Comparative Transcriptome Analysis Shows Conserved Metabolic Regulation during Production of Secondary Metabolites in Filamentous Fungi

Secondary metabolites are a major source of pharmaceuticals, especially antibiotics. However, the development of efficient processes of production of secondary metabolites has proved troublesome due to a limited understanding of the metabolic regulations governing secondary metabolism. By analyzing...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jens Christian Nielsen, Sylvain Prigent, Sietske Grijseels, Mhairi Workman, Boyang Ji, Jens Nielsen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Microbiology 2019-04-01
Series:mSystems
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00012-19
id doaj-7194bc118ac1487294481b157040f22e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7194bc118ac1487294481b157040f22e2020-11-24T20:54:36ZengAmerican Society for MicrobiologymSystems2379-50772019-04-0142e00012-1910.1128/mSystems.00012-19Comparative Transcriptome Analysis Shows Conserved Metabolic Regulation during Production of Secondary Metabolites in Filamentous FungiJens Christian NielsenSylvain PrigentSietske GrijseelsMhairi WorkmanBoyang JiJens NielsenSecondary metabolites are a major source of pharmaceuticals, especially antibiotics. However, the development of efficient processes of production of secondary metabolites has proved troublesome due to a limited understanding of the metabolic regulations governing secondary metabolism. By analyzing the conservation in gene expression across secondary metabolite-producing fungal species, we identified a metabolic signature that links primary and secondary metabolism and that demonstrates that fungal metabolism is tailored for the efficient production of secondary metabolites. The insight that we provide can be used to develop high-yielding fungal cell factories that are optimized for the production of specific secondary metabolites of pharmaceutical interest.Filamentous fungi possess great potential as sources of medicinal bioactive compounds, such as antibiotics, but efficient production is hampered by a limited understanding of how their metabolism is regulated. We investigated the metabolism of six secondary metabolite-producing fungi of the Penicillium genus during nutrient depletion in the stationary phase of batch fermentations and assessed conserved metabolic responses across species using genome-wide transcriptional profiling. A coexpression analysis revealed that expression of biosynthetic genes correlates with expression of genes associated with pathways responsible for the generation of precursor metabolites for secondary metabolism. Our results highlight the main metabolic routes for the supply of precursors for secondary metabolism and suggest that the regulation of fungal metabolism is tailored to meet the demands for secondary metabolite production. These findings can aid in identifying fungal species that are optimized for the production of specific secondary metabolites and in designing metabolic engineering strategies to develop high-yielding fungal cell factories for production of secondary metabolites.https://doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00012-19comparative transcriptomicscell factoriesfilamentous fungisecondary metabolism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jens Christian Nielsen
Sylvain Prigent
Sietske Grijseels
Mhairi Workman
Boyang Ji
Jens Nielsen
spellingShingle Jens Christian Nielsen
Sylvain Prigent
Sietske Grijseels
Mhairi Workman
Boyang Ji
Jens Nielsen
Comparative Transcriptome Analysis Shows Conserved Metabolic Regulation during Production of Secondary Metabolites in Filamentous Fungi
mSystems
comparative transcriptomics
cell factories
filamentous fungi
secondary metabolism
author_facet Jens Christian Nielsen
Sylvain Prigent
Sietske Grijseels
Mhairi Workman
Boyang Ji
Jens Nielsen
author_sort Jens Christian Nielsen
title Comparative Transcriptome Analysis Shows Conserved Metabolic Regulation during Production of Secondary Metabolites in Filamentous Fungi
title_short Comparative Transcriptome Analysis Shows Conserved Metabolic Regulation during Production of Secondary Metabolites in Filamentous Fungi
title_full Comparative Transcriptome Analysis Shows Conserved Metabolic Regulation during Production of Secondary Metabolites in Filamentous Fungi
title_fullStr Comparative Transcriptome Analysis Shows Conserved Metabolic Regulation during Production of Secondary Metabolites in Filamentous Fungi
title_full_unstemmed Comparative Transcriptome Analysis Shows Conserved Metabolic Regulation during Production of Secondary Metabolites in Filamentous Fungi
title_sort comparative transcriptome analysis shows conserved metabolic regulation during production of secondary metabolites in filamentous fungi
publisher American Society for Microbiology
series mSystems
issn 2379-5077
publishDate 2019-04-01
description Secondary metabolites are a major source of pharmaceuticals, especially antibiotics. However, the development of efficient processes of production of secondary metabolites has proved troublesome due to a limited understanding of the metabolic regulations governing secondary metabolism. By analyzing the conservation in gene expression across secondary metabolite-producing fungal species, we identified a metabolic signature that links primary and secondary metabolism and that demonstrates that fungal metabolism is tailored for the efficient production of secondary metabolites. The insight that we provide can be used to develop high-yielding fungal cell factories that are optimized for the production of specific secondary metabolites of pharmaceutical interest.Filamentous fungi possess great potential as sources of medicinal bioactive compounds, such as antibiotics, but efficient production is hampered by a limited understanding of how their metabolism is regulated. We investigated the metabolism of six secondary metabolite-producing fungi of the Penicillium genus during nutrient depletion in the stationary phase of batch fermentations and assessed conserved metabolic responses across species using genome-wide transcriptional profiling. A coexpression analysis revealed that expression of biosynthetic genes correlates with expression of genes associated with pathways responsible for the generation of precursor metabolites for secondary metabolism. Our results highlight the main metabolic routes for the supply of precursors for secondary metabolism and suggest that the regulation of fungal metabolism is tailored to meet the demands for secondary metabolite production. These findings can aid in identifying fungal species that are optimized for the production of specific secondary metabolites and in designing metabolic engineering strategies to develop high-yielding fungal cell factories for production of secondary metabolites.
topic comparative transcriptomics
cell factories
filamentous fungi
secondary metabolism
url https://doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00012-19
work_keys_str_mv AT jenschristiannielsen comparativetranscriptomeanalysisshowsconservedmetabolicregulationduringproductionofsecondarymetabolitesinfilamentousfungi
AT sylvainprigent comparativetranscriptomeanalysisshowsconservedmetabolicregulationduringproductionofsecondarymetabolitesinfilamentousfungi
AT sietskegrijseels comparativetranscriptomeanalysisshowsconservedmetabolicregulationduringproductionofsecondarymetabolitesinfilamentousfungi
AT mhairiworkman comparativetranscriptomeanalysisshowsconservedmetabolicregulationduringproductionofsecondarymetabolitesinfilamentousfungi
AT boyangji comparativetranscriptomeanalysisshowsconservedmetabolicregulationduringproductionofsecondarymetabolitesinfilamentousfungi
AT jensnielsen comparativetranscriptomeanalysisshowsconservedmetabolicregulationduringproductionofsecondarymetabolitesinfilamentousfungi
_version_ 1716793961383723008