Engineering dispersed mycelium morphology in Aspergillus niger for enhanced mycoprotein production via CRISPR/Cas9-mediated genome editing
1College of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, Tianjin University of Science and Technology, Tianjin 300457, China; Tianjin Institute of Industrial Biotechnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Tianjin 300308, China.
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Summary
Engineered Aspergillus niger with disrupted genes achieved dispersed morphology, boosting biomass and protein content. Fermentation optimization further enhanced these gains for industrial applications.
Area of Science:
- Biotechnology
- Industrial Microbiology
- Synthetic Biology
Background:
- Filamentous fungi are crucial for industrial fermentation, but their morphology impacts yield.
- Aspergillus niger forms pellets, limiting mass transfer and industrial use.
- Optimizing morphology and fermentation is key for enhanced microbial protein production.
Purpose of the Study:
- To engineer Aspergillus niger for improved microbial protein production.
- To overcome limitations of pellet formation in submerged cultures.
- To enhance biomass and protein content through genetic and process optimization.
Main Methods:
- CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing to disrupt α-1,3-glucan synthase (agsA, agsB) and galactosaminogalactan synthase (sph3, uge3) genes.
- Morphological engineering to achieve complete dispersion of fungal pellets.
- Fermentation optimization using Response Surface Methodology (RSM) with Box-Behnken design.
Main Results:
- Engineered A. niger (AnΔABSU) showed dispersed morphology, a 77.52% increase in biomass, and 39.98% higher protein content.
- Transcriptomics revealed upregulated nutrient transporters, altered cell wall integrity, and enhanced amino acid biosynthesis.
- Optimized fermentation yielded 16.67 g/L biomass and 45.91% protein content, significant improvements over the wild-type.
Conclusions:
- Genetic modification and fermentation optimization successfully created a high-efficiency microbial protein cell factory.
- Morphological engineering is a viable strategy to enhance fungal fermentation processes.
- This integrated approach offers a novel paradigm for industrial biotechnology applications.