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1.
In the green alga Chlorella vulgaris UAM 101, a CO2-concentrating mechanism (CCM) is induced when cells are transferred from high (5%) to low (0.03%) CO2 concentrations. The induction of the CCM is correlated with de-novo synthesis of several polypeptides that remain to be identified. The internal carbonic anhydrase (CA; EC 4.2.1.1) activity increased 6- to 7-fold within 6 h of acclimation to air. When crude homogenates were further separated into soluble and insoluble fractions, nearly all of the CA activity was associated with the membrane fraction. Immunoblot analysis of cell homogenates probed with antibodies raised against the 37-kDa subunit of periplasmic CA of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii showed a cross-reaction with a single 38-kDa polypeptide in both high- and low-CO2-grown cells. The up-regulation of the expression of the 38-kDa polypeptide was closely correlated with the increase in internal CA activity. Furthermore, its subcellular location was also correlated with the distribution of the activity. Immunoblot analysis of pyrenoid fractions showed that the 38-kDa polypeptide was concentrated in the pyrenoids from low-CO2-grown cells but was not present in pyrenoids from high-CO2-grown cells. In addition, immunogold labeling experiments showed that the protein was mainly associated with membranes crossing the pyrenoid, while it was absent from the pyrenoid matrix. These studies have identified a putative intracellular CA polypeptide associated with the pyrenoid in Chlorella vulgaris, suggesting that this structure may play an important role in the operation of the CCM and the acclimation to low CO2 conditions. Received: 16 July 1997 / Accepted: 26 April 1998  相似文献   

2.
We have examined the induction of carbonic anhydrase activity in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and have identified the polypeptide responsible for this activity. This polypeptide was not synthesized when the alga was grown photoautotrophically on 5% CO2, but its synthesis was induced under low concentrations of CO2 (air levels of CO2). In CW-15, a mutant of C. reinhardtii which lacks a cell wall, between 80 and 90% of the carbonic anhydrase activity of air-adapted cells was present in the growth medium. Furthermore, between 80 and 90% of the carbonic anhydrase is released if wild type cells are treated with autolysin, a hydrolytic enzyme responsible for cell wall degradation during mating of C. reinhardtii. These data extend the work of Kimpel, Togasaki, Miyachi (1983 Plant Cell Physiol 24: 255-259) and indicate that the bulk of the carbonic anhydrase is located either in the periplasmic space or is loosely bound to the algal cell wall. The polypeptide associated with carbonic anhydrase activity has a molecular weight of approximately 37,000. Several lines of evidence indicate that this polypeptide is responsible for carbonic anhydrase activity: (a) it appears following the transfer of C. reinhardtii from growth on 5% CO2 to growth on air levels of CO2, (b) it is located in the periplasmic space or associated with the cell wall, like the bulk of the carbonic anhydrase activity, (c) it binds dansylamide, an inhibitor of the enzyme which fluoresces upon illumination with ultraviolet light, (d) antibodies which inhibit carbonic anhydrase activity only cross-react with this 37,000 dalton species.  相似文献   

3.
The activity of carbonic anhydrase (CA) was studied in different cell fractions of the alkaliphilic cyanobacterium Microcoleus chthonoplastes. The activity of this enzyme was found in the soluble and membrane protein fractions, as well as in intact cells and in a thick glycocalyx layer enclosing the cyanobacterium cells. The localization of CA in glycocalyx of M. chthonoplastes was shown by western blot analysis and by immunoelectron microscopy studies with antibodies to the thylakoid CA from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Cah3). At least one of the CA forms occurring in M. chthonoplastes CA was shown to be an -type enzyme. A possible mechanism of the involvement of the glycocalyx CA in calcification of cyanobacteria is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
In order to broaden our understanding of the eukaryotic CO2-concentrating mechanism the occurrence and localization of a thylakoid-associated carbonic anhydrase (EC 4.2.1.1) were studied in the green algae Tetraedron minimum and Chlamydomonas noctigama. Both algae induce a CO2-concentrating mechanism when grown under limiting CO2 conditions. Using mass-spectrometric measurements of 18O exchange from doubly labelled CO2, the presence of a thylakoid-associated carbonic anhydrase was confirmed for both species. From purified thylakoid membranes, photosystem I (PSI), photosystem II (PSII) and the light-harvesting complex of the photosynthetic apparatus were isolated by mild detergent gel. The protein fractions were identified by 77 K fluorescence spectroscopy and immunological studies. A polypeptide was found to immunoreact with an antibody raised against thylakoid carbonic anhydrase (CAH3) from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. It was found that this polypeptide was mainly associated with PSII, although a certain proportion was also connected to light harvesting complex II. This was confirmed by activity measurements of carbonic anhydrase in isolated bands extracted from the mild detergent gel. The thylakoid carbonic anhydrase isolated from T. minimum had an isoelectric point between 5.4 and 4.8. Together the results are consistent with the hypothesis that thylakoid carbonic anhydrase resides within the lumen where it is associated with the PSII complex. Received: 13 May 2000 / Accepted: 16 August 2000  相似文献   

