Affiliation:
1. State Key Laboratory of Animal Nutrition and Feeding, Institute of Animal Sciences, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Beijing, China
2. Key Laboratory of Birth Regulation and Control Technology of National Health Commission of China, Shandong Provincial Maternal and Child Health Care Hospital Affiliated to Qingdao University, Jinan, China
3. Institute of Microbiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Genetic engineering at the genomic scale provides a rapid means to evolve microbes for desirable traits. However, in many filamentous fungi, such trials are daunted by low transformation efficiency. Differentially expressed genes under certain conditions may contain important regulatory factors. Accordingly, although manipulating these subsets of genes only can largely reduce the time and labor, engineering at such a sub-genomic level may also be able to improve the microbial performance. Herein, first using the industrially important cellulase-producing filamentous fungus
Trichoderma reesei
as a model organism, we constructed suppression subtractive hybridization (SSH) libraries enriched with differentially expressed genes under cellulase induction (MM-Avicel) and cellulase repression conditions (MM-Glucose). The libraries, in combination with RNA interference, enabled sub-genomic engineering of
T. reesei
for enhanced cellulase production. The ability of
T. reesei
to produce endoglucanase was improved by 2.8~3.3-fold. In addition, novel regulatory genes (
tre49304
,
tre120391
, and
tre123541
) were identified to affect cellulase expression in
T. reesei
. Iterative manipulation using the same strategy further increased the yield of endoglucanase activity to 75.6 U/mL, which was seven times as high as that of the wild type (10.8 U/mL). Moreover, using
Humicola insolens
as an example, such a sub-genomic RNAi-assisted strain evolution proved to be also useful in other industrially important filamentous fungi.
H. insolens
is a filamentous fungus commonly used to produce catalase, albeit with similarly low transformation efficiency and scarce knowledge underlying the regulation of catalase expression. By combining SSH and RNAi, a strain of
H. insolens
producing 28,500 ± 288 U/mL of catalase was obtained, which was 1.9 times as high as that of the parent strain.
IMPORTANCE
Genetic engineering at the genomic scale provides an unparalleled advantage in microbial strain improvement, which has previously been limited only to the organisms with high transformation efficiency such as
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
and
Escherichia coli
. Herein, using the filamentous fungus
Trichoderma reesei
as a model organism, we demonstrated that the advantage of suppression subtractive hybridization (SSH) to enrich differentially expressed genes and the convenience of RNA interference to manipulate a multitude of genes could be combined to overcome the inadequate transformation efficiency. With this sub-genomic evolution strategy,
T. reesei
could be iteratively engineered for higher cellulase production. Intriguingly,
Humicola insolens
, a fungus with even little knowledge in gene expression regulation, was also improved for catalase production. The same strategy may also be expanded to engineering other microorganisms for enhanced production of proteins, organic acids, and secondary metabolites.
Funder
MOST | National Key Research and Development Program of China
China Postdoctoral Science Foundation
MOST | National Natural Science Foundation of China
CAAS | Agricultural Science and Technology Innovation Program
China Agricultural Research System (CARS) of MOF and MARA
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology