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1.
The ability of unicellular green algal species such as Chlamydomonas reinhardtii to produce hydrogen gas via iron‐hydrogenase is well known. However, the oxygen‐sensitive hydrogenase is closely linked to the photosynthetic chain in such a way that hydrogen and oxygen production need to be separated temporally for sustained photo‐production. Under illumination, sulfur‐deprivation has been shown to accommodate the production of hydrogen gas by partially‐deactivating O2 evolution activity, leading to anaerobiosis in a sealed culture. As these facets are coupled, and the system complex, mathematical approaches potentially are of significant value since they may reveal improved or even optimal schemes for maximizing hydrogen production. Here, a mechanistic model of the system is constructed from consideration of the essential pathways and processes. The role of sulfur in photosynthesis (via PSII) and the storage and catabolism of endogenous substrate, and thus growth and decay of culture density, are explicitly modeled in order to describe and explore the complex interactions that lead to H2 production during sulfur‐deprivation. As far as possible, functional forms and parameter values are determined or estimated from experimental data. The model is compared with published experimental studies and, encouragingly, qualitative agreement for trends in hydrogen yield and initiation time are found. It is then employed to probe optimal external sulfur and illumination conditions for hydrogen production, which are found to differ depending on whether a maximum yield of gas or initial production rate is required. The model constitutes a powerful theoretical tool for investigating novel sulfur cycling regimes that may ultimately be used to improve the commercial viability of hydrogen gas production from microorganisms. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2014;111: 320–335. © 2013 The Authors. Biotechnology and Bioengineering Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

2.
Sulphur limitation may restrain cell growth and viability. In the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, sulphur limitation may induce H2 production lasting for several days, which can be exploited as a renewable energy source. Sulphur limitation causes a large number of physiological changes, including the inactivation of photosystem II (PSII), leading to the establishment of hypoxia, essential for the increase in hydrogenase expression and activity. The inactivation of PSII has long been assumed to be caused by the sulphur‐limited turnover of its reaction center protein PsbA. Here we reinvestigated this issue in detail and show that: (i) upon transferring Chlamydomonas cells to sulphur‐free media, the cellular sulphur content decreases only by about 25%; (ii) as demonstrated by lincomycin treatments, PsbA has a significant turnover, and other photosynthetic subunits, namely RbcL and CP43, are degraded more rapidly than PsbA. On the other hand, sulphur limitation imposes oxidative stress early on, most probably involving the formation of singlet oxygen in PSII, which leads to an increase in the expression of GDP‐L‐galactose phosphorylase, playing an essential role in ascorbate biosynthesis. When accumulated to the millimolar concentration range, ascorbate may inactivate the oxygen‐evolving complex and provide electrons to PSII, albeit at a low rate. In the absence of a functional donor side and sufficient electron transport, PSII reaction centers are inactivated and degraded. We therefore demonstrate that the inactivation of PSII is a complex and multistep process, which may serve to mitigate the damaging effects of sulphur limitation.  相似文献   

3.
The unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii possesses a [FeFe]-hydrogenase HydA1 (EC 1.12.7.2), which is coupled to the photosynthetic electron transport chain. Large amounts of H2 are produced in a light-dependent reaction for several days when C. reinhardtii cells are deprived of sulfur. Under these conditions, the cells drastically change their physiology from aerobic photosynthetic growth to an anaerobic resting state. The understanding of the underlying physiological processes is not only important for getting further insights into the adaptability of photosynthesis, but will help to optimize the biotechnological application of algae as H2 producers. Two of the still most disputed questions regarding H2 generation by C. reinhardtii concern the electron source for H2 evolution and the competition of the hydrogenase with alternative electron sinks. We analyzed the H2 metabolism of S-depleted C. reinhardtii cultures utilizing a special mass spectrometer setup and investigated the influence of photosystem II (PSII)- or ribulosebisphosphate-carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco)-deficiency. We show that electrons for H2-production are provided both by PSII activity and by a non-photochemical plastoquinone reduction pathway, which is dependent on previous PSII activity. In a Rubisco-deficient strain, which produces H2 also in the presence of sulfur, H2 generation seems to be the only significant electron sink for PSII activity and rescues this strain at least partially from a light-sensitive phenotype. The latter indicates that the down-regulation of assimilatory pathways in S-deprived C. reinhardtii cells is one of the important prerequisites for a sustained H2 evolution.  相似文献   

