| Literature DB >> 30866811 |
Eva Hitzenhammer1, Christoph Büschl2, Michael Sulyok2, Rainer Schuhmacher2, Bernhard Kluger2, Elisabeth Wischnitzki1, Monika Schmoll3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Filamentous fungi have evolved to succeed in nature by efficient growth and degradation of substrates, but also due to the production of secondary metabolites including mycotoxins. For Trichoderma reesei, as a biotechnological workhorse for homologous and heterologous protein production, secondary metabolite secretion is of particular importance for industrial application. Recent studies revealed an interconnected regulation of enzyme gene expression and carbon metabolism with secondary metabolism.Entities:
Keywords: Alamethicin; Carbon metabolism; Hypocrea jecorina; Light response; Secondary metabolism; Trichoderma reesei
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30866811 PMCID: PMC6417087 DOI: 10.1186/s12864-019-5574-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Fig. 1Gene regulation by YPR2 in T. reesei. a Schematic representation of the SOR cluster. Genomic locations are taken from the JGI Trichoderma reesei database v2.0 (https://genome.jgi.doe.gov/Trire2/Trire2.home.html). b Hierarchical clustering of gene regulation patterns in ∆ypr2 compared to wildtype in constant light (LL) and constant darkness (DD) upon growth on cellulose. c Numbers of genes regulated in ∆ypr2 in constant light or constant darkness on cellulose (≥2fold, p-value threshold 0.01). d Genes directly or indirectly regulated by YPR2 in constant light overlapping with gene regulation by YPR2 in constant darkness. The diagram shows the proportion of consistent regulation (upregulation in ∆ypr2 in light and darkness, downregulation in light and darkness) or contrasting regulation (upregulation in light and downregulation in darkness (“up”) or downregulation in light and upregulation in darkness (“down”))
Fig. 2Schematic representation of functional category analysis. a Funcat analysis of genes up- regulated in ∆ypr2 in darkness. b Funcat analysis of genes downregulated in ∆ypr2 in darkness. For funcat overview in light see Additional file 3: Figure S1
Fig. 3Comparison of gene regulation by YPR2 in darkness with targets (direct or indirect) of CRE1. Amount of genes regulated in ∆ypr2 in constant darkness compared to wildtype versus those regulated in ∆cre1 in darkness. In ∆cre1 233 genes are upregulated in constant darkness and 244 genes are downregulated in constant darkness [5]. Of the 447 genes regulated by CRE1 in darkness, 62 are consistently upregulated in both mutant strains (light green area) and 58 are consistently downregulated in both mutants. In total, of the 447 genes regulated by in ∆cre1 in darkness, 120 are consistently regulated in ∆ypr2 suggesting a double lock mechanism for these genes
Fig. 4Secondary metabolite production in ∆ypr2 upon growth on cellulose. a Results from mass spectrometric analysis revealed 6 clusters of regulation patterns. b Box plots show levels within the clusters as normalized to biomass formation. Mostly, biosynthesis level even decrease below wildtype in the dark. For smaller sets (cluster 5) elevated levels were observed in the mutant compared to wildtype. c Abundance of Alamethicine in samples lacking sor5 (TR_73623) and ypr2 (TR_102497) upon growth on minimal media with cellulose as carbon source, relative to QM6a and normalized to the biomass produced under these conditions. Errorbars indicate standard deviations of at least two biological replicates