(2014)
Analysis of the Phlebiopsis gigantea Genome, Transcriptome and Secretome Provides Insight into Its Pioneer Colonization Strategies of Wood.
PLOS Genet 10,
e1004759.
Dr. Gerald Lackner
Synthetische Mikrobiologie · Leiter +49 3641 532-1104 gerald.lackner@leibniz-hki.deCurriculum vitae
Wissenschaftlicher Werdegang
2016 -today | Junior Group Leader |
2014 - 2016 | PostDoc (Feodor Lynen Research Fellowship) ETH Zurich (Jörn Piel) Research focus: Genomics of uncultured natural product producers, biosynthesis of ribosomally produced small molecules |
2011 - 2014 | PostDoc FSU Jena (Dirk Hoffmeister) Research focus: Polyketide and nonribosomal peptide biosynthesis in mushrooms. |
2006 - 2011 | PhD student HKI Jena (Christian Hertweck) Research focus: Genomics of natural product-producing bacterial endosymbionts of fungi. |
2001 - 2006 | Studies of Biochemistry FSU, Jena |
Publikationen
(2014)
Functional and phylogenetic divergence of fungal adenylate-forming reductases.
Appl Environ Microbiol 80,
6175-6183.
(2014)
Active invasion of bacteria into living fungal cells.
Elife ,
e03007.
(2013)
Fungal peptide synthetases – an update on functions and specificity signatures
Fungal Biology Reviews 27,
43-50.
(2013)
Assembly of melleolide antibiotics involves a polyketide synthase with cross-coupling activity.
Chem Biol 20,
1101-1106.
(2013)
Biosynthesis and mass spectrometric imaging of tolaasin, the virulence factor of brown blotch mushroom disease.
Chembiochem 14(18),
2439-2443.
(2013)
Bimodular peptide synthetase SidE produces fumarylalanine in the human pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus.
Appl Environ Microbiol 79,
6670-6676.
(2012)
Imaging mass spectrometry and genome mining reveal highly antifungal virulence factor of mushroom soft rot pathogen.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl 51(52),
13173-13177.
(2012)
Genome mining reveals the evolutionary origin and biosynthetic potential of basidiomycete polyketide synthases.
Fungal Genet Biol 49,
996-991003.
(2012)
Symbiotic cooperation in the biosynthesis of a phytotoxin.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl 51(38),
9615-9618.