Abstract

Aromatic compounds are important molecules which are widely applied in many industries and are mainly produced from nonrenewable sources. Renewable sources such as plant biomass are interesting alternatives for the production of aromatic compounds. Ferulic acid and p-coumaric acid, a precursor for vanillin and p-vinyl phenol, respectively, can be released from plant biomass by the fungus Aspergillus niger. The degradation of hydroxycinnamic acids such as caffeic acid, ferulic acid, and p-coumaric acid has been observed in many fungi. In A. niger, multiple metabolic pathways were suggested for the degradation of hydroxycinnamic acids. However, no genes were identified for these hydroxycinnamic acid metabolic pathways. In this study, several pathway genes were identified using whole-genome transcriptomic data of A. niger grown on different hydroxycinnamic acids. The genes are involved in the CoA-dependent β-oxidative pathway in fungi. This pathway is well known for the degradation of fatty acids, but not for hydroxycinnamic acids. However, in plants, it has been shown that hydroxycinnamic acids are degraded through this pathway. We identified genes encoding hydroxycinnamate-CoA synthase (hcsA), multifunctional β-oxidation hydratase/dehydrogenase (foxA), 3-ketoacyl CoA thiolase (katA), and four thioesterases (theA-D) of A. niger, which were highly induced by all three tested hydroxycinnamic acids. Deletion mutants revealed that these genes were indeed involved in the degradation of several hydroxycinnamic acids. In addition, foxA and theB are also involved in the degradation of fatty acids. HcsA, FoxA, and KatA contained a peroxisomal targeting signal and are therefore predicted to be localized in peroxisomes.Key points• Metabolism of hydroxycinnamic acid was investigated in Aspergillus niger• Using transcriptome data, multiple CoA-dependent β-oxidative genes were identified.• Both foxA and theB are involved in hydroxycinnamate but also fatty acid metabolism.

Highlights

  • Aromatic compounds are applied in many industries such as food and beverage, cosmetic, polymer, and pharmaceutical industries and are mainly produced from nonrenewable petroleum sources, which are slowly depleting

  • We showed that in A. niger, the hydroxycinnamic acids ferulic acid, m-coumaric acid, pcoumaric acid, and caffeic acid are degraded through the peroxisomal CoA-dependent β-oxidative pathway resulting in the formation of vanillic acid, m-hydroxybenzoic acid, phydroxybenzoic acid, and protocatechuic acid, respectively

  • Deletion of hydroxycinnamate-CoA synthase (hcsA), foxA, or ketoacyl CoA thiolase (katA) resulted in reduced growth on caffeic acid, ferulic acid, and p-coumaric acid

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Aromatic compounds are applied in many industries such as food and beverage, cosmetic, polymer, and pharmaceutical industries and are mainly produced from nonrenewable petroleum sources, which are slowly depleting. Aromatic metabolism in fungi has been studied for decades, but most studies are scattered over different fungal species (Milstein et al 1983; Mäkelä et al 2015; Lubbers et al 2019c) It remains largely unknown which pathways are present in a single species. It has been shown that the hydroxycinnamic acids, ferulic acid, p-coumaric acid (4-hydroxycinnamic acid), and caffeic acid (3,4-dihydroxycinnamic acid), were converted to vanillic acid, p-hydroxybenzoic acid, and protocatechuic acid, respectively (Lubbers et al 2019b, 2020) It remains unknown which enzymes mediate the conversion of hydroxycinnamic acids to their benzoate forms

Objectives
Methods
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call