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  5. Insights from the Fungus Fusarium oxysporum Point to High Affinity Glucose Transporters as Targets for Enhancing Ethanol Production from Lignocellulose
 
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Insights from the Fungus Fusarium oxysporum Point to High Affinity Glucose Transporters as Targets for Enhancing Ethanol Production from Lignocellulose

Author(s)
Ali, Shahin S.  
Nugent, Brian  
Mullins, Ewen  
Doohan, Fiona M.  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/6129
Date Issued
2013-01-30
Date Available
2014-11-10T11:51:05Z
Abstract
Ethanol is the most-widely used biofuel in the world today. Lignocellulosic plant biomass derived from agricultural residue can be converted to ethanol via microbial bioprocessing. Fungi such as Fusarium oxysporum can simultaneously saccharify straw to sugars and ferment sugars to ethanol. But there are many bottlenecks that need to be overcome to increase the efficacy of microbial production of ethanol from straw, not least enhancement of the rate of fermentation of both hexose and pentose sugars. This research tested the hypothesis that the rate of sugar uptake by F. oxysporum would enhance the ethanol yields from lignocellulosic straw and that high affinity glucose transporters can enhance ethanol yields from this substrate. We characterized a novel hexose transporter (Hxt) from this fungus. The F. oxysporum Hxt represents a novel transporter with homology to yeast glucose signaling/transporter proteins Rgt2 and Snf3, but it lacks their C-terminal domain which is necessary for glucose signalling. Its expression level decreased with increasing glucose concentration in the medium and in a glucose uptake study the Km(glucose) was 0.9 mM, which indicated that the protein is a high affinity glucose transporter. Post-translational gene silencing or over expression of the Hxt in F. oxysporum directly affected the glucose and xylose transport capacity and ethanol yielded by F. oxysporum from straw, glucose and xylose. Thus we conclude that this Hxt has the capacity to transport both C5 and C6 sugars and to enhance ethanol yields from lignocellulosic material. This study has confirmed that high affinity glucose transporters are ideal candidates for improving ethanol yields from lignocellulose because their activity and level of expression is high in low glucose concentrations, which is very common during the process of consolidated processing.
Other Sponsorship
Department of Agriculture, Fisheries & Food Research Stimulus Fund
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Journal
PLoS ONE
Volume
8
Issue
1
Start Page
e54701
Copyright (Published Version)
2013 the Authors
Subjects

Saccharomyces-Cerevis...

Neurospora-Crassa

HXT genes

Bioethanol production...

Chemostat cultures

Direct conversion

Glycolytic flux

Rice straw

Fermentation

Yeast hexose transpor...

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0054701
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/
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ali_et_al_2013.pdf

Size

2.4 MB

Format

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Checksum (MD5)

0fbb0f0ccbef03b812fb96a56a543328

Owning collection
Biology & Environmental Science Research Collection
Mapped collections
Institute of Food and Health Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
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