Abstract

Fungal ammonia fermentation is a novel dissimilatory metabolic mechanism that supplies energy under anoxic conditions. The fungus Fusarium oxysporum reduces nitrate to ammonium and simultaneously oxidizes ethanol to acetate to generate ATP (Zhou, Z., Takaya, N., Nakamura, A., Yamaguchi, M., Takeo, K., and Shoun, H. (2002) J. Biol. Chem. 277, 1892-1896). We identified the Aspergillus nidulans genes involved in ammonia fermentation by analyzing fungal mutants. The results showed that assimilatory nitrate and nitrite reductases (the gene products of niaD and niiA) were essential for reducing nitrate and for anaerobic cell growth during ammonia fermentation. We also found that ethanol oxidation is coupled with nitrate reduction and catalyzed by alcohol dehydrogenase, coenzyme A (CoA)-acylating aldehyde dehydrogenase, and acetyl-CoA synthetase (Acs). This is similar to the mechanism suggested in F. oxysporum except A. nidulans uses Acs to produce ATP instead of the ADP-dependent acetate kinase of F. oxysporum. The production of Acs requires a functional facA gene that encodes Acs and that is involved in ethanol assimilation and other metabolic processes. We purified the gene product of facA (FacA) from the fungus to show that the fungus acetylates FacA on its lysine residue(s) specifically under conditions of ammonia fermentation to regulate its substrate affinity. Acetylated FacA had higher affinity for acetyl-CoA than for acetate, whereas non-acetylated FacA had more affinity for acetate. Thus, the acetylated variant of the FacA protein is responsible for ATP synthesis during fungal ammonia fermentation. These results showed that the fungus ferments ammonium via coupled dissimilatory and assimilatory mechanisms.

Highlights

  • Fungal ammonia fermentation is a novel dissimilatory metabolic mechanism that supplies energy under anoxic conditions

  • Anaerobic Ammonia Fermentation by A. nidulans—We showed that various species of fungi ferment ammonia under anaerobic conditions (5), the ammonia-fermenting activity of A. nidulans has not been described

  • A. nidulans reduces nitrate to ammonium through the nitrate and nitrite reductases that are required for the assimilatory reduction of nitrate (13, 14)

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Summary

Introduction

Fungal ammonia fermentation is a novel dissimilatory metabolic mechanism that supplies energy under anoxic conditions. Such organisms induce the expression of a set of genes to allow adaptation to anaerobic circumstances Some lower eukaryotes such as yeasts and filamentous fungi induce these genes under anaerobic conditions to produce O2-independent energy-producing metabolic mechanisms that support facultative anaerobic growth (1– 4). This is in sharp contrast to higher eukaryotes that essentially require O2. Ammonia fermentation consists of the dissimilatory reduction of nitrate to ammonium (Reaction 2) coupled with the catabolic oxidation of electron donors (ethanol) to acetate and substrate-level phosphorylation that supports growth under anaerobic conditions. The nitrate-assimilating pathway in the fungus Aspergillus nidulans has been extensively studied (12), and assimilatory nitrate and nitrite reductases

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