4.7 Article

Major involvement of two laccase genes in conidial pigment biosynthesis in Aspergillus oryzae

Journal

APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 106, Issue 1, Pages 287-300

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00253-021-11669-1

Keywords

Aspergillus oryzae; Colony color; Conidial pigmentation; Laccases; Ayg1-like hydrolase; Filamentous fungi

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In Aspergillus oryzae, conidial pigment biosynthesis primarily involves two laccases, while Ayg1-like hydrolase is not significantly involved. The color of conidia is dependent on the expression levels of the two laccases and hydrolase.
Wild-type strains of Aspergillus oryzae develop yellow, yellow-green, green, or brown conidia. Previous reports suggested that the conidiation initiates with the biosynthesis of a yellow pigment YWA1 from acetyl-CoA by a polyketide synthase encoded by wA (AO090102000545). This is followed by the conversion to other pigment by a laccase encoded by yA (AO090011000755). Based on orthologous pathways in other Aspergilli, it is reasonable to hypothesize that in addition to yA, AO090102000546 encoding laccase and AO090005000332 encoding Ayg1-like hydrolase play a role in A. oryzae conidial pigment biosynthesis. However, the involvement of these two genes in conidial pigmentation remains unclear. In this study, we tested this hypothesis by assessing the conidial colors of both disruption and overexpression mutants to verify whether AO090102000546 and AO090005000332 were associated with the conidial pigmentation. Observation of single, double, and triple disruptants of these three genes suggested that conidial pigments were synthesized by two laccase genes, AO090011000755 and AO090102000546, whereas Ayg1-like hydrolase gene AO090005000332 was proven to have no obvious association with the synthesis. This was corroborated by observing the phenotype of each overexpression mutant. Interestingly, AO090005000332 overexpression mutant produced smoky yellow-green conidia, different from the wild-type strain. Thus, the AO090005000332-encoded protein is likely to maintain the enzymatic activity. However, the expression level was observed to be one-third of that of AO090102000546 and one-seventh of that of AO090011000755. Consequently, apparent lack of obvious contribution of AO090005000332 to conidial pigmentation could be attributed to its low expression level. Expression analysis indicated similar profiles in several wild-type strains. Key points Conidial pigment biosynthesis after YWA1 mainly involves two laccases in A. oryzae. Ayg1-like hydrolase in A. oryzae is not obviously involved in conidial pigmentation. Conidial color is deemed dependent on expression level of two laccases and hydrolase.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available