How nutritional status signalling coordinates metabolism and lignocellulolytic enzyme secretion

•Carbon, energy, nitrogen, light and pH status regulates lignocellulolytic pathways.•Readily metabolised carbon sources induce carbon catabolite repression.•Lignocellulolytic pathways are activated by derepression during carbon limitation.•Lignocellulolytic pathways are further induced by saccharide...

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Veröffentlicht in:Fungal genetics and biology 2014-11, Vol.72, p.48-63
Hauptverfasser: Brown, Neil Andrew, Ries, Laure Nicolas Annick, Goldman, Gustavo Henrique
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Carbon, energy, nitrogen, light and pH status regulates lignocellulolytic pathways.•Readily metabolised carbon sources induce carbon catabolite repression.•Lignocellulolytic pathways are activated by derepression during carbon limitation.•Lignocellulolytic pathways are further induced by saccharide oligomer detection.•Lignocellulolytic pathways are regulated by a network of signalling cascades. The utilisation of lignocellulosic plant biomass as an abundant, renewable feedstock for green chemistries and biofuel production is inhibited by its recalcitrant nature. In the environment, lignocellulolytic fungi are naturally capable of breaking down plant biomass into utilisable saccharides. Nonetheless, within the industrial context, inefficiencies in the production of lignocellulolytic enzymes impede the implementation of green technologies. One of the primary causes of such inefficiencies is the tight transcriptional control of lignocellulolytic enzymes via carbon catabolite repression. Fungi coordinate metabolism, protein biosynthesis and secretion with cellular energetic status through the detection of intra- and extra-cellular nutritional signals. An enhanced understanding of the signals and signalling pathways involved in regulating the transcription, translation and secretion of lignocellulolytic enzymes is therefore of great biotechnological interest. This comparative review describes how nutrient sensing pathways regulate carbon catabolite repression, metabolism and the utilisation of alternative carbon sources in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and ascomycete fungi.
ISSN:1087-1845
1096-0937
DOI:10.1016/j.fgb.2014.06.012