5.
A physiologically significant level of intracellular carbonic anhydrase has been identified in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii after lysis of the cell wall-less mutant, cw15, and two intracellular polypeptides have been identified which bind to anti-carbonic anhydrase antisera. The susceptibility of the intracellular activity to sulfonamide carbonic anhydrase inhibitors is more than three orders-of-magnitude less than that of the periplasmic enzyme, indicating that the intracellular activity was distinct from the periplasmic from of the enzyme. When electrophoretically separated cell extracts or chloroplast stromal fractions were probed with either anti-C. reinhardtii periplasmic carbonic anhydrase antiserum or anti-spinach carbonic anhydrase antiserum, immunoreactive polypeptides of 45 kilodaltons and 110 kilodaltons were observed with both antisera. The strongly immunoreactive 37 kilodalton polypeptide due to the periplasmic carbonic anhydrase was also observed in lysed cells, but neither the 37 kilodalton nor the 110 kilodalton polypeptides were present in the chloroplast stromal fraction. These studies have identified intracellular carbonic anhydrase activity, and putative intracellular carbonic anhydrase polypeptides in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii represented by a 45 kilodalton polypeptide in the chloroplast and a 110 kilodalton form probably in the cytoplasm, which may be associated with an intracellular inorganic carbon concentrating system.  相似文献   

6.
Unicellular algae grown under low-CO2 conditions (0.03% CO2) have developed a means of concentrating CO2 at the site of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase. Cells with the CO2-concentrating mechanism (CCM) acquire the ability to accumulate inorganic carbon to a level higher than that obtained by simple diffusion. To identify proteins which are involved in the organization of the CCM, cells of Scenedesumus obliquus and Chlorella vulgaris grown in high CO2 (5% CO2 in air) were transferred to low-CO2 (0.03%) conditions in the presence of 35SO inf4 sup2? and, thereafter, polypeptides labeled with 35S were detected. Under low-CO2 conditions the inducton of 36-, 39-, 94- and 110- to 116kDa polypeptides were particularly observed in S. obliquus and 16-, 19-, 27-, 36-, 38- and 45-kDa polypeptides were induced in C. vulgaris. Western blots with antibodies raised against 37-kDa subunits of the periplasmic carbonic anhydrase (CA) of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii showed immunoreactive bands with the 39-kDa polypeptide in the whole-cell homogenates from S. obliquus and with 36 and 38-kDa polypeptides in both high- and low-CO2grown cells of C. vulgaris. Anti-pea-chloroplast CA antibodies cross-reacted with a single polypeptide of 30 kDa in the whole-cell homogenates but not with thylakoid membranes. The CA activity was associated with soluble and membrane-bound fractions, except thylakoid membranes.  相似文献   

7.
Polypeptides of 21, 36 and 37 kDa are induced in the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Dang. when cells are transferred from high (2%) to low (0.03%) CO2 concentrations. The synthesis of these polypeptides is correlated with the induction of the CO2-concentrating mechanism. In this work we studied the effect of the growth conditions on the synthesis of these polypeptides with the aim of clarifying whether the induction of all three of these low-CO2-inducible polypeptides requires the same environmental factor. Our results showed that induction of the 21- and 36-kDa polypeptides under low-CO2 conditions occurred only in the light, while the 37-kDa periplasmic carbonic anhydrase (EC 4.2.1.1) was induced in light, darkness, and in both synchronous and asynchronous cultures. In addition, induction of these polypeptides appeared to be determined more by the O2/CO2 ratio than by the CO2 concentrations. None of these polypeptides could be induced in either of two different mutants of C. reinhardtii, one lacking ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (EC 4.1.1.39) and the other with inactive enzyme. Our results indicate that the 21- and 36-kDa polypeptides are regulated by a mechanism different from that controlling the 37-kDa polypeptide.Abbreviations pCA (periplasmic) carbonic anhydrase - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - TAP Trisacetate phosphate medium The authors thank Prof. M. Spalding (Iowa State University, USA) for providing antisera to LIP-21 and LIP-36. We thank Prof. S. Bartlett and Dr. J. Moroney (Louisiana State University, USA) for providing antibodies to C. reinhardtii, Rubisco and 37-kDa pCA, respectively. This work was supported by the Instituto Tecnologico de Canarias.  相似文献   

