae FAS was functionally replaced by the Escherichia coli type II FAS (eFAS) system.

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Collagen's ability to direct cellular behavior suggests that redesigning it at the molecular level could enable manipulation of cells residing in an engineered microenvironment. However, the fabrication of full-length collagen mimics of specified sequence de novo has been elusive, and applications still rely on material from native tissues. Using a bottom-up strategy, we synthesized modular genes and expressed recombinant human collagen variants in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

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Triacetic acid lactone (TAL) is a potential platform chemical that can be produced in yeast. To evaluate the potential for industrial yeast strains to produce TAL, the g2ps1 gene encoding 2-pyrone synthase was transformed into 13 industrial yeast strains of varied genetic background. TAL production varied 63-fold between strains when compared in batch culture with glucose.

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The production of fuels and chemicals from biorenewable resources is important to alleviate the environmental concerns, costs, and foreign dependency associated with the use of petroleum feedstock. Fatty acids are attractive biomolecules due to the flexibility of their iterative biosynthetic pathway, high energy content, and suitability for conversion into other secondary chemicals. Free fatty acids (FFAs) that can be secreted from the cell are particularly appealing due to their lower harvest costs and straightforward conversion into a broad range of biofuel and biochemical products.

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The current conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq present unique risk factors for military personnel that increase the likelihood of psychological distress and concomitant consequences related to trauma. Several studies have found that the stress brought about by financial difficulties, unemployment, and the need to renegotiate roles and responsibilities with spouses following discharge increases the likelihood of relationship strain and even intimate partner violence in the veteran population. This study was undertaken to determine the challenges related to maintaining healthy relationships for college student veterans who have served in the armed forces since September 11, 2001.

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It is shown that microenvironments formed around catalytically active sites mitigate catalyst deactivation by biogenic impurities that are present during the production of biorenewable chemicals from biologically derived species. Palladium and ruthenium catalysts are inhibited by the presence of sulfur-containing amino acids; however, these supported metal catalysts are stabilized by overcoating with poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA), which creates a microenvironment unfavorable for biogenic impurities. Moreover, deactivation of Pd catalysts by carbon deposition from the decomposition of highly reactive species is suppressed by the formation of bimetallic PdAu nanoparticles.

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