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Journal article

Investigating the Influence of Glycerol on the Utilization of Glucose in Yarrowia lipolytica Using RNA-Seq-Based Transcriptomics

From

Department of Biotechnology and Biomedicine, Technical University of Denmark1

Fungal Physiology and Biotechnology, Department of Systems Biology, Technical University of Denmark2

Department of Systems Biology, Technical University of Denmark3

Chalmers University of Technology4

Section for Synthetic Biology, Department of Biotechnology and Biomedicine, Technical University of Denmark5

Regulatory Genomics, Section for Synthetic Biology, Department of Biotechnology and Biomedicine, Technical University of Denmark6

Glycerol is considered as a promising substrate for biotechnological applications and the non-conventional yeast Yarrowia lipolytica has been used extensively for the valorization of this compound. Contrary to S. cerevisiae, Y. lipolytica seems to prefer glycerol over glucose and it has been reported previously that the presence of glycerol can suppress the consumption of glucose in co-substrate fermentations.

Based on these observations, we hypothesized glycerol repression-like effects in Y. lipolytica, which are converse to well described carbon repression mechanisms ensuring the prioritized use of glucose (e.g. in S. cerevisiae). We therefore aimed to investigate this effect on the level of transcription.

Strains varying in the degree of glucose suppression were chosen and characterized in high-resolution growth screenings, resulting in the detection of different growth phenotypes under glycerol-glucose mixed conditions. Two strains, IBT and W29, were selected and cultivated in chemostats using glucose, glycerol and glucose/glycerol as carbon sources, followed by an RNA-Seq-based transcriptome analysis.

We could show that several transporters were significantly higher expressed in W29, which is potentially related to the observed physiological differences. However, most of the expression variation between the strains were regardless of the carbon source applied, and cross-comparisons revealed that the strain-specific carbon source responses underwent in the opposite direction.

A deeper analysis of the substrate specific carbon source response led to the identification of several differentially expressed genes with orthologous functions related to signal transduction and transcriptional regulation. This study provides an initial investigation on potentially novel carbon source regulation mechanisms in yeasts.

Language: English
Publisher: Genetics Society of America
Year: 2019
Pages: 4059-4071
ISSN: 21601836
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1534/g3.119.400469
ORCIDs: 0000-0002-3593-5792 and Workman, Christopher T

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