| Literature DB >> 33727528 |
Zikang Zhou1, Hongzhi Tang2, Weiwei Wang1, Lige Zhang1, Fei Su1, Yuanting Wu1, Linquan Bai1, Sicong Li3, Yuhui Sun3, Fei Tao1, Ping Xu4.
Abstract
Endowing mesophilic microorganisms with high-temperature resistance is highly desirable for industrial microbial fermentation. Here, we report a cold-shock protein (CspL) that is an RNA chaperone protein from a lactate producing thermophile strain (Bacillus coagulans 2-6), which is able to recombinantly confer strong high-temperature resistance to other microorganisms. Transgenic cspL expression massively enhanced high-temperature growth of Escherichia coli (a 2.4-fold biomass increase at 45 °C) and eukaryote Saccharomyces cerevisiae (a 2.6-fold biomass increase at 36 °C). Importantly, we also found that CspL promotes growth rates at normal temperatures. Mechanistically, bio-layer interferometry characterized CspL's nucleotide-binding functions in vitro, while in vivo we used RNA-Seq and RIP-Seq to reveal CspL's global effects on mRNA accumulation and CspL's direct RNA binding targets, respectively. Thus, beyond establishing how a cold-shock protein chaperone provides high-temperature resistance, our study introduces a strategy that may facilitate industrial thermal fermentation.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33727528 PMCID: PMC7966797 DOI: 10.1038/s41421-021-00246-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Discov ISSN: 2056-5968 Impact factor: 10.849