Filamentous fungi can each produce dozens of secondary metabolites which are attractive as therapeutics, drugs, antimicrobials, flavour compounds and other high-value chemicals. Furthermore, they can be used as an expression system for eukaryotic proteins. Application of most fungal secondary metabolites is, however, so far hampered by the lack of suitable fermentation protocols for the producing strain and/or by low product titers. To overcome these limitations, we report here the engineering of the industrial fungus Aspergillus niger to produce high titers (up to 4,500 mg • l −1) of secondary metabolites belonging to the class of nonribosomal peptides.
CITATION STYLE
Richter, L., Wanka, F., Boecker, S., Storm, D., Kurt, T., Vural, Ö., … Meyer, V. (2014). Engineering of Aspergillus niger for the production of secondary metabolites. Fungal Biology and Biotechnology, 1(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s40694-014-0004-9
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