9 results match your criteria: "Max Planck Institute of Terrestrial Microbiology[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • * Researchers are engineering microbes like Escherichia coli to utilize formic acid, a reduced one-carbon compound, as their sole source of carbon and energy through the synthetic Serine Threonine Cycle.
  • * The study demonstrates that combining tailored strain selection and adaptive laboratory evolution can lead to successful growth using formic acid, highlighting a method for developing complex carbon-assimilation pathways in organisms.
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Dissecting the intricate networks of covalent and non-covalent interactions that stabilize complex protein structures is notoriously difficult and requires subtle atomic-level exchanges to precisely affect local chemical functionality. The function of the Orange Carotenoid Protein (OCP), a light-driven photoswitch involved in cyanobacterial photoprotection, depends strongly on two H-bonds between the 4-ketolated xanthophyll cofactor and two highly conserved residues in the C-terminal domain (Trp288 and Tyr201). By orthogonal translation, we replaced Trp288 in OCP with 3-benzothienyl--alanine (BTA), thereby exchanging the imino nitrogen for a sulphur atom.

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The nicotinamide cofactor specificity of enzymes plays a key role in regulating metabolic processes and attaining cellular homeostasis. Multiple studies have used enzyme engineering tools or a directed evolution approach to switch the cofactor preference of specific oxidoreductases. However, whole-cell adaptation toward the emergence of novel cofactor regeneration routes has not been previously explored.

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The efficient regeneration of cofactors is vital for the establishment of biocatalytic processes. Formate is an ideal electron donor for cofactor regeneration due to its general availability, low reduction potential, and benign byproduct (CO). However, formate dehydrogenases (FDHs) are usually specific to NAD, such that NADPH regeneration with formate is challenging.

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Loss-of-function alleles of () confer broad-spectrum resistance to foliar infections by powdery mildew pathogens. Like pathogens, microbes that establish mutually beneficial relationships with their plant hosts, trigger the induction of some defense responses. Initially, barley colonization by the root endophyte (syn.

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Neuropeptides are processed from larger preproproteins by a dedicated set of enzymes. The molecular and biochemical mechanisms underlying preproprotein processing and the functional importance of processing enzymes are well-characterised in mammals, but little studied outside this group. In contrast to mammals, Drosophila melanogaster lacks a gene for carboxypeptidase E (CPE), a key enzyme for mammalian peptide processing.

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Conversion of biological feedstocks into value-added chemicals is mostly performed via microbial fermentation. An emerging alternative approach is the use of cell-free systems, consisting of purified enzymes and cofactors. Unfortunately, the in vivo and in vitro research communities rarely interact, which leads to oversimplifications and exaggerations that do not permit fair comparison of the two strategies and impede synergistic interactions.

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In response to a variety of environmental cues, prokaryotes can switch between a motile and a sessile, biofilm-forming mode of growth. The regulatory mechanisms and signaling pathways underlying this switch are largely unknown in archaea but involve small winged helix-turn-helix DNA-binding proteins of the archaea-specific Lrs14 family. Here, we study the Lrs14 member AbfR1 of Sulfolobus acidocaldarius.

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Article Synopsis
  • Forests, particularly feather moss stands, have been found to emit methane (CH) instead of always acting as carbon sinks, highlighting a gap in research on their microbial communities and methane cycling.
  • Methanogenic rates in these moss stands were influenced by temperature and water content, with emissions showing microbial origins, confirmed by the presence of specific genes associated with methane production.
  • The study revealed that these moss communities primarily produce methane through hydrogenotrophic pathways and can lead to net methane emissions, despite the rates being relatively low.
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