Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Basotra N" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Retraction notice to "Thermostable xylanases from thermophilic fungi and bacteria: Current perspective" [Bioresour. Technol. 277 (2019) 195-203] Chadha BS; Kaur B; Basotra N; Tsang A; Pandey A; 39447502
CSFG
2 Developing endophytic Penicillium oxalicum as a source of lignocellulolytic enzymes for enhanced hydrolysis of biorefinery relevant pretreated rice straw Sharma G; Kaur B; Raheja Y; Kaur A; Singh V; Basotra N; Di Falco M; Tsang A; Chadha BS; 39249151
CSFG
3 CRISPR/Cas9 mediated gene editing of transcription factor ACE1 for enhanced cellulase production in thermophilic fungus Rasamsonia emersonii Singh V; Raheja Y; Basotra N; Sharma G; Tsang A; Chadha BS; 37658430
CSFG
4 Lignocellulolytic enzymes from Aspergillus allahabadii for efficient bioconversion of rice straw into fermentable sugars and biogas Sharma G; Kaur B; Raheja Y; Agrawal D; Basotra N; Di Falco M; Tsang A; Singh Chadha B; 35753566
CSFG
5 Combination of system biology and classical approaches for developing biorefinery relevant lignocellulolytic Rasamsonia emersonii strain Raheja Y; Singh V; Kaur B; Basotra N; Di Falco M; Tsang A; Singh Chadha B; 35318142
CSFG
6 Discovery and Expression of Thermostable LPMOs from Thermophilic Fungi for Producing Efficient Lignocellulolytic Enzyme Cocktails. Agrawal D, Basotra N, Balan V, Tsang A, Chadha BS 31792786
CSFG
7 Malbranchea cinnamomea: A thermophilic fungal source of catalytically efficient lignocellulolytic glycosyl hydrolases and metal dependent enzymes. Mahajan C, Basotra N, Singh S, Di Falco M, Tsang A, Chadha BS 26476165
CSFG
8 Expression of catalytically efficient xylanases from thermophilic fungus Malbranchea cinnamomea for synergistically enhancing hydrolysis of lignocellulosics. Basotra N, Joshi S, Satyanarayana T, Pati PK, Tsang A, Chadha BS 29174359
CSFG
9 Thermostable xylanases from thermophilic fungi and bacteria: Current perspective. Chadha BS, Kaur B, Basotra N, Tsang A, Pandey A 30679061
CSFG
10 Characterization of a novel Lytic Polysaccharide Monooxygenase from Malbranchea cinnamomea exhibiting dual catalytic behavior Basotra N; Dhiman SS; Agrawal D; Sani RK; Tsang A; Chadha BS; 31054382
ENCS

 

Title:CRISPR/Cas9 mediated gene editing of transcription factor ACE1 for enhanced cellulase production in thermophilic fungus Rasamsonia emersonii
Authors:Singh VRaheja YBasotra NSharma GTsang AChadha BS
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37658430/
DOI:10.1186/s40694-023-00165-y
Publication:Fungal biology and biotechnology
Keywords:ACE1 transcription factorCRISPR/Cas9CellulasesGene expressionRasamsonia emersonii
PMID:37658430 Category: Date Added:2023-09-02
Dept Affiliation: CSFG

Description:

Background: The filamentous fungus Rasamsonia emersonii has immense potential to produce biorefinery relevant thermostable cellulase and hemicellulase enzymes using lignocellulosic biomass. Previously in our lab, a hyper-cellulase producing strain of R. emersonii was developed through classical breeding and system biology approaches. ACE1, a pivotal transcription factor in fungi, plays a crucial role in negatively regulating the expression of cellulase genes. In order to identify the role of ACE1 in cellulase production and to further improve the lignocellulolytic enzyme production in R. emersonii, CRISPR/Cas9 mediated disruption of ACE1 gene was employed.

Results: A gene-edited ?ACE1 strain (GN11) was created, that showed 21.97, 20.70 and 24.63, 9.42, 18.12%, improved endoglucanase, cellobiohydrolase (CBHI), ß-glucosidase, FPase, and xylanase, activities, respectively, as compared to parental strain M36. The transcriptional profiling showed that the expression of global regulator (XlnR) and different CAZymes genes including endoglucanases, cellobiohydrolase, ß-xylosidase, xylanase, ß-glucosidase and lytic polysaccharide mono-oxygenases (LPMOs) were significantly enhanced, suggesting critical roles of ACE1 in negatively regulating the expression of various key genes associated with cellulase production in R. emersonii. Whereas, the disruption of ACE1 significantly down-regulated the expression of CreA repressor gene as also evidenced by 2-deoxyglucose (2-DG) resistance phenotype exhibited by edited strain GN11 as well as appreciably higher constitutive production of cellulases in the presence of glucose and mixture of glucose and disaccharide (MGDs) both in batch and flask fed batch mode of culturing. Furthermore, ?ACE1 strains were evaluated for the hydrolysis of biorefinery relevant steam/acid pretreated unwashed rice straw slurry (Praj Industries Ltd; 15% substrate loading rate) and were found to be significantly superior when compared to the benchmark enzymes produced by parent strain M36 and Cellic Ctec3.

Conclusions: Current work uncovers the crucial role of ACE1 in regulating the expression of the various cellulase genes and carbon catabolite repression mechanism in R. emersonii. This study represents the first successful report of utilizing CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing technology to disrupt the ACE1 gene in the thermophlic fungus R. emersonii. The improved methodologies presented in this work might be applied to other commercially important fungal strains for which genetic manipulation tools are limited.





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