999 results match your criteria: "Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center[Affiliation]"
ChemSusChem
April 2024
Wisconsin Energy Institute and the DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1552 University Avenue, Madison, WI 53726, USA.
As we work to transition the modern society that is based on non-renewable chemical feedstocks to a post-modern society built around renewable sources of energy, fuels, and chemicals, there is a need to identify the renewable resources and processes for converting them to platform chemicals. Herein, we explore a strategy for utilizing the p-hydroxybenzoate in biomass feedstocks (e. g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew Phytol
April 2024
Graduate Program in Bioinformatics, Institute of Biological Sciences (ICB), Federal University of Minas Gerais (UFMG), Belo Horizonte, MG, 31270-901, Brazil.
Mol Biol Evol
April 2024
DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53726, USA.
Siderophores are crucial for iron-scavenging in microorganisms. While many yeasts can uptake siderophores produced by other organisms, they are typically unable to synthesize siderophores themselves. In contrast, Wickerhamiella/Starmerella (W/S) clade yeasts gained the capacity to make the siderophore enterobactin following the remarkable horizontal acquisition of a bacterial operon enabling enterobactin synthesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFmSystems
March 2024
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
Members of the " Accumulibacter" genus are widely studied as key polyphosphate-accumulating organisms (PAOs) in biological nutrient removal (BNR) facilities performing enhanced biological phosphorus removal (EBPR). This diverse lineage includes 18 ". Accumulibacter" species, which have been proposed based on the phylogenetic divergence of the polyphosphate kinase 1 () gene and genome-scale comparisons of metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
March 2024
Department of Biological Sciences, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37235.
The Saccharomycotina yeasts ("yeasts" hereafter) are a fungal clade of scientific, economic, and medical significance. Yeasts are highly ecologically diverse, found across a broad range of environments in every biome and continent on earth; however, little is known about what rules govern the macroecology of yeast species and their range limits in the wild. Here, we trained machine learning models on 12,816 terrestrial occurrence records and 96 environmental variables to infer global distribution maps at ~1 km resolution for 186 yeast species (~15% of described species from 75% of orders) and to test environmental drivers of yeast biogeography and macroecology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethods Mol Biol
February 2024
MSU-DOE Plant Research Lab, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA.
Proteotoxic stress of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is a potentially lethal condition that ensues when the biosynthetic capacity of the ER is overwhelmed. A sophisticated and largely conserved signaling, known as the unfolded protein response (UPR), is designed to monitor and alleviate ER stress. In plants, the emerging picture of gene regulation by the UPR now appears to be more complex than ever before, requiring multi-omics-enabled network-level approaches to be untangled.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWater Res
April 2024
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Earth Sciences, University of Notre Dame, 156 Fitzpatrick Hall, Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA. Electronic address:
Temperature is known to have an important effect on the morphology and removal fluxes of conventional, co-diffusional biofilms. However, much less is known about the effects of temperature on membrane-aerated biofilm reactors (MABRs). Experiments and modeling were used to determine the effects of temperature on the removal fluxes, biofilm thickness and morphology, and biofilm microbial community structure of nitrifying MABRs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Bot
May 2024
MSU-DOE Plant Research Laboratory, Michigan State University, 612 Wilson Rd, East Lansing, MI 48824, USA.
The net CO2 assimilation (A) response to intercellular CO2 concentration (Ci) is a fundamental measurement in photosynthesis and plant physiology research. The conventional A/Ci protocols rely on steady-state measurements and take 15-40 min per measurement, limiting data resolution or biological replication. Additionally, there are several CO2 protocols employed across the literature, without clear consensus as to the optimal protocol or systematic biases in their estimations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFiScience
February 2024
UCIBIO, Department of Life Sciences, Nova School of Science and Technology, Caparica 2829-516, Portugal.
