Abstract

The filamentous fungus Penicillium roqueforti is widely known as the ripening agent of blue-veined cheeses. Additionally, this fungus is able to produce several secondary metabolites, including the meroterpenoid compound mycophenolic acid (MPA). Cheeses ripened with P. roqueforti are usually contaminated with MPA. On the other hand, MPA is a commercially valuable immunosuppressant. However, to date the molecular basis of the production of MPA by P. roqueforti is still unknown. Using a bioinformatic approach, we have identified a genomic region of approximately 24.4 kbp containing a seven-gene cluster that may be involved in the MPA biosynthesis in P. roqueforti. Gene silencing of each of these seven genes (named mpaA, mpaB, mpaC, mpaDE, mpaF, mpaG and mpaH) resulted in dramatic reductions in MPA production, confirming that all of these genes are involved in the biosynthesis of the compound. Interestingly, the mpaF gene, originally described in P. brevicompactum as a MPA self-resistance gene, also exerts the same function in P. roqueforti, suggesting that this gene has a dual function in MPA metabolism. The knowledge of the biosynthetic pathway of MPA in P. roqueforti will be important for the future control of MPA contamination in cheeses and the improvement of MPA production for commercial purposes.

Highlights

  • Mycophenolic acid (MPA) is one of the main metabolites produced by fungi of the genus Penicillium [1, 2]

  • The results indicate that MpaG catalyzes the methylation of demethylmycophenolic acid (DMMPA) to produce MPA, the last step in the biosynthesis of this compound [6]

  • We identified a genomic region of approximately 24.4 kbp containing a sevengene cluster that may be responsible for the MPA biosynthesis in P. roqueforti

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Summary

Introduction

Mycophenolic acid (MPA) is one of the main metabolites produced by fungi of the genus Penicillium [1, 2]. The transformants selected exhibited between 2.99- and 44.7- fold decreases in transcripts compared with the wildtype strain of P. roqueforti (Fig 2), confirming the successful knockdown of the expression of all the genes of the mpa cluster.

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