A novel transcriptional regulator, ClbR, controls the cellobiose- and cellulose-responsive induction of cellulase and xylanase genes regulated by two distinct signaling pathways in Aspergillus aculeatus
DNA, Bacterial
0301 basic medicine
Cellobiose
Molecular Sequence Data
Sequence Analysis, DNA
Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic
Culture Media
Mutagenesis, Insertional
03 medical and health sciences
Aspergillus
Transformation, Genetic
Xylosidases
Cellulase
Gene Expression Regulation, Fungal
Cluster Analysis
Amino Acid Sequence
Cellulose
DNA, Fungal
Sequence Alignment
Phylogeny
Signal Transduction
Transcription Factors
DOI:
10.1007/s00253-012-4305-8
Publication Date:
2012-07-31T08:04:30Z
AUTHORS (4)
ABSTRACT
The cellobiose- and cellulose-responsive induction of the FIII-avicelase (cbhI), FII-carboxymethyl cellulase (cmc2), and FIa-xylanase (xynIa) genes is not regulated by XlnR in Aspergillus aculeatus, which suggests that this fungus possesses an unknown cellulase gene-activating pathway. To identify the regulatory factors involved in this pathway, we constructed a random insertional mutagenesis library using Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation of A. aculeatus NCP2, which harbors a transcriptional fusion between the cbhI promoter (P ( CBHI )) and the orotidine 5'-phosphate decarboxylase gene (pyrG). Of the ~6,000 transformants screened, one 5-FOA-resistant transformant, S4-22, grew poorly on cellulose-containing media and exhibited reduced cellobiose-induced expression of cbhI. Southern blot analysis and nucleotide sequencing of the flanking regions of the T-DNA inserted in S4-22 indicated that the T-DNA was inserted within the coding region of a previously unreported Zn(II)(2)Cys(6)-transcription factor, which we designated the cellobiose response regulator (ClbR). The disruption of the clbR gene resulted in a significant reduction in the expression of cbhI and cmc2 in response to cellobiose and cellulose. Interestingly, the cellulose-responsive induction of FI-carboxymethyl cellulase (cmc1) and FIb-xylanase (xynIb) genes that are under the control of XlnR, was also reduced in the clbR-deficient mutant, but there was no effect on the induction of these genes in response to D-xylose or L-arabinose. These data demonstrate that ClbR participates in both XlnR-dependent and XlnR-independent cellobiose- and cellulose-responsive induction signaling pathways in A. aculeatus.
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CITATIONS (47)
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