Abstract

BackgroundLignocellulosic biomass has long been recognized as a potential sustainable source for industrial applications. The costs associated with conversion of plant biomass to fermentable sugar represent a significant barrier to the production of cost-competitive biochemicals. Consolidated bioprocessing (CBP) is considered a potential breakthrough for achieving cost-efficient production of biomass-based fuels and commodity chemicals. During the degradation of cellulose, cellobiose (major end-product of cellulase activity) is catabolized by hydrolytic and phosphorolytic pathways in cellulolytic organisms. However, the details of the two intracellular cellobiose metabolism pathways in cellulolytic fungi remain to be uncovered.ResultsUsing the engineered malic acid production fungal strain JG207, we demonstrated that the hydrolytic pathway by β-glucosidase and the phosphorolytic pathway by phosphorylase are both used for intracellular cellobiose metabolism in Myceliophthora thermophila, and the yield of malic acid can benefit from the energy advantages of phosphorolytic cleavage. There were obvious differences in regulation of the two cellobiose catabolic pathways depending on whether M. thermophila JG207 was grown on cellobiose or Avicel. Disruption of Mtcpp in strain JG207 led to decreased production of malic acid under cellobiose conditions, while expression levels of all three intracellular β-glucosidase genes were significantly up-regulated to rescue the impairment of the phosphorolytic pathway under Avicel conditions. When the flux of the hydrolytic pathway was reduced, we found that β-glucosidase encoded by bgl1 was the dominant enzyme in the hydrolytic pathway and deletion of bgl1 resulted in significant enhancement of protein secretion but reduction of malate production. Combining comprehensive manipulation of both cellobiose utilization pathways and enhancement of cellobiose uptake by overexpression of a cellobiose transporter, the final strain JG412Δbgl2Δbgl3 produced up to 101.2 g/L and 77.4 g/L malic acid from cellobiose and Avicel, respectively, which corresponded to respective yields of 1.35 g/g and 1.03 g/g, representing significant improvement over the starting strain JG207.ConclusionsThis is the first report of detailed investigation of intracellular cellobiose catabolism in cellulolytic fungus M. thermophila. These results provide insights that can be applied to industrial fungi for production of biofuels and biochemicals from cellobiose and cellulose.

Highlights

  • Lignocellulosic biomass has long been recognized as a potential sustainable source for industrial applications

  • In the cellobiose phosphorolytic pathway, there is only one predicted cellobiose phosphorylase encoding by gene Mycth_2308030 in the M. thermophila genome, which was classified into Glycoside Hydrolase family 94 (GH94)

  • The transcriptional level of Mtcpp was found to be significantly increased in strain JG207 under cellobiose or microcrystalline cellulose (Avicel) conditions, compared with that in the wild-type M. thermophila strain via quantitative real time polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) analysis (Fig. 1b)

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Summary

Introduction

Lignocellulosic biomass has long been recognized as a potential sustainable source for industrial applications. Economic analysis has revealed that consolidated bioprocessing (CBP), which implies incorporating cellulase secretion and the biochemical biosynthetic pathway into a single cell, will enjoy the benefit of cost-efficient production of biomassbased fuels and commodity chemicals [3, 4]. Cellulolytic organisms, such as Trichoderma, Neurospora, Clostridium, and Myceliophthora have been considered as the CBP strain candidates for producing biochemicals directly from plant cell walls [5,6,7,8]

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