Kluyveromyces marxianus developing ethanol tolerance during adaptive evolution with significant improvements of multiple pathways

马克斯克鲁维酵母在适应性进化过程中形成乙醇耐受性,多种途径显著改善

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作者:Wenjuan Mo #, Mengzhu Wang #, Rongrong Zhan, Yao Yu, Yungang He, Hong Lu

Background

Kluyveromyces marxianus, the known fastest-growing eukaryote on the earth, has remarkable thermotolerance and capacity to utilize various agricultural residues to produce low-cost bioethanol, and hence is industrially important to resolve the imminent energy shortage crisis. Currently, the poor ethanol tolerance hinders its operable application in the industry, and it is necessary to improve K. marxianus' ethanol resistance and unravel the underlying systematical mechanisms. However, this has been seldom reported to date.

Conclusions

This study reveals that ethanol-driven laboratory evolution could improve K. marxianus' ethanol tolerance via significant up-regulation of multiple pathways including anti-osmotic, anti-oxidative, and anti-thermic processes, and indeed consequently raised ethanol yield in industrial high-temperature and high-ethanol circumstance. Our findings give genetic clues for further rational optimization of K. marxianus' ethanol production, and also partly confirm the positively correlated relationship between yeast's ethanol tolerance and production.

Results

We carried out a wild-type haploid K. marxianus FIM1 in adaptive evolution in 6% (v/v) ethanol. After 100-day evolution, the KM-100d population was obtained; its ethanol tolerance increased up to 10% (v/v). Interestingly, DNA analysis and RNA-seq analysis showed that KM-100d yeasts' ethanol tolerance improvement was not due to ploidy change or meaningful mutations, but founded on transcriptional reprogramming in a genome-wide range. Even growth in an ethanol-free medium, many genes in KM-100d maintained their up-regulation. Especially, pathways of ethanol consumption, membrane lipid biosynthesis, anti-osmotic pressure, anti-oxidative stress, and protein folding were generally up-regulated in KM-100d to resist ethanol. Notably, enhancement of the secretory pathway may be the new strategy KM-100d developed to anti-osmotic pressure, instead of the traditional glycerol production way in S. cerevisiae. Inferred from the transcriptome data, besides ethanol tolerance, KM-100d may also develop the ability to resist osmotic, oxidative, and thermic stresses, and this was further confirmed by the cell viability test. Furthermore, under such environmental stresses, KM-100d greatly improved ethanol production than the original strain. In addition, we found that K. marxianus may adopt distinct routes to resist different ethanol concentrations. Trehalose biosynthesis was required for low ethanol, while sterol biosynthesis and the whole secretory pathway were activated for high ethanol. Conclusions: This study reveals that ethanol-driven laboratory evolution could improve K. marxianus' ethanol tolerance via significant up-regulation of multiple pathways including anti-osmotic, anti-oxidative, and anti-thermic processes, and indeed consequently raised ethanol yield in industrial high-temperature and high-ethanol circumstance. Our findings give genetic clues for further rational optimization of K. marxianus' ethanol production, and also partly confirm the positively correlated relationship between yeast's ethanol tolerance and production.

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