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Glucose-mediated repression of plant biomass utilization in the white-rot fungus Dichomitus squalens.

Author(s): Daly P, Peng M, Di Falco M, Lipzen A, Wang M, Ng V, Grigoriev IV, Tsang A, Mäkelä MR, de Vries RP

Appl Environ Microbiol. 2019 Oct 04;: Authors: Daly P, Peng M, Di Falco M, Lipzen A, Wang M, Ng V, Grigoriev IV, Tsang A, Mäkelä MR, de Vries RP

Article GUID: 31585998

Four Aromatic Intradiol Ring Cleavage Dioxygenases from Aspergillus niger.

Author(s): Semana P, Powlowski J

Ring cleavage dioxygenases catalyze the critical ring-opening step in the catabolism of aromatic compounds. The archetypal filamentous fungus Aspergillus niger previously has been reported to be able to utilize a range of monocyclic aromatic compounds as so...

Article GUID: 31540981

Using the endogenous CRISPR-Cas system of Heliobacterium modesticaldum to delete the photochemical reaction center core subunit gene.

Author(s): Baker PL, Orf GS, Kevershan K, Pyne ME, Bicer T, Redding KE

Appl Environ Microbiol. 2019 Sep 20;: Authors: Baker PL, Orf GS, Kevershan K, Pyne ME, Bicer T, Redding KE

Article GUID: 31540988

An Engineered Aro1 Protein Degradation Approach for Increased cis,cis-Muconic Acid Biosynthesis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Author(s): Pyne ME, Narcross L, Melgar M, Kevvai K, Mookerjee S, Leite GB, Martin VJJ

Appl Environ Microbiol. 2018 Sep 01;84(17): Authors: Pyne ME, Narcross L, Melgar M, Kevvai K, Mookerjee S, Leite GB, Martin VJJ

Article GUID: 29934332


Title:Glucose-mediated repression of plant biomass utilization in the white-rot fungus Dichomitus squalens.
Authors:Daly PPeng MDi Falco MLipzen AWang MNg VGrigoriev IVTsang AMäkelä MRde Vries RP
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31585998?dopt=Abstract
DOI:10.1128/AEM.01828-19
Category:Appl Environ Microbiol
PMID:31585998
Dept Affiliation: GENOMICS
1 Fungal Physiology, Westerdijk Fungal Biodiversity Institute & Fungal Molecular Physiology, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
2 Center for Structural and Functional Genomics, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
3 U.S. Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute, Walnut Creek, California, USA.
4 Department of Microbiology, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
5 Fungal Physiology, Westerdijk Fungal Biodiversity Institute & Fungal Molecular Physiology, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands r.devries@wi.knaw.nl.

Description:

Glucose-mediated repression of plant biomass utilization in the white-rot fungus Dichomitus squalens.

Appl Environ Microbiol. 2019 Oct 04;:

Authors: Daly P, Peng M, Di Falco M, Lipzen A, Wang M, Ng V, Grigoriev IV, Tsang A, Mäkelä MR, de Vries RP

Abstract

The extent of carbon catabolite repression (CCR) at a global level is unknown in wood-rotting fungi, which are critical to the carbon cycle and are a source of biotechnological enzymes. CCR occurs in the presence of sufficient concentrations of easily metabolizable carbon sources (e.g. glucose), down-regulating the expression of genes encoding enzymes involved in the breakdown of complex carbon sources. We investigated this phenomenon in the white-rot fungus Dichomitus squalens using transcriptomics and exo-proteomics. In D. squalens cultures, approximately 7% of genes were repressed in the presence of glucose compared to Avicel or xylan alone. The glucose-repressed genes included the essential components for utilization of plant biomass - Carbohydrate Active enZyme (CAZy) and carbon catabolic genes. The majority of polysaccharide degrading CAZy genes were repressed and included activities towards all major carbohydrate polymers present in plant cell walls, while also repression of ligninolytic genes occurred. The transcriptome-level repression of the CAZy genes observed on the Avicel cultures was strongly supported by exo-proteomics. Protease encoding genes were generally not glucose-repressed indicating their likely dominant role in scavenging for nitrogen rather than carbon. The extent of CCR is surprising given that D. squalens rarely experiences high free sugar concentrations in its woody environment and indicates that biotechnological use of D. squalens for modification of plant biomass would benefit from de-repressed or constitutively CAZymes-expressing strains.Importance White-rot fungi are critical to the carbon cycle because they can mineralise all wood components using enzymes that also have biotechnological potential. The occurrence of carbon catabolite repression (CCR) in white-rot fungi is poorly understood. Previously, CCR in wood-rotting fungi has only been demonstrated for a small number of genes. We demonstrated widespread glucose-mediated CCR of plant biomass utilisation in the white-rot fungus D. squalens This indicates that the CCR mechanism has been largely retained even though wood-rotting fungi rarely experience commonly considered CCR conditions in their woody environment. The general lack of repression of genes encoding proteases along with the reduction in secreted CAZymes during CCR suggested that the retention of CCR may be connected with the need to conserve nitrogen use while growing on nitrogen-scarce wood. The widespread repression indicates that de-repressed strains could be beneficial for enzyme production.

PMID: 31585998 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]