Penicillin production in Penicillium chrysogenum is controlled by PcVelA and PcLaeA, two components of the regulatory velvet-like complex. Comparative microarray analysis with mutants lacking PcVelA or PcLaeA revealed a set of 62 common genes affected by the loss of both components. A downregulated gene in both knockout strains is PcchiB1, potentially encoding a class V chitinase. Under nutrient-depleted conditions, transcript levels of PcchiB1 are strongly upregulated, and the gene product contributes to more than 50 % of extracellular chitinase activity. Functional characterization by generating PcchiB1-disruption strains revealed that PcChiB1 is responsible for cell wall integrity and pellet formation in P. chrysogenum. Further, fluorescence microscopy with a DsRed-labelled chitinase suggests a cell wall association of the protein. An unexpected phenotype occurred when knockout strains were grown on media containing N-acetylglucosamine as the sole C and N source, where, in contrast to the recipient, a penicillin producer strain, the mutants and an ancestral strain show distinct mycelial growth. We discuss the relevance of this class V chitinase for morphology in an industrially important fungus.
INTRODUCTIONPenicillium chrysogenum is the main industrial producer of the b-lactam antibiotic penicillin. In this filamentous ascomycete, developmental processes and secondary metabolism are tightly linked and controlled by diverse conserved regulators. Among these are PcVelA and PcLaeA, two global regulators, which have recently been shown to control penicillin biosynthesis as well as hyphal and conidiophore morphogenesis (Hoff et al., 2010a). Homologues of both proteins have been intensively studied in the model fungus Aspergillus nidulans (Calvo, 2008;Bok & Keller, 2004;Sarikaya Bayram et al., 2010). For example, it has been shown that both proteins, together with VelB, form the core of a regulatory heterotrimeric complex, which we refer to as the velvet complex (Bayram et al., 2008a). The general regulatory function of these proteins is highly conserved in diverse filamentous fungi (Calvo, 2008), and it has been shown that velvet-like complexes exist in other ascomycetes (Hoff et al., 2010a;Wiemann et al., 2010).Despite its importance for development and secondary metabolism, so far only a few high-throughput transcriptional analyses have been conducted with strains lacking components of the velvet complex. Cary et al. (2007) performed a microarray analysis with a DveA mutant of Aspergillus flavus to analyse the expression levels of 5002 genes. That study identified 136 differentially regulated genes in the disruption strain compared with the control strain, some of these representing known aflatoxin biosynthetic genes. In Aspergillus fumigatus, about 20-40 % of all secondary metabolite biosynthesis genes are negatively affected by the loss of laeA, as detected by whole-genome microarray analysis (Perrin et al., 2007).Using a PcvelA knockout strain, our previous microarray study to understand the expression profi...