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- Title
Overexpression of MET4 Leads to the Upregulation of Stress-Related Genes and Enhanced Sulfite Tolerance in Saccharomyces uvarum.
- Authors
Wei, Zhuo; Zhang, Zhiming; Zhao, Wenjuan; Yin, Tuo; Liu, Xiaozhen; Zhang, Hanyao
- Abstract
Saccharomyces uvarum is one of the few fermentative species that can be used in winemaking, but its weak sulfite tolerance is the main reason for its further use. Previous studies have shown that the expression of the methionine synthase gene (MET4) is upregulated in FZF1 (a gene encoding a putative zinc finger protein, which is a positive regulator of the transcription of the cytosolic sulfotransferase gene SSU1) overexpression transformant strains, but its exact function is unknown. To gain insight into the function of the MET4 gene, in this study, a MET4 overexpression vector was constructed and transformed into S. uvarum strain A9. The MET4 transformants showed a 20 mM increase in sulfite tolerance compared to the starting strain. Ninety-two differential genes were found in the transcriptome of A9-MET4 compared to the A9 strain, of which 90 were upregulated, and two were downregulated. The results of RT-qPCR analyses confirmed that the expression of the HOMoserine requiring gene (HOM3) in the sulfate assimilation pathway and some fermentation-stress-related genes were upregulated in the transformants. The overexpression of the MET4 gene resulted in a significant increase in sulfite tolerance, the upregulation of fermentation-stress-related gene expression, and significant changes in the transcriptome profile of the S. uvarum strain.
- Subjects
ZINC-finger proteins; SACCHAROMYCES; GENES; GENETIC overexpression; GENE expression
- Publication
Cells (2073-4409), 2022, Vol 11, Issue 4, p636
- ISSN
2073-4409
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3390/cells11040636