TY - JOUR
T1 - CreA-mediated repression of gene expression occurs at low monosaccharide levels during fungal plant biomass conversion in a time and substrate dependent manner
AU - Peng, Mao
AU - Khosravi, Claire
AU - Lubbers, Ronnie J.M.
AU - Kun, Roland S.
AU - Aguilar Pontes, Maria Victoria
AU - Battaglia, Evy
AU - Chen, Cindy
AU - Dalhuijsen, Sacha
AU - Daly, Paul
AU - Lipzen, Anna
AU - Ng, Vivian
AU - Yan, Juying
AU - Wang, Mei
AU - Visser, Jaap
AU - Grigoriev, Igor V.
AU - Mäkelä, Miia R.
AU - de Vries, Ronald P.
N1 - Funding Information:
The work conducted by the U.S. Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute, a DOE Office of Science User Facility, was supported by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231 . CK, EB was supported by a grant of the Applied and Engineering Sciences division of NWO , and the Technology Program of the Ministry of Economic Affairs 016.130.609 to RPdV. PD was supported by a grant of the Netherlands Scientific Organization NWO 824.15.023 to RPdV. The Academy of Finland grant no. 308284 to MRM is acknowledged.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Author(s)
PY - 2021/12
Y1 - 2021/12
N2 - Carbon catabolite repression enables fungi to utilize the most favourable carbon source in the environment, and is mediated by a key regulator, CreA, in most fungi. CreA-mediated regulation has mainly been studied at high monosaccharide concentrations, an uncommon situation in most natural biotopes. In nature, many fungi rely on plant biomass as their major carbon source by producing enzymes to degrade plant cell wall polysaccharides into metabolizable sugars. To determine the role of CreA when fungi grow in more natural conditions and in particular with respect to degradation and conversion of plant cell walls, we compared transcriptomes of a creA deletion and reference strain of the ascomycete Aspergillus niger during growth on sugar beet pulp and wheat bran. Transcriptomics, extracellular sugar concentrations and growth profiling of A. niger on a variety of carbon sources, revealed that also under conditions with low concentrations of free monosaccharides, CreA has a major effect on gene expression in a strong time and substrate composition dependent manner. In addition, we compared the CreA regulon from five fungi during their growth on crude plant biomass or cellulose. It showed that CreA commonly regulated genes related to carbon metabolism, sugar transport and plant cell wall degrading enzymes across different species. We therefore conclude that CreA has a crucial role for fungi also in adapting to low sugar concentrations as occurring in their natural biotopes, which is supported by the presence of CreA orthologs in nearly all fungi.
AB - Carbon catabolite repression enables fungi to utilize the most favourable carbon source in the environment, and is mediated by a key regulator, CreA, in most fungi. CreA-mediated regulation has mainly been studied at high monosaccharide concentrations, an uncommon situation in most natural biotopes. In nature, many fungi rely on plant biomass as their major carbon source by producing enzymes to degrade plant cell wall polysaccharides into metabolizable sugars. To determine the role of CreA when fungi grow in more natural conditions and in particular with respect to degradation and conversion of plant cell walls, we compared transcriptomes of a creA deletion and reference strain of the ascomycete Aspergillus niger during growth on sugar beet pulp and wheat bran. Transcriptomics, extracellular sugar concentrations and growth profiling of A. niger on a variety of carbon sources, revealed that also under conditions with low concentrations of free monosaccharides, CreA has a major effect on gene expression in a strong time and substrate composition dependent manner. In addition, we compared the CreA regulon from five fungi during their growth on crude plant biomass or cellulose. It showed that CreA commonly regulated genes related to carbon metabolism, sugar transport and plant cell wall degrading enzymes across different species. We therefore conclude that CreA has a crucial role for fungi also in adapting to low sugar concentrations as occurring in their natural biotopes, which is supported by the presence of CreA orthologs in nearly all fungi.
KW - Aspergillus niger
KW - Carbon catabolite repression
KW - creA
KW - Fungal plant biomass conversion
KW - Transcription factor
KW - 1184 Genetics, developmental biology, physiology
KW - 11832 Microbiology and virology
U2 - 10.1016/j.tcsw.2021.100050
DO - 10.1016/j.tcsw.2021.100050
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85102530708
VL - 7
JO - The Cell surface
JF - The Cell surface
SN - 2468-2330
M1 - 100050
ER -