Abstract
Carotenoids, a family of lipid-soluble pigments, have garnered growing interest for their health-promoting benefits and are widely utilized in the food, feed, pharmaceutical, and cosmetic industries. Rhodosporidiobolus odoratus, a representative oleaginous red yeast, is considered a promising alternative for producing high-value carotenoids including β-carotene, torulene, and torularhodin. Here, the impact of varying concentrations of NaCl treatments on carotenoid contents in R. odoratus XQR after 120 h of incubation was examined. The results indicated that, as compared to the control (59.37 μg/gdw), the synthesis of total carotenoids was significantly increased and entirely suppressed under low-to-moderate (0.25 mol/L: 68.06 μg/gdw, 0.5 mol/L: 67.62 μg/gdw, and 0.75 mol/L: 146.47 μg/gdw) and high (1.0, 1.25, and 1.5 mol/L: 0 μg/gdw) concentrations of NaCl treatments, respectively. Moreover, the maximum production of β-carotene (117.62 μg/gdw), torulene (21.81 μg/gdw), and torularhodin (7.04 μg/gdw) was achieved with a moderate concentration (0.75 mol/L) of NaCl treatment. Transcriptomic and metabolomic analyses suggested that the increase in β-carotene, torulene, and torularhodin production might be primarily attributed to the up-regulation of some key protein-coding genes involved in the terpenoid backbone biosynthesis (atoB, HMGCS, and mvaD), carotenoid biosynthesis (crtYB and crtI), and TCA cycle (pckA, DLAT, pyc, MDH1, gltA, acnA, IDH1/2, IDH3, sucA, sucB, sucD, LSC1, SDHA, and fumA/fumB). The present study not only demonstrates a viable method to concurrently increase the production of β-carotene, torulene, torularhodin, and total carotenoids in R. odoratus XQR, but it also establishes a molecular foundation for further enhancing their production through genetic engineering.
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