Chemical induction of silent biosynthetic pathway transcription in Aspergillus niger

Katja M. Fisch(University of Bristol), Allison F. Gillaspy(University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center), M. Gipson(University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center), Jon C. Henrikson(University of Oklahoma), Ashley R. Hoover(University of Oklahoma), Lydgia Jackson(University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center), Fares Z. Najar(University of Oklahoma), Heike Wägele(Zoological Research Museum Alexander Koenig), Robert H. Cichewicz(University of Oklahoma)
Journal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology
June 11, 2009
Cited by 166Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Manipulation of the fungal epigenome is hypothesized to be an effective method for accessing natural products from silent biosynthetic pathways. A library of epigenetic modifiers was tested using the fungus Aspergillus niger to determine the impact of small-molecule inhibitors on reversing the transcriptional suppression of biosynthetic genes involved in polyketide (PKS), non-ribosomal peptide (NRPS), and hybrid PKS-NRPS (HPN) production. Examination of expressed sequence tag libraries from A. niger demonstrated that >70% of its PKS-, NRPS-, and HPN-encoding gene clusters were transcriptionally suppressed under standard laboratory culture conditions. Using a chemical epigenetic methodology, we showed that treatment of A. niger with suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid and 5-azacytidine led to the transcriptional upregulation of many secondary-metabolite-encoding biosynthetic gene clusters. Chemical epigenetic modifiers exhibited positional biases for upregulating chromosomally distal gene clusters. In addition, a phylogenetic-based preference was noted in the upregulation of reducing clade I PKS gene clusters, while reducing clade IV PKS gene clusters were largely unaffected. Manipulating epigenetic features in fungi is a powerful method for accessing the products of silent biosynthetic pathways. Moreover, this approach can be readily incorporated into modern microbial screening operations.


Related Papers