A broader role for AmyR in Aspergillus niger: regulation of the utilisation of d-glucose or d-galactose containing oligo- and polysaccharides

Publication date

2012-01

Authors

vanKuyk, Patricia A.
Benen, Jaques A. E.
Wösten, HanISNI 0000000395913701
Visser, Jaap
de Vries, RonaldISNI 0000000391144204

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by_nc

Abstract

AmyR is commonly considered a regulator of starch degradation whose activity is induced by the presence of maltose, the disaccharide building block of starch. In this study, we demonstrate that the role of AmyR extends beyond starch degradation. Enzyme activity assays, genes expression analysis and growth profiling on d-glucose- and d-galactose-containing oligo- and polysaccharides showed that AmyR regulates the expression of some of the Aspergillus niger genes encoding alpha- and beta-glucosidases, alpha- and beta- galactosidases, as well as genes encoding alpha-amlyases and glucoamylases. In addition, we provide evidence that d-glucose or a metabolic product thereof may be the inducer of the AmyR system in A. niger and not maltose, as is commonly assumed.

Keywords

AmyR, Aspergillus niger, Gene regulation, Polysaccharide degradation

Citation

vanKuyk, P A, Benen, J A E, Wosten, H A B, Visser, J & de Vries, R P 2012, 'A broader role for AmyR in Aspergillus niger : regulation of the utilisation of d-glucose or d-galactose containing oligo- and polysaccharides', Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, vol. 93, no. 1, pp. 285-293. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00253-011-3550-6