8.
The green alga, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, was grown under high and low CO2 regimes inducing significantly different activities of the extracellular carbonic anhydrase (CA). In close relation to the CA activities, the algae exhibited different consumption rates of the climatically relevant atmospheric trace gas, carbonyl sulphide (COS), thus indicating that CA is responsible for uptake of COS from the medium.  相似文献   

9.
The prokaryotic algal symbiont of ascidians, Prochloron sp., was found to exhibit carbonic anhydrase activity which is largely associated with the cell surface. This extracellular carbonic anhydrase activity was inhibited, while the intracellular activity was not affected, by chloride or bromide. Acetazolamide and ethoxyzolamide inhibited carbonic anhydrase activity with I50 values of 7×10-4 and 3×10-4M, respectively. These I50 values are similar to those observed for intracellular carbonic anhydrases of Synechococcus sp. PCC7942, Chlamydomonas reinhardii and spinach.Abbreviations AZA acetazolamide - CA carbonic anhydrase - chl chlorophyll - EZA ethozyzolamide - I50 concentration of an inhibitor required to cause 50% inhibition - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - U unit  相似文献   

10.
The biosynthesis and degradation of carbonic anhydrase (CA;EC 4.3.1.1 [EC] ) was investigated during the course of synchronousculture of the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii,carried out under a regime of 12 h of light and 12 h of darknesswith bubbling of ordinary air. The enzymatic activity increasedlinearly during the light phase. A coordinate increase in thelevel of the 35-kDa mature CA polypeptide was demonstrated byimmunostaining after poly-acrylamide gel electrophoresis andWestern blotting. Pulse-labeling with [14C]arginine followedby immunoprecipitation showed that the biosynthesis of the CApolypeptide is very active in the early light phase and rapidlydecreases after the middle of the light phase, indicating thatthe bio-synthetic activity does not reflect the quantity ofenzyme protein or the level of enzymatic activity. The 42-kDaprecursor but not the 35-kDa mature polypeptide was synthesizedin the dark. The 35-kDa polypeptide, pulse-labeled at the beginningof the light phase, was gradually degraded throughout the lightphase while it appeard to be stable in the dark. These resultssuggest that the messenger RNA coding for CA is present butits translation is limited in the dark. Normal translation ofmRNA and processing of the precursor to yield the holoenzymemay both require light. 1Present address: Plant Laboratory, Kirin Brewery Co., Ltd.,Kitsuregawa-machi, Shioya-gun, Tochigi-ken, 329-314 Japan. (Received August 22, 1988; Accepted March 9, 1989)  相似文献   

11.
Carbonic anhydrase (CA) (EC 4.2.1.1) enzymes catalyze the reversible hydration of CO2, a reaction that is important in many physiological processes. We have cloned and sequenced a full-length cDNA encoding an intracellular β-CA from the unicellular green alga Coccomyxa. Nucleotide sequence data show that the isolated cDNA contains an open reading frame encoding a polypeptide of 227 amino acids. The predicted polypeptide is similar to β-type CAs from Escherichia coli and higher plants, with an identity of 26% to 30%. The Coccomyxa cDNA was overexpressed in E. coli, and the enzyme was purified and biochemically characterized. The mature protein is a homotetramer with an estimated molecular mass of 100 kD. The CO2-hydration activity of the Coccomyxa enzyme is comparable with that of the pea homolog. However, the activity of Coccomyxa CA is largely insensitive to oxidative conditions, in contrast to similar enzymes from most higher plants. Fractionation studies further showed that Coccomyxa CA is extrachloroplastic.  相似文献   