4.
In Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cells, H2 photoproduction can be induced in conditions of sulfur deprivation in the presence of acetate. The decrease in photosystem II (PSII) activity induced by sulfur deprivation leads to anoxia, respiration becoming higher than photosynthesis, thereby allowing H2 production. Two different electron transfer pathways, one PSII dependent and the other PSII independent, have been proposed to account for H2 photoproduction. In this study, we investigated the contribution of both pathways as well as the acetate requirement for H2 production in conditions of sulfur deficiency. By using 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU), a PSII inhibitor, which was added at different times after the beginning of sulfur deprivation, we show that PSII-independent H2 photoproduction depends on previously accumulated starch resulting from previous photosynthetic activity. Starch accumulation was observed in response to sulfur deprivation in mixotrophic conditions (presence of acetate) but also in photoautotrophic conditions. However, no H2 production was measured in photoautotrophy if PSII was not inhibited by DCMU, due to the fact that anoxia was not reached. When DCMU was added at optimal starch accumulation, significant H2 production was measured. H2 production was enhanced in autotrophic conditions by removing O2 using N2 bubbling, thereby showing that substantial H2 production can be achieved in the absence of acetate by using the PSII-independent pathway. Based on these data, we discuss the possibilities of designing autotrophic protocols for algal H2 photoproduction.  相似文献   

5.
Wang H  Fan X  Zhang Y  Yang D  Guo R 《Biotechnology letters》2011,33(7):1345-1350
The sustained production of H2 by Chlorella pyrenoidosa was achieved without sulfur deficiency or PSII inhibition. C. pyrenoidosa preserved hydrogenase activity for several hours in the dark. Hydrogenase activity in vitro is O2 sensitive, which indicates that respiration may play an important role in H2 production. A sustainable production of H2 was obtained for 200 h under illumination. Further, by using 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea as a PSII inhibitor, at least 70% electrons for H2 production were generated from PSII-catalyzed-H2O oxidation. The remaining electrons were probably from endogenous substrate degradation.  相似文献   

6.
Sulfur deprivation of algal cultures selectively and partially inactivates photosystem II (PSII)-catalyzed O2 evolution, induces anaerobiosis and hydrogenase expression, and results in sustained H2 photoproduction for several days. We show that re-addition of limiting amounts of sulfate (1–10 μM final concentration) to the cultures during the H2-production phase temporarily reactivates PSII photochemical and O2-evolution activity and re-establishes higher rates of electron transport through the photosynthetic electron transport chain. The reactivation of PSII occurs by de novo D1 protein synthesis, but does not result in the re-establishment of aerobic conditions in the reactor, detectable by dissolved-O2 sensors. However, concomitant H2 photoproduction is inhibited, possibly due to excessive intra-cellular levels of photosynthetically-evolved O2. The partial recovery of electron transport rates correlates with the re-oxidation of the plastoquinone (PQ) pool, as observed by pulse-amplitude modulated (PAM) and fluorescence-induction measurements. These results show that the presence of a more oxidized PQ pool releases some of the down-regulation of electron transport caused by the anaerobic conditions.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Molecular hydrogen (H2) can be produced in green microalgae by [FeFe]‐hydrogenases as a direct product of photosynthesis. The Chlamydomonas reinhardtii hydrogenase HYDA1 contains a catalytic site comprising a classic [4Fe4S] cluster linked to a unique 2Fe sub‐cluster. From in vitro studies it appears that the [4Fe4S] cluster is incorporated first by the housekeeping FeS cluster assembly machinery, followed by the 2Fe sub‐cluster, whose biosynthesis requires the specific maturases HYDEF and HYDG. To investigate the maturation process in vivo, we expressed HYDA1 from the C. reinhardtii chloroplast and nuclear genomes (with and without a chloroplast transit peptide) in a hydrogenase‐deficient mutant strain, and examined the cellular enzymatic hydrogenase activity, as well as in vivo H2 production. The transformants expressing HYDA1 from the chloroplast genome displayed levels of H2 production comparable to the wild type, as did the transformants expressing full‐length HYDA1 from the nuclear genome. In contrast, cells equipped with cytoplasm‐targeted HYDA1 produced inactive enzyme, which could only be activated in vitro after reconstitution of the [4Fe4S] cluster. This indicates that the HYDA1 FeS cluster can only be built by the chloroplastic FeS cluster assembly machinery. Further, the expression of a bacterial hydrogenase gene, CPI, from the C. reinhardtii chloroplast genome resulted in H2‐producing strains, demonstrating that a hydrogenase with a very different structure can fulfil the role of HYDA1 in vivo and that overexpression of foreign hydrogenases in C. reinhardtii is possible. All chloroplast transformants were stable and no toxic effects were seen from HYDA1 or CPI expression.  相似文献   

