Elucidation of substrate specificities of decorating enzymes involved in mannosylerythritol lipid production by cross-species complementation

•U. hordei produced mono-acetylated MEL-C as a result of the specificity of UhMat1.•Incorporation of C16 and C4 fatty acids in UhMELs depends on enzyme specificities.•Mac1 is responsible for of the small fatty acids at the mannose position C2.•Mac2 adds the medium chain length fatty acids to the man...

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Veröffentlicht in:Fungal genetics and biology 2019-09, Vol.130, p.91-97
Hauptverfasser: Deinzer, Hans-Tobias, Linne, Uwe, Xie, Xiulan, Bölker, Michael, Sandrock, Björn
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•U. hordei produced mono-acetylated MEL-C as a result of the specificity of UhMat1.•Incorporation of C16 and C4 fatty acids in UhMELs depends on enzyme specificities.•Mac1 is responsible for of the small fatty acids at the mannose position C2.•Mac2 adds the medium chain length fatty acids to the mannose residue C3. Mannosylerythritol lipids (MELs) are surface active molecules produced by many basidiomycetous fungi. MELs consist of a mannosylerythritol disaccharide, which is acylated with short and medium chain fatty acids at the mannosyl moiety. A gene cluster composed of five genes is required for MEL biosynthesis. Here we show that the plant pathogenic fungus Ustilago hordei secretes these glycolipids under nitrogen starvation conditions. In contrast to MELs produced by the closely related fungus Ustilago maydis those secreted by U. hordei are mostly mono-acetylated and contain a different mixture of acyl groups. Cross-species complementation between these fungi revealed that these differences result from different catalytic activities of the acetyltransferase Mat1 and the acyltransferases Mac1 and Mac2. U. maydis mat1 mutants expressing the homologous mat1 gene from U. hordei produced mostly mono-acetylated variants and lack di-acetylated MELs normally produced by U. maydis. Furthermore, we determined that the acyltransferase Mac1 acylates the mannosylerythritol moiety at position C2 while Mac2 acylates C3. The identification of decorating enzymes with different substrate specificities will allow the tailor-made production of novel subsets of MELs.
ISSN:1087-1845
1096-0937
DOI:10.1016/j.fgb.2019.05.003