Abstract
AbstractBackgroundTrichoderma reesei is the main filamentous fungus used in industry to produce cellulases. Over the last decades, there have been a strong increase in the understanding of the regulatory network controlling cellulase-coding gene expression in response to a number of inducers and environmental signals. In this sense, the role of calcium and the Calcineurin-responsive protein (CRZ1) has been investigated in industrially relevant strains of T. reesei RUT-C30, but this system has not been investigated in wild-type reference strain of this fungus.ResultsHere, we investigated the role of CRZ1 and Ca2+ signaling in the fungus T. reesei QM6a. For this, we first searched for potential CRZ1 binding sites in promoter regions of key genes coding holocellulases, as well as transcriptional regulators and sugar and calcium transporters. Using a nearly constructed T. reesei Δcrzl strain, we demonstrated that most of the genes expected to be regulated by CRZ1 were affected in the mutant strain induced with sugarcane bagasse (SCB) and cellulose. In particular, our data demonstrate that Ca2+ acts synergistically with CRZ1 to modulate gene expression, but also exerts CRZ1-independent regulatory role in gene expression in T. reesei, suggesting the existence of additional Ca2+ sensing mechanisms in this fungus.ConclusionsThis work presents new evidence on the regulatory role of CRZ1 and Ca2+ sensing in the regulation of cellulolytic enzymes in T. reesei, evidencing significant and previously unknown function of this Ca2+ sensing system in the control key transcriptional regulators (XYR1 and CRE1) and on the expression of genes related to sugar and Ca2+ transport. Taken together, the data obtained here provide new evidence on the regulatory network of T. reesei related to plant biomass deconstruction.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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