9.
Hydrogen photoproduction by eukaryotic microalgae results from a connection between the photosynthetic electron transport chain and a plastidial hydrogenase. Algal H2 production is a transitory phenomenon under most natural conditions, often viewed as a safety valve protecting the photosynthetic electron transport chain from overreduction. From the colony screening of an insertion mutant library of the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii based on the analysis of dark-light chlorophyll fluorescence transients, we isolated a mutant impaired in cyclic electron flow around photosystem I (CEF) due to a defect in the Proton Gradient Regulation Like1 (PGRL1) protein. Under aerobiosis, nonphotochemical quenching of fluorescence (NPQ) is strongly decreased in pgrl1. Under anaerobiosis, H2 photoproduction is strongly enhanced in the pgrl1 mutant, both during short-term and long-term measurements (in conditions of sulfur deprivation). Based on the light dependence of NPQ and hydrogen production, as well as on the enhanced hydrogen production observed in the wild-type strain in the presence of the uncoupling agent carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone, we conclude that the proton gradient generated by CEF provokes a strong inhibition of electron supply to the hydrogenase in the wild-type strain, which is released in the pgrl1 mutant. Regulation of the trans-thylakoidal proton gradient by monitoring pgrl1 expression opens new perspectives toward reprogramming the cellular metabolism of microalgae for enhanced H2 production.  相似文献   

10.
Summary The effect of anaerobic (N2+CO2) pre-incubation in the dark on photosynthetic reactions (O2 evolution, measured manometrically and with the oxygraph; fluorescence; and photoproduction of H2, measured with the mass spectrometer) was studied in algae with hydrogenase (strains of Chlorella fusca, C. kessleri, C. vulgaris f. tertia, and Ankistrodesmus braunii) and in algae without hydrogenase (strains of Chlorella vulgaris, C. saccharophila, and C. minutissima).The inhibition by anaerobic incubation of photosynthetic O2 evolution is much stronger in algae without hydrogenase than it is in algae with hydrogenase. The effect of anaerobiosis is most pronounced at rather low light intensity (about 1000 lux), in acid medium (pH 4), and after prolonged anaerobic incubation in the dark (about 20 h). These results indicate that the presence of hydrogenase might be ecologically advantageous for algae under certain conditions.Chlorophyll fluorescence showed the fastest response to anaerobic incubation, and the most pronounced difference between algae with and without hydrogenase. After only 30 min under N2+CO2, fluorescence in algae with hydrogenase starts with a peak and decreases within 10 to 20 sec to a rather low steady-state level which is only slightly higher than that found under aerobic conditions. In algae without hydrogenase, fluorescence is rather low during the first 1 to 2 sec and then rises to a higher steady-state level which is much higher than that of the aerobic controls. This indicates an inhibition due to anaerobiosis of photosystem II in algae without hydrogenase.Algae with hydrogenase can react in different ways during the first minutes of illumination. In some cases there is an immediate photoproduction of H2, which is followed after a few minutes by photosynthetic O2 evolution; in other algae there is a simultaneous production of H2 and O2 from the very beginning; in a few experiments there was no photoproduction of H2 at all, and in this case there was no photosynthetic O2 evolution either. Thus, photoproduction of H2 seems to be the process which normally enables algae with hydrogenase to oxidise and thereby activate their photosynthetic electron transport system after anaerobic incubation.A mass spectrometric search for nitrogen fixation (using N2 and acetylene) in eucaryotic green algae gave negative results, even with species containing hydrogenase and under anaerobic conditions.  相似文献   