When grows on mixtures of glucose and galactose, galactose utilization is repressed by glucose, and induction of the gene network only occurs when glucose is exhausted. Contrary to reference alleles, alternative alleles support faster growth on galactose, thus enabling distinct galactose utilization strategies maintained by balancing selection. Here, we report on new wild populations of harboring alternative versions and, for the first time, of alternative alleles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiotechnol Biofuels Bioprod
February 2024
DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA.
Background: Cost-effective production of biofuels from lignocellulose requires the fermentation of D-xylose. Many yeast species within and closely related to the genera Spathaspora and Scheffersomyces (both of the order Serinales) natively assimilate and ferment xylose. Other species consume xylose inefficiently, leading to extracellular accumulation of xylitol.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell Rep
February 2024
State Key Laboratory of Genetic Engineering, Collaborative Innovation Center for Genetics and Development, Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Institute of Plant Biology, School of Life Sciences, Fudan University, Shanghai 200438, P.R. China. Electronic address:
Warm ambient conditions induce thermomorphogenesis and affect plant growth and development. However, the chromatin regulatory mechanisms involved in thermomorphogenesis remain largely obscure. In this study, we show that the histone methylation readers MORF-related gene 1 and 2 (MRG1/2) are required to promote hypocotyl elongation in response to warm ambient conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Plants
February 2024
State Key Laboratory of Tree Genetics and Breeding, Chinese Academy of Forestry, Beijing, China.
Nat Commun
January 2024
Renewable Resources and Enabling Sciences Center, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO, 80401, USA.
Efforts to produce aromatic monomers through catalytic lignin depolymerization have historically focused on aryl-ether bond cleavage. A large fraction of aromatic monomers in lignin, however, are linked by various carbon-carbon (C-C) bonds that are more challenging to cleave and limit the yields of aromatic monomers from lignin depolymerization. Here, we report a catalytic autoxidation method to cleave C-C bonds in lignin-derived dimers and oligomers from pine and poplar.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiotechnol Biofuels Bioprod
January 2024
DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, 53726, USA.
Background: Recent engineering efforts have targeted the ethanologenic bacterium Zymomonas mobilis for isobutanol production. However, significant hurdles remain due this organism's vulnerability to isobutanol toxicity, adversely affecting its growth and productivity. The limited understanding of the physiological impacts of isobutanol on Z.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFmSystems
February 2024
Department of Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
Disturbance events can impact ecological community dynamics. Understanding how communities respond to disturbances and how those responses can vary is a challenge in microbial ecology. In this study, we grew a previously enriched specialized microbial community on either cellulose or glucose as a sole carbon source and subjected them to one of five different disturbance regimes of varying frequencies ranging from low to high.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGreen Chem
July 2023
Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA.
A biomass-derived difuran compound, denoted as HAH (HMF-Acetone-HMF), synthesized by aldol-condensation of 5-hydroxyfurfural (HMF) and acetone, can be partially hydrogenated to provide an electron-rich difuran compound (PHAH) for Diels-Alder reactions with maleimide derivatives. The nitrogen (N) site in the maleimide can be substituted by imidation with amine-containing compounds to control the hydrophobicity of the maleimide moiety in adducts of furans and maleimide by Diels-Alder reaction, denoted as norcantharimides (Diels-Alder adducts). The structural effects on the toxicity of various biomass-derived small molecules synthesized in this manner to regulate biological processes, defined as low molecular weight (≤ 1000 g/mol) organic compounds, were investigated against diverse microbial and mammalian cell types.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFEMS Yeast Res
January 2024
Department of Biological Sciences, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37235, United States.
