Comprehensive Response of Rhodosporidium kratochvilovae to Glucose Starvation: A Transcriptomics-Based Analysis

Author:

He Meixia1ORCID,Guo Rui1,Chen Gongshui1,Xiong Chao1,Yang Xiaoxia1,Wei Yunlin1,Chen Yuan1,Qiu Jingwen1,Zhang Qi1

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Life Science and Technology, Kunming University of Science and Technology, Kunming 650500, China

Abstract

Microorganisms adopt diverse mechanisms to adapt to fluctuations of nutrients. Glucose is the preferred carbon and energy source for yeast. Yeast cells have developed many strategies to protect themselves from the negative impact of glucose starvation. Studies have indicated a significant increase of carotenoids in red yeast under glucose starvation. However, their regulatory mechanism is still unclear. In this study, we investigated the regulatory mechanism of carotenoid biosynthesis in Rhodosporidium kratochvilovae YM25235 under glucose starvation. More intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) was produced when glucose was exhausted. Enzymatic and non-enzymatic (mainly carotenoids) antioxidant systems in YM25235 were induced to protect cells from ROS-related damage. Transcriptome analysis revealed massive gene expression rearrangement in YM25235 under glucose starvation, leading to alterations in alternative carbon metabolic pathways. Some potential pathways for acetyl-CoA and then carotenoid biosynthesis, including fatty acid β-oxidation, amino acid metabolism, and pyruvate metabolism, were significantly enriched in KEGG analysis. Overexpression of the fatty acyl-CoA oxidase gene (RkACOX2), the first key rate-limiting enzyme of peroxisomal fatty acid β-oxidation, demonstrated that fatty acid β-oxidation could increase the acetyl-CoA and carotenoid concentration in YM25235. These findings contribute to a better understanding of the overall response of red yeast to glucose starvation and the regulatory mechanisms governing carotenoid biosynthesis under glucose starvation.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Virology,Microbiology (medical),Microbiology

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