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Comparative genomics of citric-acid-producing Aspergillus niger ATCC 1015 versus enzyme-producing CBS 513.88

Authors :
M. Meijer
Herman Jan Pel
Jasmyn Pangilinan
Jette Thykaer
Gerhard H. Braus
Scott E. Baker
Rob Samson
Jens Christian Frisvad
Kristian Fog Nielsen
Erika Lindquist
Susanna A. Braus-Stromeyer
Margarita Salazar
Peter J. I. van de Vondervoort
Peter J. Schaap
Michael Lynge Nielsen
Diego Martinez
Susan Lisette Meijer
Johannes Maarten Van Den Brink
Jakob Blæsbjerg Nielsen
Johannes Andries Roubos
Hein Stam
Jon K. Magnuson
Noël Nicolaas Maria Elisabeth Van Peij
Lars Kongsbak Poulsen
Adrian Tsang
Alex Atkins
Asaf Salamov
Ziyu Dai
Jane Grimwood
Harris Shapiro
Igor V. Grigoriev
Piet W.M. van Dijck
Susan Lucas
Andrea Aerts
Luis M. Corrochano
Hildegard Henna Menke
Albert J. J. van Ooyen
David E. Culley
Gerald Hofmann
Mikael Rørdam Andersen
Randy M. Berka
Jens Nielsen
Linda L. Lasure
Yigong Lou
Kaj Albermann
Christian P. Kubicek
Richard Albang
Universidad de Sevilla. Departamento de Genética
Source :
Genome Research 21 (2011) 6, idUS. Depósito de Investigación de la Universidad de Sevilla, instname, Genome Research, 21(6), 885-897. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Genome Research, 21(6), 885-897
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

The filamentous fungus Aspergillus niger exhibits great diversity in its phenotype. It is found globally, both as marine and terrestrial strains, produces both organic acids and hydrolytic enzymes in high amounts, and some isolates exhibit pathogenicity. Although the genome of an industrial enzyme-producing A. niger strain (CBS 513.88) has already been sequenced, the versatility and diversity of this species compel additional exploration. We therefore undertook whole-genome sequencing of the acidogenic A. niger wild-type strain (ATCC 1015) and produced a genome sequence of very high quality. Only 15 gaps are present in the sequence, and half the telomeric regions have been elucidated. Moreover, sequence information from ATCC 1015 was used to improve the genome sequence of CBS 513.88. Chromosome-level comparisons uncovered several genome rearrangements, deletions, a clear case of strain-specific horizontal gene transfer, and identification of 0.8 Mb of novel sequence. Single nucleotide polymorphisms per kilobase (SNPs/kb) between the two strains were found to be exceptionally high (average: 7.8, maximum: 160 SNPs/kb). High variation within the species was confirmed with exo-metabolite profiling and phylogenetics. Detailed lists of alleles were generated, and genotypic differences were observed to accumulate in metabolic pathways essential to acid production and protein synthesis. A transcriptome analysis supported up-regulation of genes associated with biosynthesis of amino acids that are abundant in glucoamylase A, tRNA-synthases, and protein transporters in the protein producing CBS 513.88 strain. Our results and data sets from this integrative systems biology analysis resulted in a snapshot of fungal evolution and will support further optimization of cell factories based on filamentous fungi.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10889051
Volume :
21
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genome Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9c431552a5e10ca4723e1faf32ab6ffd
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.112169.110