11.
The metabolic flexibility of some photosynthetic microalgae enables them to survive periods of anaerobiosis in the light by developing a particular photofermentative metabolism. The latter entails compounds of the photosynthetic electron transfer chain and an oxygen-sensitive hydrogenase in order to reoxidize reducing equivalents and to generate ATP for maintaining basal metabolic function. This pathway results in the photo-evolution of hydrogen gas by the algae. A decade ago, Melis and coworkers managed to reproduce such a condition in a laboratory context by depletion of sulfur in the algal culture media, making the photo-evolution by the algae sustainable for several days (Melis et al. in Plant Physiol 122:127–136, 2000). This observation boosted research in algal H2 evolution. A feature, which due to its transient nature was long time considered as a curiosity of algal photosynthesis suddenly became a phenomenon with biotechnological potential. Although the Melis procedure has not been developed into a biotechnological process of renewable H2 generation so far, it has been a useful tool for studying microalgal metabolic and photosynthetic flexibility and a possible step stone for future H2 production procedures. Ten years later most of the critical steps and limitations of H2 production by this protocol have been studied from different angles particularly with the model organism Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, by introducing various changes in culture conditions and making use of mutants issued from different screens or by reverse genomic approaches. A synthesis of these observations with the most important conclusions driven from recent studies will be presented in this review.  相似文献   

12.
Zhang L  Happe T  Melis A 《Planta》2002,214(4):552-561
Sulfur deprivation in green algae causes reversible inhibition of photosynthetic activity. In the absence of S, rates of photosynthetic O2 evolution drop below those of O2 consumption by respiration. As a consequence, sealed cultures of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii become anaerobic in the light, induce the "Fe-hydrogenase" pathway of electron transport and photosynthetically produce H2 gas. In the course of such H2-gas production cells consume substantial amounts of internal starch and protein. Such catabolic reactions may sustain, directly or in directly, the H2-production process. Profile analysis of selected photosynthetic proteins showed a precipitous decline in the amount of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase (Rubisco) as a function of time in S deprivation, a more gradual decline in the level of photosystem (PS) II and PSI proteins, and a change in the composition of the PSII light-harvesting complex (LHC-II). An increase in the level of the enzyme Fe-hydrogenase was noted during the initial stages of S deprivation (0-72 h) followed by a decline in the level of this enzyme during longer (t >72 h) S-deprivation times. Microscopic observations showed distinct morphological changes in C. reinhardtii during S deprivation and H2 production. Ellipsoid-shaped cells (normal photosynthesis) gave way to larger and spherical cell shapes in the initial stages of S deprivation and H2 production, followed by cell mass reductions after longer S-deprivation and H2-production times. It is suggested that, under S-deprivation conditions, electrons derived from a residual PSII H2O-oxidation activity feed into the hydrogenase pathway, thereby contributing to the H2-production process in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Interplay between oxygenic photosynthesis, mitochondrial respiration, catabolism of endogenous substrate, and electron transport via the hydrogenase pathway is essential for this light-mediated H2-production process.  相似文献   

