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  6. Engineering Dispersed Mycelium Morphology In Aspergillus Niger For Enhanced Mycoprotein Production Via Crispr/cas9-mediated Genome Editing

Engineering dispersed mycelium morphology in Aspergillus niger for enhanced mycoprotein production via CRISPR/Cas9-mediated genome editing

Yingshuai Zhou1, Yu Duan2, Limei Chen2

  • 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.

Bioresource Technology|May 21, 2025

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View abstract on PubMed

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.
Keywords:
Aspergillus nigerFilamentous fungiGene editingMycoproteinSph3Uge3agsAagsB

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