Transcriptional response of desaturase genes to low temperature was investigated in the dimorphic fungus Mucor rouxii. The two morphological forms of M. rouxii, yeast-like and mycelial cells containing different fatty acid profiles were shifted from 30 to 10°C. Both cultures exhibited significantly altered fatty acid composition, whose content in polyunsaturated fatty acids increased as consequence of the temperature shift and was accompanied by a reduction of C18:1Δ(9) about 2 h after the temperature shift. These changes were particularly significant in phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine fractions. Moreover, the fatty acid profiles of monoacylglycerol and diacylglycerol were also modulated in response to the lower temperature of incubation. The changes of membrane lipids of M. rouxii were due to the cold-induced expression of Δ(9)-, Δ(12)- and Δ(6)-desaturase genes. Although the mRNA levels of the three desaturases were transiently induced by lowering the temperature, the pre-existing composition of fatty acid profiles of mycelial and yeast-like forms of M. rouxii may have lead to different expression profiles of desaturase genes that modified their membrane physical state under cold shock. While expression of Δ(12)-desaturase gene contributed mainly to cold acclimation of mycelia, Δ(9)-desaturase expression was the main transcript identified in the yeast-like culture after temperature shift.
Background
Cassava pulp is a promising starch-based biomasses, which consists of residual starch granules entrapped in plant cell wall containing non-starch polysaccharides, cellulose and hemicellulose. Strain CT4T, a novel mesophilic anaerobic bacterium isolated from soil collected from a cassava pulp landfill, has a strong ability to degrade polysaccharides in cassava pulp. This study explored a rarely described species within the genus Clostridium that possessed a group of cassava pulp-degrading enzymes.
Methods
A novel mesophilic anaerobic bacterium, the strain CT4T, was identified based on phylogenetic, genomic, phenotypic and chemotaxonomic analysis. The complete genome of the strain CT4T was obtained following whole-genome sequencing, assembly and annotation using both Illumina and Oxford Nanopore Technology (ONT) platforms.
Results
Analysis based on the 16S rRNA gene sequence indicated that strain CT4T is a species of genus Clostridium. Analysis of the whole-genome average amino acid identity (AAI) of strain CT4T and the other 665 closely related species of the genus Clostridium revealed a separated strain CT4T from the others. The results revealed that the genome consisted of a 6.3 Mb circular chromosome with 5,664 protein-coding sequences. Genome analysis result of strain CT4T revealed that it contained a set of genes encoding amylolytic-, hemicellulolytic-, cellulolytic- and pectinolytic enzymes. A comparative genomic analysis of strain CT4T with closely related species with available genomic information, C. amylolyticum SW408T, showed that strain CT4T contained more genes encoding cassava pulp-degrading enzymes, which comprised a complex mixture of amylolytic-, hemicellulolytic-, cellulolytic- and pectinolytic enzymes. This work presents the potential for saccharification of strain CT4T in the utilization of cassava pulp. Based on phylogenetic, genomic, phenotypic and chemotaxonomic data, we propose a novel species for which the name Clostridium manihotivorum sp. nov. is suggested, with the type strain CT4T (= TBRC 11758T = NBRC 114534T).
Cordyceps militaris is an industrially important fungus, which is often used in Asia as traditional medicine. There has been a published genome-scale metabolic model (GSMM) of C. militaris useful for predicting its growth behaviors; however, lipid metabolism, which plays a vital role in cellular functions, remains incomplete in the GSMM of C. militaris. A comprehensive study on C. militaris was thus performed by enhancing GSMM through integrative analysis of metabolic footprint and transcriptome data. Through the enhanced GSMM of C. militaris (called iPC1469), it contained 1469 genes, 1904 metabolic reactions and 1229 metabolites. After model evaluation, in silico growth simulation results agreed well with the experimental data of the fungal growths on different carbon sources. Beyond the model-driven integrative data analysis, interestingly, we found key metabolic responses in alteration of lipid metabolism in C. militaris upon different carbon sources. The sphingoid bases (e.g., sphinganine, sphingosine, and phytosphingosine) and ceramide were statistically significant accumulated in the xylose culture when compared with other cultures; this study suggests that the sphingolipid biosynthetic capability in C. militaris was dependent on the carbon source assimilated for cell growth; this finding provides a comprehensive basis for the sphingolipid biosynthesis in C. militaris that can help to further redesign its metabolic control for medicinal and functional food applications.
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