improved strain
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2021 ◽  
Vol 902 ◽  
pp. 35-41
Author(s):  
Adam Otabil ◽  
Mohamed El-Hofy ◽  
Mohamed Abdel Hady Gepreel

In this paper, a new metastable Titanium alloy in the Ti-Nb-Ta-Mo system has been successfully produced using both the d-electron and Moeq concept. The influence of cold rolling on the microstructure and hardness was investigated. The alloy was fabricated by arc melting, cold rolled up to 90% reduction in thickness and characterized using X-ray diffraction (XRD), optical microscope and Vickers microhardness. The XRD peaks depicted both β and α′′ phases in all the cold rolled specimens. The hardness of the alloy increased with increasing cold rolling reduction thickness. An excellent plasticity (≥ 65%) and compressive strength up to (2.9 GPa) was achieved with low Young’s modulus (31 GPa) and no failure or crack on the alloy. Also, the alloy demonstrated a high compressive true strength coefficient (k ≈1426 MPa) along with improved strain hardening index (n ≈ 0.41). Based on the XRD, optical microscope and microhardness indentation micrographs, the deformation mechanism of Ti-13Nb-1.5Ta-3Mo was found to be a combination of stress induced transformation, mechanical twinning and slipping.


2021 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 035015
Author(s):  
A Sorrentino ◽  
D Castagnetti ◽  
L Mizzi ◽  
A Spaggiari

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Leonie Baumann

Octanoic acid (C8 FA) is a medium-chain fatty acid which, in nature, mainly occurs in palm kernel oil and coconuts. It is used in various products including cleaning agents, cosmetics, pesticides and herbicides as well as in foods for preservation or flavoring. Furthermore, it is investigated for medical treatments, for instance, of high cholesterol levels. The cultivation of palm oil plants has surged in the last years to satisfy an increasing market demand. However, concerns about extensive monocultures, which often come along with deforestation of rainforest, have driven the search for more environmentally friendly production methods. A biotechnological production with microbial organisms presents an attractive, more sustainable alternative. Traditionally, the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been utilized by mankind in bread, wine, and beer making. Based on comprehensive knowledge about its metabolism and genetics, it can nowadays be metabolically engineered to produce a plethora of compounds of industrial interest. To produce octanoic acid, the cytosolic fatty acid synthase (FAS) of S. cerevisiae was utilized and engineered. Naturally, the yeast produces mostly long-chain fatty acids with chain lengths of C16 and C18, and only trace amounts of medium-chain fatty acids, i.e. C8-C14 fatty acids. To generate an S. cerevisiae strain that produces primarily octanoic acid, a mutated version of the FAS was generated (Gajewski et al., 2017) and the resulting S. cerevisiae FASR1834K strain was utilized in this work as a starting strain. The goal of this thesis was to develop and implement strategies to improve the production level of this strain. The current mode of quantification of octanoic acid includes labor-intensive, low-throughput sample preparation and measurement – a main obstacle in generating and screening for improved strain variants. To this end, a main objective of this thesis was the development of a biosensor. The biosensor was based on the pPDR12 promotor, which is regulated by the transcription factor War1. Coupling pPDR12 to GFP as the reporter gene on a multicopy plasmid allowed in vivo detection via fluorescence intensity. The developed biosensor enabled rapid and facile quantification of the short- and medium-chain fatty acids C6, C7 and C8 fatty acids (Baumann et al., 2018). This is the first biosensor that can quantify externally supplied octanoic acid as well as octanoic acid present in the culture supernatant of producer strains with a high linear and dynamic range. Its reliability was validated by correlation of the biosensor signal to the octanoic acid concentrations extracted from culture supernatants as determined by gas chromatography. The biosensor’s ability to detect octanoic acid in a linear range of 0.01-0.75 mM (≈1-110 mg/L), which is within the production range of the starting strain, and a response of up to 10-fold increase in fluorescence after activation was demonstrated. A high-throughput FACS (fluorescence-activated cell sorting) screening of an octanoic acid producer strain library was performed with the biosensor to detect improved strain variants (Baumann et al., 2020a). For this purpose, the biosensor was genomically integrated into an octanoic acid producer strain, resulting in drastically reduced single cell noise. The additional knockout of FAA2 successfully prevented medium-chain fatty acid degradation. A high-throughput screening protocol was designed to include iterative enrichment rounds which decreased false positives. The functionality of the biosensor on single cell level was validated by adding octanoic acid in the range of 0-80 mg/L and subsequent flow cytometric analysis. The biosensor-assisted FACS screening of a plasmid overexpression library of the yeast genome led to the detection of two genetic targets, FSH2 and KCS1, that in combined overexpression enhanced octanoic acid titers by 55 % compared to the parental strain. This was the first report of an effect of FSH2 and KCS1 on fatty acid titers. The presented method can also be utilized to screen other genetic libraries and is a means to facilitate future engineering efforts. In growth tests, the previously reported toxicity of octanoic acid on S. cerevisiae was confirmed. Different strategies were harnessed to create more robust strains. An adaptive laboratory evolution (ALE) experiment was conducted and several rational targets including transporter- (PDR12, TPO1) and transcription factor-encoding genes (PDR1, PDR3, WAR1) as well as the mutated acetyl-CoA carboxylase encoding gene ACC1S1157A were overexpressed or knocked out in producer or non-producer strains, respectively. Despite contrary previous reports for other strain backgrounds, an enhanced robustness was not observable. Suspecting that the utilized laboratory strains have a natively low tolerance level, four industrial S. cerevisiae strains were evaluated in growth assays with octanoic acid and inherently more robust strains were detected, which are suitable future production hosts. ...