13.
Under sulfur deprivation conditions, the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii produces hydrogen in the light in a sustainable manner thanks to the contribution of two pathways, direct and indirect. In the direct pathway, photosystem II (PSII) supplies electrons to hydrogenase through the photosynthetic electron transport chain, while in the indirect pathway, hydrogen is produced in the absence of PSII through a photosystem I-dependent process. Starch metabolism has been proposed to contribute to both pathways by feeding respiration and maintaining anoxia during the direct pathway and by supplying reductants to the plastoquinone pool during the indirect pathway. At variance with this scheme, we report that a mutant lacking starch (defective for sta6) produces similar hydrogen amounts as the parental strain in conditions of sulfur deprivation. However, when PSII is inhibited by 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea, conditions where hydrogen is produced by the indirect pathway, hydrogen production is strongly reduced in the starch-deficient mutant. We conclude that starch breakdown contributes to the indirect pathway by feeding electrons to the plastoquinone pool but is dispensable for operation of the direct pathway that prevails in the absence of DCMU. While hydrogenase induction was strongly impaired in the starch-deficient mutant under dark anaerobic conditions, wild-type-like induction was observed in the light. Because this light-driven hydrogenase induction is DCMU insensitive and strongly inhibited by carbonyl cyanide-p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone or 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone, we conclude that this process is regulated by the proton gradient generated by cyclic electron flow around PSI.In the context of economical and environmental concerns around fossil fuel depletion and global warming, the interest in hydrogen as an energy carrier for the future has considerably grown. Because molecular hydrogen is scarce on our planet, the development of a hydrogen economy strongly depends on our ability to propose clean and sustainable technologies of hydrogen production. In this context, the ability of some photosynthetic microorganisms, and particularly cyanobacteria and microalgae, to convert solar energy into hydrogen has been considered as very promising (Ghirardi et al., 2000; Rupprecht et al., 2006). When cells of the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii are illuminated after adaptation to anaerobic conditions, electrons originating from water splitting at PSII are driven by the photosynthetic electron transport chain to ferredoxin and to a reversible iron hydrogenase, thereby enabling the production of molecular hydrogen from water and solar energy. Because both hydrogenase activity and expression are highly sensitive to the presence of O2 (Happe et al., 1994; Ghirardi et al., 1997; Happe and Kaminski, 2002) and because O2 is produced at PSII, hydrogen photoproduction stops after a few minutes of illumination. Melis et al. (2000) proposed an experimental protocol based on sulfur (S) deprivation, allowing long-term hydrogen production. This protocol relies on a two-stage process: during a first stage, oxygenic photosynthesis drives production of biomass and carbohydrate stores, and during a second anaerobic stage, the hydrogenase is induced and hydrogen is produced. Sulfur starvation has two important effects regarding hydrogen production: (1) a massive accumulation of starch that defines a common response to nutrient starvation and (2) a gradual drop in PSII activity (Wykoff et al., 1998). Once the rate of photosynthetic O2 evolution drops below the rate of respiration, anaerobic conditions are reached, enabling the induction of hydrogenase and the production of significant amounts of hydrogen for several days. In parallel to hydrogen production, starch is degraded (Melis et al., 2000; Melis, 2007).The importance of starch fermentation in hydrogen production has been recognized early from the pioneering work of Gibbs and coworkers (Gfeller and Gibbs, 1984; Gibbs et al., 1986). Based on the observation that starchless C. reinhardtii mutants sta6 and sta7 are strongly affected in their ability to produce hydrogen, Posewitz et al. (2004) proposed that starch metabolism plays a central role in C. reinhardtii hydrogen production. Actually, two different pathways can supply reductants (i.e. reduced ferredoxin) for hydrogen production in the light, a direct pathway involving PSII and an indirect PSII-independent pathway that relies on a nonphotochemical reduction of plastoquinones (PQs; Fouchard et al., 2005; Melis, 2007). Starch catabolism was proposed to play a role in both pathways (Melis, 2007) by (1) sustaining mitochondrial respiration and allowing the maintenance of anaerobic conditions for the PSII-dependent direct pathway and (2) by supplying electrons to the chlororespiratory pathway and to the hydrogenase through a PSI-dependent process during the indirect pathway (Fouchard et al., 2005; Mus et al., 2005; Melis, 2007). Such a dual role of starch was first confirmed by the study of a Rubisco-deficient mutant (CC2653), unable to accumulate starch and to produce hydrogen in conditions of S deprivation (White and Melis, 2006), but was recently challenged by the study of another Rubisco-less mutant (CC2803), which was reported to produce significant amounts of hydrogen in S starvation conditions, although not accumulating starch (Hemschemeier et al., 2008). These conflicting results obtained on two different Rubisco-deficient mutants prompted us to reexamine the contribution of starch to both direct and indirect pathways of hydrogen production. For this purpose, we complemented the initial work of Posewitz et al. (2004) by revisiting the ability of C. reinhardtii mutants deficient in starch metabolism to produce hydrogen. We thus tested the ability to produce hydrogen in a starchless strain carrying defect in the structural gene encoding the small subunit of ADP-Glc pyrophosphorylase (AGPase; sta6; Zabawinski et al., 2001). We found that sta6 mutant produces significant hydrogen amounts in condition of S deprivation but shows a strongly reduced PSII-independent hydrogen production. We conclude that while the PSII-independent hydrogen production pathway strictly relies on starch catabolism, the PSII-dependent pathway may require either starch or acetate as a respiratory substrate to maintain anaerobiosis.  相似文献   