12.
The carbonic anhydrase (EC 4.2.1.1) of Rhodospirillum rubrum has been purified to apparent homogeneity and some of its properties have been determined. The enzyme was cytoplasmic and was found only in photosynthetically grown cells. It had a molecular weight of about 28,000, and was apparently composed of two equal subunits. The amino acid composition was similar to that of other reported carbonic anhydrases except that the R. rubrum enzyme contained no arginine. The isoelectric point of the enzyme was 6.2 and the pH optimum was 7.5. It required Zn(II) for stability and enzymatic activity. The K m(CO2) was 80 mM. Typical carbonic anhydrase inhibition patterns were found with the R. rubrum enzyme. Strong acetazolamide and sulfanilamide inhibition confirmed the importance of Zn(II) for enzymatic activity as did the anionic inhibitors iodide, and azide. Other inhibitors indicated that histidine, sulfhydryl, lysine and serine residues were important for enzymatic activity.Abbreviation CA carbonic anhydrase In memory of R. Y. Stanier  相似文献   

13.
The biosynthesis of a 36 kilodalton polypeptide of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii was induced by photoautotrophic growth on low CO2. Fractionation studies using the cell-wall-deficient strain of C. reinhardtii, CC-400, showed that this polypeptide was different from the low CO2-induced periplasmic carbonic anhydrase. In addition, the 36 kilodalton polypeptide was found to be localized in intact chloroplasts isolated from low CO2-adapting cultures. This protein may, in part, account for the different inorganic carbon uptake characteristics observed in chloroplasts isolated from high and low CO2-grown C. reinhardtii cells.  相似文献   

14.
B. N. Patel  M. J. Merrett 《Planta》1986,169(1):81-86
The regulation of carbonic anhydrase by environmental conditions was determined forChlamydomonas reinhardtii. The depression of carbonic anhydrase in air-grown cells was pH-dependent. Growth of cells on air at acid pH, corresponding to 10 m CO2 in solution, resulted in complete repression of carbonic-anhydrase activity. At pH 6.9, increasing the CO2 concentration to 0.15% (v/v) in the gas phase, corresponding to 11 M in solution, was sufficient to completely repress carbonic-anhydrase activity. Photosynthesis and intracellular inorganic carbon were measured in air-grown and high-CO2-grown cells using a silicone-oil centrifugation technique. With carbonic anhydrase repressed cells limited inorganic-carbon accumulation resulted from non-specific binding of CO2. With air-grown cells, inorganic-carbon uptake at acid pH, i.e. 5.5, was linear up to 0.5 mM external inorganic-carbon concentration whereas at alkaline pH, i.e. 7.5, the accumulation ratio decreased with increase in external inorganic-carbon concentration. It is suggested that in air-grown cells at acid pH, CO2 is the inorganic carbon species that crosses the plasmalemma. The conversion of CO2 to HCO 3 - by carbonic anhydrase in the cytosol results in inorganic-carbon accumulation and maintains the diffusion gradient for carbon dioxide across the cell boundary. However, this mechanism will not account for energy-dependent accumulation of inorganic carbon when there is little difference in pH between the exterior and cytosol.  相似文献   

15.
The extracellular carbonic anhydrase of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is dissociated from either intact or lysed cells by treatment with a 20 millimolar potassium phosphate buffer containing 0.4 molar KCI at pH 7.4. Electrophoretic analysis of proteins dissociated by the high salt treatment reveals that carbonic anhydrase comprises over 70% of the total released. These results suggest that the extracellular carbonic anhydrase in C. reinhardtii is bound to either the cell wall or plasma membrane through ionic interactions.  相似文献   

16.
From high-CO2 (5% CO2) grown unicellular green alga, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, carbonic anhydrase (CA) was isolated by affinity chromatography and characterized. Isolated CA was identified as an isozyme (CA2) which is the product from the second gene CAH2 by peptide sequencing. The CA2 was inactivated by dithiothreitol. This treatment caused dissociation of CA2 into the large (38 kDa) and small subunits (4243 Da). The molecular mass of the CA2 holoenzyme measured by low-angle laser light-scattering photometry and precision differential refractometry combined with gel-filtration HPLC was 87.9 kDa. These results and gene structure indicate that CA2 is a heterotetramer consisting of two large and two small subunits linked by disulfide bonds like CA1, which is the CAH1 gene product. The speciffc activity of CA2 purified by anion-exchange HPLC was 3300 units per mg protein, which was approximately 1.6 times higher than that of CA1. Therefore, it was concluded that two structurally related isozymes, CA1 and CA2, are present in the wild type cells of C. reinhardtii and differentially regulated by the atmospheric CO2 concentration.  相似文献   

