Login / Signup

Regulation of fungal raw-starch-degrading enzyme production depends on transcription factor phosphorylation and recruitment of the Mediator complex.

Yuan-Ni NingDi TianMan-Li TanXue-Mei LuoShuai ZhaoJia-Xun Feng
Published in: Communications biology (2023)
Filamentous fungus can produce raw-starch-degrading enzyme (RSDE) that efficiently degrades raw starch below starch gelatinization temperature. Employment of RSDE in starch processing can save energy. A key putative transcription factor PoxRsrA (production of raw-starch-degrading enzyme regulation in Penicillium oxalicum) was identified to regulate RSDE production in P. oxalicum; however, its regulatory mechanism remains unclear. Here we show that PoxRsrA 1434-1730 was the transcriptional activation domain, with essential residues, D1508, W1509 and M1510. SANT (SWI3, ADA2, N-CoR and TFIIIB)-like domain 1 (SANT1) bound to DNA at the sequence 5'-RHCDDGGD-3' in the promoter regions of genes encoding major amylases, with an essential residue, R866. SANT2 interacted with a putative 3-hydroxyisobutyryl-CoA hydrolase, which suppressed phosphorylation at tyrosines Y1127 and Y1170 of PoxRsrA 901-1360 , thereby inhibiting RSDE biosynthesis. PoxRsrA 1135-1439 regulated mycelial sporulation by interacting with Mediator subunit Med6, whereas PoxRsrA 1440-1794 regulated RSDE biosynthesis by binding to Med31. Overexpression of PoxRsrA increased sporulation and RSDE production. These findings provide insights into the regulatory mechanisms of fungal RSDE biosynthesis.
Keyphrases