14.
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cultures, deprived of inorganic sulfur, undergo dramatic changes during adaptation to the nutrient stress [Biotechnol. Bioeng. 78 (2002) 731]. When the capacity for Photosystem II (PSII) O(2) evolution decreases below that of respiration, the culture becomes anaerobic [Plant Physiol. 122 (2000) 127]. We demonstrate that (a) the photochemical activity of PSII, monitored by in situ fluorescence, also decreases slowly during the aerobic period; (b) at the exact time of anaerobiosis, the remaining PSII activity is rapidly down regulated; and (c) electron transfer from PSII to PSI abruptly decreases at that point. Shortly thereafter, the PSII photochemical activity is partially restored, and H(2) production starts. Hydrogen production, which lasts for 3-4 days, is catalyzed by an anaerobically induced, reversible hydrogenase. While most of the reductants used directly for H(2) gas photoproduction come from water, the remaining electrons must come from endogenous substrate degradation through the NAD(P)H plastoquinone (PQ) oxido-reductase pathway. We propose that the induced hydrogenase activity provides a sink for electrons in the absence of other alternative pathways, and its operation allows the partial oxidation of intermediate photosynthetic carriers, including the PQ pool, between PSII and PSI. We conclude that the reduced state of this pool, which controls PSII photochemical activity, is one of the main factors regulating H(2) production under sulfur-deprived conditions. Residual O(2) evolved under these conditions is probably consumed mostly by the aerobic oxidation of storage products linked to mitochondrial respiratory processes involving both the cytochrome oxidase and the alternative oxidase. These functions maintain the intracellular anaerobic conditions required to keep the hydrogenase enzyme in the active, induced form.  相似文献   

15.
Li  Yuefei  Fan  Yong  Ma  Ying  Zhang  Zhen  Yue  Haobo  Wang  Lijie  Li  Jing  Jiao  Yang 《Journal of Plant Growth Regulation》2017,36(2):436-449

The effects of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) treatment on parameters of photosynthesis and antioxidant defense system were measured in pepper (Capsicum annuum L.) leaves under low-light (LL) stress. Seedlings exposed to LL stress showed increased chlorophyll content as well as decreased net photosynthetic rate (P n), stomatal conductance (g s), maximum quantum yield of PSII (F v/F m), actual PSII photochemical efficiency (ΦPSII), electron transport rates and photochemical quenching coefficient (q p). However, almost all the photosynthetic parameters above were enhanced markedly in seedlings treated with GABA under LL stress. Moreover, LL stress increased malondialdehyde (MDA) content, superoxide anion radical (O2 ·?) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) production. GABA-treated, LL-stressed seedlings exhibited lower MDA, O2 ·? and H2O2 production, and showed an activated antioxidant defense system, including increased activities of superoxide dismutase, catalase, ascorbate peroxidase, glutathione peroxidase, monodehydroascorbate reductase, dehydroascorbate reductase, glutathione reductase, ascorbate and glutathione. Moreover, seedlings subjected to LL stress showed increased endogenous GABA levels, and the level was further improved by application of exogenous GABA. These results suggest that GABA mitigates the LL-induced stress via regulating the antioxidant defense system and maintaining a high level of photochemical efficiency in pepper seedlings.

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16.
Photoproduction of H2 was examined in a series of sulfur-deprived Chlamydomonas reinhardtii D1-R323 mutants with progressively impaired PSII photochemical activity. In the R323H, R323D, and R323E D1 mutants, replacement of arginine affects photosystem II (PSII) function, as demonstrated by progressive decreases in O2-evolving activity and loss of PSII photochemical activity. Significant changes in PSII activity were found when the arginine residue was replaced by negatively charged amino acid residues (R323D and R323E). However, the R323H (positively charged or neutral, depending on the ambient pH) mutant had minimal changes in PSII activity. The R323H, R323D, and R323E mutants and the pseudo-wild-type (pWt) with restored PSII function were used to study the effects of sulfur deprivation on H2-production activity. All of these mutants exhibited significant changes in the normal parameters associated with the H2-photoproduction process, such as a shorter aerobic phase, lower accumulation of starch, a prolonged anaerobic phase observed before the onset of H2-production, a shorter duration of H2-production, lower H2 yields compared to the pWt control, and slightly higher production of dark fermentation products such as acetate and formate. The more compromised the PSII photochemical activity, the more dramatic was the effect of sulfur deprivation on the H2-production process, which depends both on the presence of residual PSII activity and the amount of stored starch.  相似文献   

