Synthetic and Systems Biotechnology (Jun 2024)

The forced activation of asexual conidiation in Aspergillus niger simplifies bioproduction

  • Xingyu Wu,
  • Tingting Zhang,
  • Ke Zhang,
  • Rui Zhang,
  • Man Shi,
  • Chenlei Gu,
  • Tianqiong Shi,
  • Ling Lu,
  • Feng Xue,
  • Qing Xu,
  • Chi Zhang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 2
pp. 277 – 284

Abstract

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Aspergillus niger is an efficient cell factory for organic acids production, particularly l-malic acid, through genetic manipulation. However, the traditional method of collecting A. niger spores for inoculation is labor-intensive and resource-consuming. In our study, we used the CRISPR-Cas9 system to replace the promoter of brlA, a key gene in Aspergillus conidiation, with a xylose-inducible promoter xylP in l-malic acid-producing A. niger strain RG0095, generating strain brlAxylP. When induced with xylose in submerged liquid culture, brlAxylP exhibited significant upregulation of conidiation-related genes. This induction allowed us to easily collect an abundance of brlAxylP spores (>7.1 × 106/mL) in liquid xylose medium. Significantly, the submerged conidiation approach preserves the substantial potential of A. niger as a foundational cellular platform for the biosynthesis of organic acids, including but not limited to l-malic acid. In summary, our study offers a simplified submerged conidiation strategy to streamline the preparation stage and reduce labor and material costs for industrial organic acid production using Aspergillus species.

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