2021 ◽  
Vol 255 ◽  
pp. 12011
Author(s):  
Filippo Bastianini ◽  
Francesco Falcetelli ◽  
Paweł Bocheński ◽  
Leonardo Rossi ◽  
Raffaella Di Sante ◽  
...  

Two innovative optical fibre cable layouts designed to improve BOTDA strain measurement accuracy through improved strain transfer efficiency are presented, discussed and tested through experiments, analytical and numerical modelling. The second improved design presents good features to minimize the mismatch between measured and actual strain.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
X.-Y. Li ◽  
Y.-C. Liu ◽  
R.-S. Zhang ◽  
D.-B. Chen ◽  
M.-M. Chen ◽  
...  

Chinese oak silkworm, Antheraea pernyi Guérin-Méneville 1855 (Lepidoptera: Saturniidae), is a traditional edible insect in China and is considered the edible insect with the highest potential. Information on the mitochondrial genome (mitogenome) of the first modern improved strain of this silkworm, Qinghuang_1, is currently unavailable. Here, we determine the mitogenome of Qinghuang_1 by long PCR amplification followed by Illumina sequencing and then compare the resulting mitogenome with the five available mitogenomes of this species. The mitogenome of Qinghuang_1 is 15,573 bp in length and exhibits an identical gene organisation to known A. pernyi mitogenomes. The base A content of this mitogenome is higher than those of the other four strains but lower than that of the wild type. Sequence comparisons identified 200 single-nucleotide variants (1.28%) and 32 amino acid changes among the five inbred strains, indicating a considerable degree of nucleotide diversity in the mitogenomes of A. pernyi germplasm resources. The 3’ end of ND1 was identified as a hotspot in the A. pernyi mitogenome. Ka/Ks analysis indicated that all protein-coding genes evolved under negative selection except for ND5, which presented values larger than 1, suggesting that positive selection may act on this gene. The phylogenetic analyses confirmed the basal position of Qinghuang_1 among the inbred strains of A. pernyi. Our results indicated that the mitogenome is helpful for understanding the intraspecific phylogenetic relationships of A. pernyi and for its genetic improvement.


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