d-Xylose is the most abundant hemicellulosic monomer on earth, but wild-type has very limited d-xylose uptake capacity. We conducted bioprospecting for new sugar transporters from the d-xylose-consuming filamentous fungus and identified three candidates belonging to the major facilitator superfamily. When they were expressed in yeast and assayed for d-xylose uptake, one of them, Xltr1p, had d-xylose transport activity that was more efficient than that of Gal2p, an endogenous yeast transporter. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to examine the functional contributions of 13 amino acid residues for the uptake of d-xylose, and these experiments identified particular amino acids that function distinctly in d-xylose vs glucose transport (e.g., F300). Excitingly, the yeast strain expressing the N326F variant was able to carry a "high efficiency" transport for d-xylose but was nearly unable to utilize glucose; in contrast, the strain with the F300A variant grew on glucose but lost d-xylose transport activity.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jafc.9b07113 | DOI Listing |
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