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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, June 2002, p. 3156-3158, Vol. 68, No. 6
0099-2240/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.68.6.3156-3158.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Lignocellulose Affects Mn2+ Regulation of Peroxidase Transcript Levels in Solid-State Cultures of Pleurotus ostreatus
Roni Cohen, Oded Yarden, and Yitzhak Hadar*
Department of Plant Pathology and Microbiology and The Otto Warburg Center for Biotechnology in Agriculture, Faculty of Agricultural, Food, and Environmental Quality Sciences, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Rehovot 76100, Israel
Received 16 November 2001/
Accepted 5 March 2002

ABSTRACT
The effect of Mn
2+ amendment on peroxidase gene expression was
studied during
Pleurotus ostreatus growth on cotton stalks.
Four peroxidase-encoding genes were expressed differentially
and in a manner different from that observed in defined media.
Mn
2+ affects
mnp3 expression even 2 h after its addition to
the cultures, suggesting a direct effect of the metal ion on
expression.

INTRODUCTION
Pleurotus species belong to the group of white rot fungi that
are responsible for the degradation of lignin (
16,
20).
Pleurotus ostreatus produces three types of oxidative extracellular enzymes:
manganese-dependent peroxidases (MnPs) (
16a), versatile peroxidases
(VPs) (
26), and laccases (
25). VPs have been found in fungi
from the genera
Pleurotus and
Bjerkandera and are suggested
to be hybrids of MnP and lignin peroxidase (
8,
21). The importance
of Mn
2+ ions, which are naturally present in lignocellulosic
substrates, for the lignin degradation process by
Pleurotus species has been demonstrated (
6,
9,
17,
18). In recent years,
different peroxidases have been purified from
Pleurotus species,
and their genes have been sequenced and analyzed. These include
mnp1 (
2),
mnp2 (
11), and
mnp3 (
14) from
P. ostreatus as well
as
vpl (corresponding to the
P. ostreatus mnp4 gene analyzed
here) and
vps1 from
Pleurotus eryngii, which show high identity
with the
P. ostreatus mnp2 gene (
7,
24). Ruiz-Dueñas
et al. (
23) studied the regulation of
P. eryngii mnp1 transcript
levels in peptone-containing liquid medium and stated that no
vpl transcript could be detected when Mn
2+ (25 µM) was
present in the medium. Previously, we described the regulation
of
P. ostreatus peroxidase activity and
mnp gene expression
by Mn
2+ as well as the lignin mineralization rate in peptone
medium (PM) under solid-state fermentation (SSF) conditions
(
9). The reduction in VP gene (
mnp1,
mnp2, and
mnp4) transcript
levels and the increase in
mnp3 (which encodes an MnP) transcript
level were colinear with the changes observed in the enzyme
activity profiles. Bogan et al. (
3) analyzed gene expression
during
Phanerochaete chrysosporium bioremediation of organopollutants
in soil. Janse et al. (
15) analyzed the expression of the
P. chrysosporium lignin peroxidase-, MnP-, and glyoxal oxidase-encoding
genes in wood. In both studies, the observed transcription patterns
were different from those found in defined media.
Since the environmental conditions that prevail in defined liquid or solid cultures are different from those in the natural substrate, extrapolation of results obtained during studies performed on cultures growing in defined media to those occurring under natural growth conditions should be performed with caution. As information concerning extracellular peroxidases of white rot fungi accumulates, we believe that it is timely to advance such analyses to conditions which are more similar to the natural lignocellulosic substrate. Such analyses would not only provide information relevant to the natural niche but would also provide a basis for comparing results obtained while analyzing the more amenable liquid culture medium system to the natural growth substrate.
The study of gene expression during SSF in natural substrates is challenging due to the presence of plant polyphenols and polysaccharides, which are known to inhibit PCR and reverse transcription (RT)-PCR (12). In the present study, we report on the comparative abundance of P. ostreatus MnP and VP gene transcripts during fungal SSF on a natural lignocellulosic substrate. P. ostreatus (pregrown on poor medium as described in reference 9) was used to inoculate sterile cotton stalks (3 g in polypropylene cups). In order to determine the expression levels of the mnp genes, we used a relative RT-PCR approach with oligonucleotide primer sets synthesized on the basis of nonconserved sequences of the different peroxidases, as previously described (9). As total RNA could not be used for RT-PCR (due to RT inhibitors present in the natural extract), we used mRNA (isolated with a PolyA-Tract kit; Promega). Quantitative calibration of mRNA was performed using ß-tubulin transcript abundance analyses as described previously (9). Briefly, the degrees of abundance of the RT-PCR products obtained from different transcripts and treatments were compared in a reaction that was terminated well within the linear phase of product accumulation. Preliminary results (data not shown) indicate that, under the reaction conditions chosen, 30 cycles of amplification were appropriate. RT-PCR amplifications were performed with RNA samples from different culture conditions in order to compare the relative abundances of mnp1, mnp2, mnp3, mnp4, and ß-tubulin gene transcripts. Although the natural substrate contains 5 ppm of manganese, our Mn2+ amendment (73 ppm) to the cotton stalks affected the expression of the different genes (Fig. 1). Transcripts of mnp1, mnp2, mnp3, and mnp4 were detected. The most significant effect of Mn2+ amendment was on mnp3 transcript abundance on day 7. The transcript levels of mnp2 increased on day 13, while mnp1 transcript levels were apparently not affected during the experiment. The mnp4 transcripts were almost undetectable in all the cultures analyzed, especially in the presence of Mn2+, which corresponds to its preferential expression in liquid cultures, and inhibition by Mn2+ as described for P. eryngii (23). These results indicate a trend of expression different from that reported when the fungus was cultured under defined conditions using PM and perlite as solid supports. Under these conditions, Mn2+ amendment increased MnP-encoding gene transcript levels, while the levels of the VP-encoding gene transcripts declined (9). These differences could be explained by additional factors that affect gene expression, such as nutrient nitrogen (22) or natural inducers that are present in the cotton stalks. Such compounds have been reported to increase laccase activity and lignin degradation by P. ostreatus (1) and MnP activity in PM (R. Cohen et al., unpublished results).
Mn
2+ amendment enhanced lignin degradation during
P. ostreatus growth on cotton stalks (
18). This effect was demonstrated by
measuring the [
14C]lignin mineralization rate, as well as lignin
content, under the same culture conditions used in the present
study. Under these conditions cellulose degradation was not
affected. Thus, an increase in preferential lignin degradation
was achieved and in vitro digestibility of organic matter was
enhanced. It was suggested that this may be the result of an
increase in the activity of lignin-degrading enzymes (
18). In
the present study we aim to support this hypothesis by the analysis
of changes in peroxidase gene transcript levels.
The regulation of mnp and vp genes over short periods in P. chrysosporium and P. eryngii, respectively, has been studied (4, 23). However, induction during SSF on a natural substrate has not been demonstrated in white rot fungi. To determine the kinetics of the alterations in mnp transcript levels following Mn2+ amendment, we conducted a series of short-term (0 to 8 h) Mn2+ induction experiments. Mn2+ (23 ppm) was added to 7-day-old nonamended cultures. The Mn2+ was added in the presence of 1% Tween 20 to enable the uptake of Mn2+ by the fungus, which produces a hydrophobic surface. Samples were collected after 2, 4, and 8 h. Addition of Tween 20 alone did not affect gene expression (Fig. 2B). A significant and positive effect of Mn2+ on mnp3 expression was detected after 2 h, while the expression levels of mnp2 were only slightly affected and mnp1 transcript levels were apparently unchanged. The expression of mnp4 was hardly detected during the course of this experiment (data not shown).
The same trend was obtained after 4 and 8 h (data not shown).
In
P. chrysosporium, detectable
mnp mRNA was found within 20
to 40 min of Mn
2+ amendment of Mn
2+-deficient nitrogen-limited
cultures. It was suggested that the Mn
2+ may be directly involved
in activating gene expression (
4).
Different studies have shown that MnP regulation occurs at the level of gene transcription by means of nutrient nitrogen, manganese, heat shock, and other factors (4, 5, 10, 19, 23). These data and those presented here suggest the presence of regulatory elements in the promoter regions of these genes. Since mnp3 was sequenced without its promoter region (14), we isolated this region (1,000 nucleotides [nt]) (using a GenomeWalker kit; Clontech) and analyzed it in comparison with the other mnp genes. Interestingly, this region contained only one metal response element. We therefore continued the sequence analysis further upstream (approximately 2,500 nt sequenced on both strands; GenBank accession number AF435445). Most of the regulatory elements of the mnp3 promoter were located between 1,000 and 2,400 nt upstream of the ATG, whereas in the other genes the regulatory elements were reported in the first 1,000 nt. We identified seven putative metal response elements in mnp3. These findings provide a basis for future functional dissection of the significant and positive effect of Mn2+ on this gene's expression. The presence of nitrogen regulatory elements in the promoter region of mnp3 and in the other genes could explain the differences in gene expression between cotton stalks and medium containing peptone. The advances in use of the P. ostreatus DNA-mediated transformation system (13) should prove useful in future alteration of the regulation of peroxidase genes in this fungus.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This study was supported by a grant from the Israeli Ministry
of Sciences, Culture, and Sports.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Plant Pathology and Microbiology, Faculty of Agricultural, Food and Environmental Quality Sciences, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, P.O. Box 12, Rehovot 76100, Israel. Phone: (972) 8-9489935. Fax: (972) 8-9468785. E-mail:
hadar{at}agri.huji.ac.il.


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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, June 2002, p. 3156-3158, Vol. 68, No. 6
0099-2240/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.68.6.3156-3158.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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