The IPB has once again been recognized for its exemplary actions in terms of equal opportunity-oriented personnel and organizational policies and has received the TOTAL E-QUALITY certification for the…
The Plant Science Student Conference (PSSC) has been organised by students from the two Leibniz institutes, IPK and IPB, every year for the last 20 years. In this interview, Christina Wäsch (IPK) and…
Otify, A. M.; Serag, A.; Porzel, A.; Wessjohann, L. A.; Farag, M. A.;NMR metabolome-based classification of Cymbopogon Species: a prospect for phyto-equivalency of its different accessions using chemometric toolsFood Analytical Methods152095-2106(2022)DOI: 10.1007/s12161-022-02257-8
Cymbopogon species are widely distributed worldwide and known for their high essential oil content with potential commercial and medicinal benefits justifying for their inclusion in food and cosmetics. Most species received scant characterization regarding their full complement of bioactive constituents necessary to explain their medicinal activities. In this study, the metabolite profiles of 5 Cymbopogon species, C. citratus, C. flexuosus, C. procerus, C. martini, and C. nardus, were characterized via NMR-based metabolomics. The results of 13 shoot accessions revealed the identification and quantification of 23 primary and secondary metabolites belonging to various compound classes. Multivariate analyses were used for species classification, though found not successful in discrimination based on geographical origin. Nevertheless, C. citratus was found particularly enriched in neral, geranial, (E)-aconitic acid, isoorientin, and caffeic acid as the major characterizing metabolites compared to other species, while an unknown apigenin derivative appeared to discriminate C. martini. The high essential oil and phenolic content in C. citratus emphasizes its strong antioxidant activity, whereas (E)-aconitic acid accounts for its traditional use as insecticide. This study affords the first insight into metabolite compositional differences among Cymbopogon species. Moreover, antimicrobial, insecticidal, antidiabetic, and antioxidant compounds were identified that can be utilized as biomarkers for species authentication.
Publications
Körfer, G.; Besirlioglu, V.; Davari, M. D.; Martinez, R.; Vojcic, L.; Schwaneberg, U.;Combinatorial InVitroFlow‐assisted Mutagenesis (CombIMut) yields a 41‐fold improved CelA2 cellulaseBiotechnology and Bioengineering1192076–2087(2022)DOI: 10.1002/bit.28110
The combination of diversity generation methods and ultrahigh-throughput screening (uHTS) technologies is key to efficiently explore nature\'s sequence space and elucidate structure-function relationships of enzymes. Beneficial substitutions often cluster in a few regions and simultaneous amino acid substitutions at multiple positions (e.g., by OmniChange) will likely lead to further improved enzyme variants. An extensive screening effort is required to identify such variants, as the simultaneous randomization of four codons can easily yield over 105 potential enzyme variants. The combination of flow cytometer-based uHTS with cell-free compartmentalization technology using (w/o/w) double emulsions (InVitroFlow), provides analysis capabilities of up to 107 events per hour, thus enabling efficient screening. InVitroFlow is an elegant solution since diversity loss through a transformation of host cells is omitted and emulsion compartments provide a genotype-phenotype linkage through a fluorescence readout. In this work, a multi-site saturation mutagenesis (mSSM) and an OmniChange library with four simultaneously saturated positions in the active site of CelA2 cellulase were screened using InVitroFlow. Screening of over 36 million events, yielded a significantly improved cellulase variant CelA2-M3 (H288F/H524Q) with an 8-fold increase in specific activity compared to the parent CelA2-H288F (83.9 U/mg) and a 41-fold increased specific activity (674.5 U/mg) compared to wildtype CelA2 (16.6 U/mg) for the substrate 4-MUC (4-methylumbelliferyl-β D-cellobioside).