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Review
. 2014 Feb 27:5:75.
doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2014.00075. eCollection 2014.

Making recombinant proteins in filamentous fungi- are we expecting too much?

Affiliations
Review

Making recombinant proteins in filamentous fungi- are we expecting too much?

Helena Nevalainen et al. Front Microbiol. .

Abstract

Hosts used for the production of recombinant proteins are typically high-protein secreting mutant strains that have been selected for a specific purpose, such as efficient production of cellulose-degrading enzymes. Somewhat surprisingly, sequencing of the genomes of a series of mutant strains of the cellulolytic Trichoderma reesei, widely used as an expression host for recombinant gene products, has shed very little light on the nature of changes that boost high-level protein secretion. While it is generally agreed and shown that protein secretion in filamentous fungi occurs mainly through the hyphal tip, there is growing evidence that secretion of proteins also takes place in sub-apical regions. Attempts to increase correct folding and thereby the yields of heterologous proteins in fungal hosts by co-expression of cellular chaperones and foldases have resulted in variable success; underlying reasons have been explored mainly at the transcriptional level. The observed physiological changes in fungal strains experiencing increasing stress through protein overexpression under strong gene promoters also reflect the challenge the host organisms are experiencing. It is evident, that as with other eukaryotes, fungal endoplasmic reticulum is a highly dynamic structure. Considering the above, there is an emerging body of work exploring the use of weaker expression promoters to avoid undue stress. Filamentous fungi have been hailed as candidates for the production of pharmaceutically relevant proteins for therapeutic use. One of the biggest challenges in terms of fungally produced heterologous gene products is their mode of glycosylation; fungi lack the functionally important terminal sialylation of the glycans that occurs in mammalian cells. Finally, exploration of the metabolic pathways and fluxes together with the development of sophisticated fermentation protocols may result in new strategies to produce recombinant proteins in filamentous fungi.

Keywords: Trichoderma reesei; expression; filamentous fungi; recombinant proteins; secretion.

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Figures

FIGURE 1
FIGURE 1
Schematic representations depicting the general morphology of Trichoderma reesei (top) and proposed pathways of protein synthesis and secretion (enlarged hyphal tip, below). Proteins are synthesized in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), then travel in secretory vesicles (sv) to the Golgi for further post-translational modification. Secretory vesicles then carry the modified proteins to the hyphal tip for apical secretion, or possibly to the septa in an alternative secretory pathway.

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