Abstract

BackgroundThe filamentous fungus Trichoderma reesei is an important host organism for industrial enzyme production. It is adapted to nutrient poor environments where it is capable of producing large amounts of hydrolytic enzymes. In its natural environment T. reesei is expected to benefit from high energy yield from utilization of respirative metabolic pathway. However, T. reesei lacks metabolic pathway reconstructions and the utilization of the respirative pathway has not been investigated on the level of in vivo fluxes.ResultsThe biosynthetic pathways of amino acids in T. reesei supported by genome-level evidence were reconstructed with computational carbon path analysis. The pathway reconstructions were a prerequisite for analysis of in vivo fluxes. The distribution of in vivo fluxes in both wild type strain and cre1, a key regulator of carbon catabolite repression, deletion strain were quantitatively studied by performing 13C-labeling on both repressive carbon source glucose and non-repressive carbon source sorbitol. In addition, the 13C-labeling on sorbitol was performed both in the presence and absence of sophorose that induces the expression of cellulase genes. Carbon path analyses and the 13C-labeling patterns of proteinogenic amino acids indicated high similarity between biosynthetic pathways of amino acids in T. reesei and yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In contrast to S. cerevisiae, however, mitochondrial rather than cytosolic biosynthesis of Asp was observed under all studied conditions. The relative anaplerotic flux to the TCA cycle was low and thus characteristic to respiratory metabolism in both strains and independent of the carbon source. Only minor differences were observed in the flux distributions of the wild type and cre1 deletion strain. Furthermore, the induction of the hydrolytic gene expression did not show altered flux distributions and did not affect the relative amino acid requirements or relative anabolic and respirative activities of the TCA cycle.ConclusionHigh similarity between the biosynthetic pathways of amino acids in T. reesei and yeast S. cerevisiae was concluded. In vivo flux distributions confirmed that T. reesei uses primarily the respirative pathway also when growing on the repressive carbon source glucose in contrast to Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which substantially diminishes the respirative pathway flux under glucose repression.

Highlights

  • The filamentous fungus Trichoderma reesei is an important host organism for industrial enzyme production

  • The results indicated a higher activity of respiratory metabolism relative to biosynthesis on the non-repressing carbon source sorbitol than that on the repressing carbon source glucose

  • The method was used to search for pathways from a metabolic network consisting of all reactions found in a comprehensive metabolic reaction database, and to subsequently rank the pathways according to the degree of support from the T. reesei's genome [21]

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Summary

Introduction

The filamentous fungus Trichoderma reesei is an important host organism for industrial enzyme production. It is adapted to nutrient poor environments where it is capable of producing large amounts of hydrolytic enzymes. The industrially important protein producer, the filamentous fungus Trichoderma reesei, a clonal derivative of the ascomycete Hypocrea jecorina, is adapted to growth in nutrient poor environments, where it is able to use complex plant material as carbon source. Because of its ability to synthesize and secrete large amounts of proteins, T. reesei has gained industrial importance in production of enzymes of native and heterologous origin. Carbon catabolite repression (CCR) of T. reesei negatively regulates the powerful production machinery of the hydrolytic enzymes when a preferred carbon source, such as glucose, is available. In high glucose concentrations CCR overrules the inductive signals in T. reesei [6]

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