Weak acids, such as sorbic acid, are used as chemical food preservatives by the industry. Fungiovercome this weak-acid stress by inducing cellular responses mediated by transcription factors. In... Show moreWeak acids, such as sorbic acid, are used as chemical food preservatives by the industry. Fungiovercome this weak-acid stress by inducing cellular responses mediated by transcription factors. In ourresearch, a large-scale sorbic acid resistance screening was performed on 100 A. niger sensu stricto strains isolated fromvarious sources to study strain variability in sorbic acid resistance. Theminimal inhibitory concentration of undissociated (MICu) sorbic acid at pH = 4 in the MEB of the A. niger strains varies between 4.0 mMand 7.0 mM, with the average out of 100 strains being 4.8 0.8 mM, when scored after 28 days. MICu valueswere roughly 1mMlowerwhen tested in commercial ice tea. Genome sequencingof the most sorbic-acid-sensitive strain among the isolates revealed a premature stop codon inside thesorbic acid response regulator encoding gene sdrA. Repairing this missense mutation increased thesorbic acid resistance, showing that the sorbic-acid-sensitive phenotype of this strain is caused by theloss of SdrA function. To identify additional transcription factors involved in weak-acid resistance,a transcription factor knock-out library consisting of 240 A. niger deletion strains was screened. Thescreen identified a novel transcription factor,WarB, which contributes to the resistance against a broadrange of weak acids, including sorbic acid. The roles of SdrA,WarA andWarB in weak-acid resistance,including sorbic acid, were compared by creating single, double and the triple knock-out strains. Allthree transcription factors were found to have an additive effect on the sorbic acid stress response. Show less