4.5 Article

Enhancement of ganoderic acid production by promoting sporulation in a liquid static culture of Ganoderma species

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 328, Issue -, Pages 72-77

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbiotec.2021.01.014

Keywords

Ganoderma; Ganoderic acids; Medicinal mushroom; Fermentation; Sporulation

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81860668]
  2. Yunnan Applied Basic Research Project [2018FB065]
  3. Natural Science Project of University Science and Research Program for Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region [XJEDU2020Y047]
  4. Yunnan Ten Thousand Talents PlanYoung & Elite Talents Project

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Promoting sporulation in Ganoderma efficiently improves the production of ganoderic acids in liquid static cultures, with higher levels observed in spores compared to liquid cultures. Through this novel strategy, significant increases in GA content were achieved, indicating the potential for enhancing the application of Ganoderma-derived triterpenoids.
Ganoderic acids (GAs) produced by Ganoderma are a type of lanostane-type triterpenoids with anticancer and antimetastatic activities; however, low production of GAs limits its wide application. In this study, a novel strategy by promoting sporulation of Ganoderma was developed to increase GA production. First, a high-spore producing Ganoderma strain G. 260125 was obtained from dikaryotic strain CGMCC 5.0026, and the sporulation-specific gene of this strain exhibits a higher transcription level than CGMCC 5.0026. Then, the effect of promoting sporulation on GA content was investigated. The maximum ganoderic acid (GA)-T, GA-Mk, and GA Me contents in G. 260125 in shake flasks were 358.97, 78.32, and 12.75 mu g/100 mg dry weight, respectively, which were 3.42, 2.91, and 1.73 times higher than those obtained in CGMCC 5.0026. Moreover, total and individual GA contents in spores were significantly higher than those in liquid static culture. Both concentrations of intermediates and transcription levels of GA biosynthetic genes also improved in G. 260125 during fermentation compared with those in CGMCC 5.0026. For scaling-up experiments, GA-T, GA-Me, and GA-Mk production in G. 260125 improved by 2.2-, 2.6-, and 2.1-fold compared with those in CGMCC 5.0026. In addition, the effectiveness of the developed strategy was also confirmed in three different Ganoderma strains. This work illustrated that promoting sporulation efficiently improves GA production in liquid static cultures of Ganoderma.

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