4.6 Article

Comparative Genomics of Mortierellaceae Provides Insights into Lipid Metabolism: Two Novel Types of Fatty Acid Synthase

Journal

JOURNAL OF FUNGI
Volume 8, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jof8090891

Keywords

Mucoromyceta; microbial lipids; phylogenomics; polyunsaturated fatty acids; arachidonic acid

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31970009, 32170012]

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This study provides high-quality genome data for two Mortierellaceae fungal species, and compares the genomes of 19 strains from different species. New types of fatty acid synthase enzymes are discovered, and the accumulation of arachidonic acid is found to be associated with specific enzymes. These findings lay the foundation for modulating the yield of polyunsaturated fatty acids.
Fungal species in the family Mortierellaceae are important for their remarkable capability to synthesize large amounts of polyunsaturated fatty acids, especially arachidonic acid (ARA). Although many genomes have been published, the quality of these data is not satisfactory, resulting in an incomplete understanding of the lipid pathway in Mortierellaceae. We provide herein two novel and high-quality genomes with 55.32% of syntenic gene pairs for Mortierella alpina CGMCC 20262 and M. schmuckeri CGMCC 20261, spanning 28 scaffolds of 40.22 Mb and 25 scaffolds of 49.24 Mb, respectively. The relative smaller genome for the former is due to fewer protein-coding gene models (11,761 vs. 13,051). The former yields 45.57% of ARA in total fatty acids, while the latter 6.95%. The accumulation of ARA is speculated to be associated with delta-5 desaturase (Delta5) and elongation of very long chain fatty acids protein 3 (ELOVL3). A further genomic comparison of 19 strains in 10 species in three genera in the Mortierellaceae reveals three types of fatty acid synthase (FAS), two of which are new to science. The most common type I exists in 16 strains of eight species of three genera, and was discovered previously and consists of a single unit with eight active sites. The newly revealed type II exists only in M. antarctica KOD 1030 where the unit is separated into two subunits alpha and beta comprised of three and five active sites, respectively. Another newly revealed type III exists in M. alpina AD071 and Dissophora globulifera REB-010B, similar to type II but different in having one more acyl carrier protein domain in the alpha subunit. This study provides novel insights into the enzymes related to the lipid metabolism, especially the ARA-related Delta5, ELOVL3, and FAS, laying a foundation for genetic engineering of Mortierellaceae to modulate yield in polyunsaturated fatty acids.

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