4.7 Article

The opposite roles of agdA and glaA on citric acid production in Aspergillus niger

Journal

APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 100, Issue 13, Pages 5791-5803

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00253-016-7324-z

Keywords

Aspergillus niger; alpha-Glucosidase; glaA gene; Gene deletion; Multicopy overexpression; Citric acid

Funding

  1. National Hightech R&D Program of China [2012AA021302]
  2. National Basic Research Program of China [2013CB734004]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31471725, 31370075]
  4. Science and Technology Support Program of Tianjin, China [12ZCZDNC01600]

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Citric acid is produced by an industrial-scale process of fermentation using Aspergillus niger as a microbial cell factory. However, citric acid production was hindered by the non-fermentable isomaltose and insufficient saccharification ability in A. niger when liquefied corn starch was used as a raw material. In this study, A. niger TNA 101 Delta agdA was constructed by deletion of the alpha-glucosidase-encoding agdA gene in A. niger CGMCC 10142 genome using Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation. The transformants A. niger OG 1, OG 17, and OG 31 then underwent overexpression of glucoamylase in A. niger TNA 101 Delta agdA. The results showed that the alpha-glucosidase activity of TNA 101 Delta agdA was decreased by 62.5 % compared with CGMCC 10142, and isomaltose was almost undetectable in the fermentation broth. The glucoamylase activity of the transformants OG 1 and OG 17 increased by 34.5 and 16.89 % compared with that of TNA 101 Delta agdA, respectively. In addition, for the recombinants TNA 101 Delta agdA, OG 1 and OG 17, there were no apparent defects in the growth development. Consequently, in comparison with CGMCC 10142, TNA 101 Delta agdA and OG 1 decreased the residual reducing sugar by 52.95 and 88.24 %, respectively, and correspondingly increased citric acid production at the end of fermentation by 8.68 and 16.87 %. Citric acid production was further improved by decreasing the non-fermentable residual sugar and increasing utilization rate of corn starch material in A. niger. Besides, the successive saccharification and citric acid fermentation processes were successfully integrated into one step.

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