Hamann Jiang (chivepound8)

On the other hand, a total of 8 metabolites of curcumin biotransformed by gut microbiota of AD mice through reduction, demethoxylation, demethylation and hydroxylation were identified by HPLC-Q-TOF/MS, and many of these metabolites have been reported to exhibit neuroprotective ability. The findings provided useful clues to understand the pharmacology of curcumin and microbiome-targeting therapies for AD.The biosynthesis of the valuable antibiotic enduracidin by Streptomyces fungicidicus TXX3120 is a complex multistep process. To identify the rate-limiting step of the entire biosynthetic process, we carried out a deep RNA sequencing towards the mycelia of TXX3120 at different fermentation stages. Comparative RNA-seq analysis indicated that the expression level of the endC gene during the enduracidin production phase was evidently lower than that of the other relevant genes to enduracidin biosynthesis. This result was further confirmed by quantitative RT-PCR, and the giant non-ribosomal peptide synthase (NRPS) encoded by endC was predicated to be the rate-limiting enzyme in enduracidin biosynthesis. To increase the expression of endC during the enduracidin production phase, a reporter-based selection system was developed by genetically replacing the initial part of the endC gene with a thiostrepton resistance gene (tsr), which will then act as a selectable marker to report the expression level of the rate-limiting gene endC, thereby facilitating the selection of enduracidin-overproducing mutants following random mutagenesis. After one round of mutagenesis, thiostrepton resistance selection, and restoration of the endC gene, three mutant strains with improved endC expression levels were obtained. Their highest enduracidin titers reached 9780.54, 9272.46, and 8849.06 U/mL, respectively representing 2.31-, 2.19-, and 2.09-fold of the initial industrial strain TXX3120. Our research provides a useful strategy for the rational breeding of industrial strains that synthesize complex natural products.Bacterially induced precipitation of minerals leading to cementation of natural geological formations has been well recorded in a variety of environments. A range of microbial pathways and geochemical processes have been found to influence the cementation processes; but detailed formation mechanisms and biogeochemical relationships are still not very clear. There has been a growing demand for the application of bacterially driven biocementation in a number of geotechnical engineering applications recently. Here, we aimed to unpin the mechanisms behind the formation of actively mineralising beachrock sediments at Lucky Bay in Western Australia to understand the natural accretionary processes and potential of indigenous bacterial communities in biocementation. We observed ferruginous, aluminosilicate and carbonate cements along with extensive extra polymeric substances, borings with possible microbial activities in certain sections of native beachrock sediments. Cement precipitation under calcium- and iron-rich microenvironments sourced from seawater and iron creek seems to be driven by both biogenic and abiogenic processes in nature. Native microbial communities with a dominance of the genera Halococcus and Marinobacter were recorded. Enrichment of native bacterial communities under seawater media conditions was conducted which lead to successful biomineralisation of calcitic and ferruginous cements under in vitro conditions although the community composition changed significantly. Nanomechanical properties of natural and laboratory synthesised cement crystals showed that engineered biocement is highly promising. The results of this study clearly demonstrate biological influence in the formation of natural cements and hint significant potential of biostimulation which can be harnessed for different engineering applications including coastal erosion.PURPOSE This study aimed to examine the correlation between right posteroinferior bile d