The ∼1 200 known species in subphylum Saccharomycotina are a highly diverse clade of unicellular fungi. During its lifecycle, a typical yeast exhibits multiple cell types with various morphologies; these morphologies vary across Saccharomycotina species. Here, we synthesize the evolutionary dimensions of variation in cellular morphology of yeasts across the subphylum, focusing on variation in cell shape, cell size, type of budding, and filament production.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFmBio
February 2024
Pharmaceutical Sciences Division, School of Pharmacy, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
The emergence of multidrug-resistant Gram-negative bacteria underscores the need to define genetic vulnerabilities that can be therapeutically exploited. The Gram-negative pathogen, , is considered an urgent threat due to its propensity to evade antibiotic treatments. Essential cellular processes are the target of existing antibiotics and a likely source of new vulnerabilities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppl Environ Microbiol
January 2024
Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
The platform chemical muconic acid (MA) provides facile access to a number of monomers used in the synthesis of commercial plastics. It is also a metabolic intermediate in the β-ketoadipic acid pathway of many bacteria and, therefore, a current target for microbial production from abundant renewable resources via metabolic engineering. This study investigates DSM12444 as a chassis for the production of MA from biomass aromatics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant J
March 2024
Plant Stress and Germplasm Development Unit, Crop Systems Research Laboratory, USDA-ARS, 3810, 4th Street, Lubbock, Texas, 79424, USA.
Mutant populations are crucial for functional genomics and discovering novel traits for crop breeding. Sorghum, a drought and heat-tolerant C4 species, requires a vast, large-scale, annotated, and sequenced mutant resource to enhance crop improvement through functional genomics research. Here, we report a sorghum large-scale sequenced mutant population with 9.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElife
December 2023
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, United States.
Identifying virulence-critical genes from pathogens is often limited by functional redundancy. To rapidly interrogate the contributions of combinations of genes to a biological outcome, we have developed a ltiplex, andomized RISPR nterference equencing (MuRCiS) approach. At its center is a new method for the randomized self-assembly of CRISPR arrays from synthetic oligonucleotide pairs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Microbiol
November 2023
Laboratory of Genetics, DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center, Wisconsin Energy Institute, Center for Genomic Science Innovation, J. F. Crow Institute for the Study of Evolution, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States.
Introduction: Eukaryotic life depends on the functional elements encoded by both the nuclear genome and organellar genomes, such as those contained within the mitochondria. The content, size, and structure of the mitochondrial genome varies across organisms with potentially large implications for phenotypic variance and resulting evolutionary trajectories. Among yeasts in the subphylum Saccharomycotina, extensive differences have been observed in various species relative to the model yeast , but mitochondrial genome sampling across many groups has been scarce, even as hundreds of nuclear genomes have become available.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
February 2024
College of Biological & Pharmaceutical Sciences, China Three Gorges University, Yichang 443002, China; Hubei Engineering Research Center for Biological Jiaosu, China Three Gorges University, Yichang 443002, China; Key Laboratory of Functional Yeast, China National Light Industry, China Three Gorges University, Yichang 443002, China. Electronic address:
J Agric Food Chem
December 2023
Key Laboratory of Agricultural Microbiomics and Precision Application (MARA), Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Microbial Culture Collection and Application, Key Laboratory of Agricultural Microbiome (MARA), State Key Laboratory of Applied Microbiology Southern China, Institute of Microbiology, Guangdong Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou 510070, People's Republic of China.
There are several methods to isolate near-native lignins, including milled-wood lignin, enzymatic lignin, cellulolytic enzyme lignin, and enzymatic mild-acidolysis lignin. Which one is the most representative of the native lignin? Herein, near-native lignins were isolated from different plant groups and structurally analyzed to determine how well these lignins represented their native lignin counterparts. Analytical methods were applied to understand the molecular weight, monomer composition, and distribution of interunit linkages in the structure of the lignins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
November 2023
DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center, Wisconsin Energy Institute, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53726, USA.
Siderophores are crucial for iron-scavenging in microorganisms. While many yeasts can uptake siderophores produced by other organisms, they are typically unable to synthesize siderophores themselves. In contrast, / (W/S) clade yeasts gained the capacity to make the siderophore enterobactin following the remarkable horizontal acquisition of a bacterial operon enabling enterobactin synthesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF