<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<STUDY_SET xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance">
  <STUDY center_name="GEO" alias="GSE114057" accession="SRP144633">
    <IDENTIFIERS>
      <PRIMARY_ID>SRP144633</PRIMARY_ID>
      <EXTERNAL_ID namespace="BioProject" label="primary">PRJNA464033</EXTERNAL_ID>
      <EXTERNAL_ID namespace="GEO">GSE114057</EXTERNAL_ID>
    </IDENTIFIERS>
    <DESCRIPTOR>
      <STUDY_TITLE>Engineering the Cellulolytic Fungus Myceliophthora thermophila into a Platform for Producing Commodity Chemicals Directly from Lignocellulose</STUDY_TITLE>
      <STUDY_TYPE existing_study_type="Transcriptome Analysis"/>
      <STUDY_ABSTRACT>Producing the fuels and chemicals from renewable plant biomass has been thought as a feasible way for global sustainable development. However, the economical efficiency of biorefinery remains challenges. Here a cellulolytic thermophilic fungus, Myceliophthora thermophila, was constructed into a platform through metabolic engineering, which can efficiently convert lignocellulose to important bulk chemicals for polymers, four carbon 1, 4-diacids (malic and succinic acid), directly from lignocellulose without any extra enzymes addition or complicated pretreatment, with titer of over 200 g/L on cellulose and 110 g/L on plant biomass (corncob) during fed-batch fermentation. Our study represents a milestone of consolidated bioprocessing technology (CBP) and offers a new promising system for cost-effectively production of biomass-based chemicals and potentially fuels. Overall design: mRNA profiles of Myceliophthora thermophila ATCC42464 wild-type strain and it derivatives exposed to glucose or cellulose (Avicel). The derivates (JG141,JG207, JG207Ncclr2, and JG336 strains) were obtained by genetic manipulation in M. thermophila wild-type strain.</STUDY_ABSTRACT>
      <CENTER_PROJECT_NAME>GSE114057</CENTER_PROJECT_NAME>
    </DESCRIPTOR>
    <STUDY_LINKS>
      <STUDY_LINK>
        <XREF_LINK>
          <DB>pubmed</DB>
          <ID>31078793</ID>
        </XREF_LINK>
      </STUDY_LINK>
    </STUDY_LINKS>
  </STUDY>
</STUDY_SET>
