Abstract

BackgroundHigh-temperature bioethanol production benefits from yeast thermotolerance. Salt stress could induce obvious cross-protection against heat stress of Pichia kudriavzevii, contributing to the improvement of its thermotolerance and bioethanol fermentation. However, the underlying mechanisms of the cross-protection remain poorly understood.ResultsSalt stress showed obvious cross-protection for thermotolerance and high-temperature ethanol production of P. kudriavzevii observed by biomass, cell morphology and bioethanol production capacity. The biomass and ethanol production of P. kudriavzevii at 45 °C were, respectively, improved by 2.6 and 3.9 times by 300 mmol/L NaCl. Metabolic network map showed that salt stress obviously improved the key enzymes and intermediates in carbohydrate metabolism, contributing to the synthesis of bioethanol, ATP, amino acids, nucleotides, and unsaturated fatty acids, as well as subsequent intracellular metabolisms. The increasing trehalose, glycerol, HSPs, and ergosterol helped maintain the normal function of cell components. Heat stress induced serious oxidative stress that the ROS-positive cell rate and dead cell rate, respectively, rose from 0.5% and 2.4% to 28.2% and 69.2%, with the incubation temperature increasing from 30 to 45 °C. The heat-induced ROS outburst, oxidative damage, and cell death were obviously inhibited by salt stress, especially the dead cell rate which fell to only 20.3% at 300 mmol/L NaCl. The inhibiting oxidative damage mainly resulted from the abundant synthesis of GSH and GST, which, respectively, increased by 4.8 and 76.1 times after addition of 300 mmol/L NaCl. The improved bioethanol production was not only due to the improved thermotolerance, but resulted from the up-regulated alcohol dehydrogenases and down-regulated aldehyde dehydrogenases by salt stress.ConclusionThe results provide a first insight into the mechanisms of the improved thermotolerance and high-temperature bioethanol production of P. kudriavzevii by salt stress, and provide important information to construct genetic engineering yeasts for high-temperature bioethanol production.Graphical

Highlights

  • High-temperature bioethanol production benefits from yeast thermotolerance

  • The results provide a first insight into the mechanisms of the improved thermotolerance and hightemperature bioethanol production of P. kudriavzevii by salt stress, and provide important information to construct genetic engineering yeasts for high-temperature bioethanol production

  • Previous study showed that salt stress positively regulated the expression of various Heat shock proteins (HSPs) in P. kudriavzevii under cadmium stress [28]. These results suggested that HSPs in P. kudriavzevii were induced by salt stress, which could help cells survive under other extreme stresses, such as heat and cadmium

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Summary

Introduction

High-temperature bioethanol production benefits from yeast thermotolerance. Salt stress could induce obvious cross-protection against heat stress of Pichia kudriavzevii, contributing to the improvement of its thermotolerance and bioethanol fermentation. Industrial bioethanol is usually produced by mesophilic yeasts, among which Saccharomyces cerevisiae is the most used industrial species with the optimal growth temperatures around 30 °C [6]. With the fermentation proceeding, yeasts release heat in the fermentation system, which will reduce the activity of yeasts, eventually leading to the decrease of bioethanol production [7]. Bioethanol production using thermotolerant yeasts has attracted a growing interest in recent years, which can reduce the cooling costs and bacterial contamination [8], and adapt to the high fermentation temperature (usually over 50 °C) in the simultaneous saccharification and fermentation process [9, 10]

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