Genetic modifications of critical regulators provide new insights into regulation modes of raw-starch-digesting enzyme expression in Penicillium.

Biotechnol Biofuels Bioprod

State Key Laboratory of Developmental Biology of Freshwater Fish, Hunan Provincial Key Laboratory for Microbial Molecular Biology, College of Life Science, Hunan Normal University, Changsha, China.

Published: May 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Starch is a valuable renewable carbohydrate used in industrial applications, but traditional methods for converting starch to products are not cost-efficient due to high energy demands.
  • Researchers discovered that the cellulolytic fungus Penicillium oxalicum 114-2 produces raw-starch-digesting enzymes (RSDEs) and identified four key regulators (AmyR, CreA, PGA3, and HepA) that control RSDE expression.
  • The study suggests a complex regulatory network among these four regulators, providing insights that could help improve RSDE production in the future.

Article Abstract

Background: Starch is a very abundant and renewable carbohydrate and an important feedstock for industrial applications. However, most starch-based products are not cost-efficient due to the high energy input needed in traditional enzymatic starch conversion processes. Raw-starch-digesting enzymes (RSDEs) from filamentous fungi have great commercial value in starch processing. However, the regulatory mechanisms associated with their production in filamentous fungi remain unknown.

Results: In this study, we reported the novel finding that cellulolytic fungus Penicillium oxalicum 114-2 has broad RSDE activity. Four regulators, including the amylase transcription activator AmyR, the catabolite repression repressor CreA, the group III G protein α subunit PGA3, and the nonhistone chromosomal protein HepA, have been found to play a crucial regulatory role in RSDE expression. Enzymatic assays revealed that RSDE production significantly increased after the overexpression of AmyR and HepA, the deletion of CreA and the dominant activation of PGA3. RT-qPCR analysis demonstrated that there is a mutual regulation mode between the four regulators, and then formed a cascade regulation mechanism that is involved in RSDE expression. Comparative transcriptomic analysis between the wild-type strain and genetically engineered strains revealed differentially expressed genes that may mediate the RSDE expression.

Conclusions: The four different types of regulators were systematically investigated and found to form a regulatory network controlling RSDE gene expression. Our results provide a new insight into the regulatory mechanism of fungal amylolytic enzyme expression and offer a theoretical basis to rationally improve the RSDE yield in the future.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9158223PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13068-022-02162-6DOI Listing

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