Project description:The marine obligate hydrocarbonoclastic bacterium Thalassolituus oleivorans MIL-1 metabolises a broad range of aliphatic hydrocarbons almost exclusively as carbon and energy sources. We used LC-MS/MS shotgun proteomics to identify proteins involved in aerobic alkane degradation during growth on medium- (n-C14) or long-chain (n-C28) alkanes.
Project description:To identify transcriptional adaptations associated with increased alkane production in Nostoc punctiforme, we performed comparative transcriptomic analysis of an alkane overproduction strain. RNA-seq data identified a large number of highly up-regulated genes in the overproduction strain potentially involved in rRNA processing, mycosporine-glycine production, and synthesis of non-ribosomal peptides including nostopeptolide A. Other up-regulated genes encoding helical carotenoid proteins, stress-induced proteins, and those for microviridin synthesis were also up-regulated. The presence of several up-regulated genes or operons on multi-copy plasmids resulted in reduced alkane production, indicating possible targets for mutagenesis that might limit lipid droplet and alkane production.
Project description:The thermophilic filamentous fungi Myceliophthora thermophila (Sporotrichum thermophile) and Thielavia terrestris are proficient decomposers of cellulose, suggesting that they will be a rich source of thermostable industrial enzymes for lignocellulose degradation. To identify the genes and proteins involved in this process, we explored the transcriptomes of M. thermophila and T. terrestris growing at 45 ºC on either glucose, alfalfa, or barley straw by short-read sequencing of extracted mRNA. To better understand the adaptations that allow these fungi to grow at elevated temperatures, we compared their transcriptomes when growing at 34C to their transcritomes at 45C, and also to the transcriptome of the related fungus Chaetomium globosum, which does not grow at 45C.