Searched for: +
(1 - 4 of 4)
document
Jansen, Mickel L.A. (author), Bracher, J.M. (author), Papapetridis, I. (author), Verhoeven, M.D. (author), de Bruijn, J.A. (author), de Waal, P. (author), van Maris, A.J.A. (author), Klaassen, P (author), Pronk, J.T. (author)
The recent start-up of several full-scale ‘second generation’ ethanol plants marks a major milestone in the development of Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains for fermentation of lignocellulosic hydrolysates of agricultural residues and energy crops. After a discussion of the challenges that these novel industrial contexts impose on yeast strains,...
journal article 2017
document
Bracher, J.M. (author), Verhoeven, M.D. (author), Wisselink, H. Wouter (author), Crimi, B. (author), Nijland, Jeroen G. (author), Driessen, Arnold J.M. (author), Klaassen, Paul (author), van Maris, A.J.A. (author), Daran, J.G. (author), Pronk, J.T. (author)
Background: l-Arabinose occurs at economically relevant levels in lignocellulosic hydrolysates. Its low-affinity uptake via the Saccharomyces cerevisiae Gal2 galactose transporter is inhibited by d-glucose. Especially at low concentrations of l-arabinose, uptake is an important rate-controlling step in the complete conversion of these...
journal article 2018
document
Bracher, J.M. (author), de Hulster, A.F. (author), Koster, C.C. (author), van den Broek, M.A. (author), Daran, J.G. (author), van Maris, A.J.A. (author), Pronk, J.T. (author)
Biotin prototrophy is a rare, incompletely understood, and industrially relevant characteristic of Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains. The genome of the haploid laboratory strain CEN.PK113-7D contains a full complement of biotin biosynthesis genes, but its growth in biotin-free synthetic medium is extremely slow (specific growth rate [μ] ≈ 0.01...
journal article 2017
document
Bracher, J.M. (author), Martinez-Rodriguez, Oscar A. (author), Dekker, W.J.C. (author), Verhoeven, M.D. (author), van Maris, A.J.A. (author), Pronk, J.T. (author)
Expression of a heterologous xylose isomerase, deletion of the GRE3 aldose-reductase gene and overexpression of genes encoding xylulokinase (XKS1) and non-oxidative pentose-phosphate-pathway enzymes (RKI1, RPE1, TAL1, TKL1) enables aerobic growth of Saccharomyces cerevisiae on d-xylose. However, literature reports differ on whether anaerobic...
journal article 2018
Searched for: +
(1 - 4 of 4)