17.
Localization of lumenal carbonic anhydrase Cah3 in thylakoid membranes of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii was studied using wild-type algae and photosynthetic mutants with different composition of chlorophyll-protein complexes in the photosystems. In addition, the photosynthetic characteristics of wild-type C. reinhardtii and cia3 mutants lacking the activity of carbonic anhydrase Cah3 were examined. Western blot analysis revealed the lack of cross reaction with antibodies to Cah3 in the mutant lacking the photosystem II (PSII) reaction center, in contrast to the mutant deficient in light-harvesting complex of PSII. These data show that the lumenal Cah3 is associated with polypeptides on the donor side of PSII reaction center. Using immunoelectron microscopy and antibodies to Cah3 from C. reinhardtii, we showed for the first time that the major part of thylakoid Cah3 is localized in the pyrenoid where the bulk of Rubisco is located. The rate of photosynthetic oxygen evolution and PSII photochemical efficiency were lower in C. reinhardtii cia3 mutant than in the wild type, especially in the cells grown at limiting CO2 concentrations. These observations show that Cah3 takes part in CO2-concentrating mechanism of the chloroplast. The results support our hypothesis [1, 2] that the carboxylation reaction in microalgae proceeds in the pyrenoid, a specific Rubisco-containing part of the chloroplast, which acquires CO2 from the lumen of intrapyrenoid thylakoids. We discuss significance of the pyrenoid as an autonomous metabolic microcompartment, in which Cah3 plays a key role in the production and concentration of CO2 for Rubisco. These functions may promote the photosynthetic efficiency owing to the effective CO2 supply for the Calvin cycle.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Antisense technology was applied to the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtiito probe the function of a novel nuclear gene encoding a chloroplast-envelope localized sulfate permease (SulP; GenBank Accession Numbers AF467891 and AF481828). Analysis showed that antiSulP transformants are impaired in sulfate uptake, a consequence of repression in the SulP gene expression. Antisense antiSulP transformants exhibited a sulfur-deprivation phenotype, strong induction of arylsulfatase activity, and global induction of sulfate assimilation gene expression. In sealed cultures, opposite to the wild-type control, antiSulP strains photo-evolved H2, underlining the notion of sulfate uptake limitation by the chloroplast, a slow-down in the rate of oxygen evolution, establishment of anaerobiosis due to internal respiration and spontaneous expression of the [Fe]-hydrogenase in these strains. It is concluded that antiSulP strains are promising as tools to limit the supply of sulfates to the chloroplast, leading to a down-regulation of H2O-oxidation and O2-evolution activity, to the constitutive expression of the [Fe]-hydrogenase and continuous H2-photoproduction in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii.Thus, antisulPstrains might permit a study of the biochemistry of H2 metabolism in this green alga under constitutive anaerobic oxygenic photosynthesis conditions.  相似文献   

20.
Nutrient stress is one of the most favorable ways of increasing neutral lipid and high value‐added output production by microalgae. However, little is known about the level of the oxidative damage caused by nutrient stress for obtaining an optimal stress level for maximum production of specific molecules. In this study, the antioxidant response of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii grown under element deprivation (nitrogen, sulfur, phosphorus and magnesium) and supplementation (nitrogen and zinc) was investigated. All element regimes caused a decrease in growth, which was most pronounced under N deprivation. Element deprivation and Zn supplementation caused significant increases in H2O2 and lipid peroxidation levels of C. reinhardtii. Decrease in total chlorophyll level was followed by an increase of total carotenoid levels in C. reinhardtii under N and S deprivation while both increased under N supplementation. Confocal imaging of live cells revealed dramatic changes of cell shape and production of neutral lipid bodies accompanied by a decrease of chlorophyll clusters. Antioxidant capacity of cells decreased under N, S and P deprivation while it increased under N and Zn supplementation. Fluctuation of antioxidant enzyme activities in C. reinhardtii grown under different element regimes refers to different metabolic sources of reactive oxygen species production triggered by a specific element absence or overabundance.  相似文献   

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