17.
The periplasmic carbonic anhydrase (CA) gene CAH1 of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii codes for a highly processed secreted glycoprotein. The primary translation product of the CAH1 gene is targeted to the ER, where it is proteolytically processed to yield two different subunits, glycosylated, assembled into an active heterotetramer, and secreted. After replacing the target leader sequence with that from tobacco anionic peroxidase, expression of this gene in transgenic tobacco plants was investigated. SDS-PAGE gels of the purified protein from tobacco, showed that it migrated as a series of discrete bands (two large and one small) with slightly faster mobility than the comparable bands in the purified algal protein. The expressed protein in the plant was active, and staining with thymol and sulfuric acid confirmed that it was also glycosylated. The periplasmic CA1 (peri-CA1) also was found to be enriched in the intercellular fluid of transgenic tobacco, indicating it was secreted. The specific activity of the enzyme and its sensitivity to sulfonamide inhibitors were similar to that of the native algal enzyme. These results suggest that the post translational processing of Chlamydomonas peri-CA1 is largely conserved in a higher plant.  相似文献   

18.
Cell extracts (27000xg supernatant) of acetate grown Methanosarcina barkeri were found to have carbonic anhydrase activity (0.41 U/mg protein), which was lost upon heating or incubation with proteinase K. The activity was inhibited by Diamox (apparent K i=0.5 mM), by azide (apparent K i=1 mM), and by cyanide (apparent K i=0.02 mM). These and other properties indicate that the archaebacterium contains the enzyme carbonic anhydrase (EC 4.2.1.1). Evidence is presented that the protein is probably located in the cytoplasm. Methanol or H2/CO2 grown cells of M. barkeri showed no or only very little carbonic anhydrase activity. After transfer of these cells to acetate medium the activity was induced suggesting a function of this enzyme in acetate fermentation to CO2 and CH4. Interestingly, Desulfobacter postgatei and Desulfotomaculum acetoxidans, which oxidize acetate to 2 CO2 with sulfate as electron acceptor, were also found to exhibit carbonic anhydrase activity (0.2 U/mg protein).  相似文献   

19.
In the green marine alga Dunaliella tertiolecta, a CO2-concentrating mechanism is induced when the cells are grown under low-CO2 conditions (0.03% CO2). To identify proteins induced under low-CO2 conditions the cells were labelled with 35SO4 2–, and seven polypeptides with molecular weights of 45, 47, 49, 55, 60, 68 and 100 kDa were detected. The induction of these polypeptides was observed when cells grown in high CO2 (5% CO2 in air) were switched to low CO2, but only while the cultures were growing in light. Immunoblot analysis of total cell protein against pea chloroplastic carbonic anhydrase polyclonal antibodies showed immunoreactive 30-kDa bands in both high- and low-CO2-grown cells and an aditional 49-kDa band exclusively in low-CO2-grown cells. The 30-kDa protein was shown to be located in the chloroplast. Western blot analysis of the plasmamembrane fraction against corn plasma-membrane AT-Pase polyclonal antibodies showed 60-kDa bands in both high- and low-CO2 cell types as well as an immunoreactive 100-kDa band occurring only in low-CO2-grown cells. These results suggest that there are two distinct forms of both carbonic anhydrase and plasma-membrane ATPase, and that one form of each of them can be regulated by the CO2 concentration.Abbreviations CA carbonic anhydrase - DIC dissolved inorganic carbon (CO2+ HCO3 ) - CCM CO2-concentrating mechanism - low CO2 air containing 0.03% CO2 - high CO2 air supplemented with 5% CO2 (v/v) We thank Prof. John Coleman for providing antibodies raised against pea chloroplast CA, Dr. James V. Moroney for providing antibodies raised against the 37-kDa periplasmic carbonic anhydrase of CO2 Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, and Prof. Leonard T. Robert for a gift of corn plasma-membrane 100-kDa ATPase antibodies. We thank Dr. Jeanine Olsen (University of Groningen, the Netherlands) for style comments. This work was supported by the Institute Tecnológico de Canarias (Spain).  相似文献   

20.
To investigate the biochemical response of freshwater green algae to elevated CO2 concentrations, Chlorella pyrenoidosa Chick and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Dang cells were cultured at different CO2 concentrations within the range 3-186μmol/L and the biochemical composition, carbonic anhydrase (CA),and nitrate reductase activities of the cells were investigated. Chlorophylls (Chl), carotenoids, carbonhydrate,and protein contents were enhanced to varying extents with increasing CO2 concentration from 3-186μmol/L. The CO2 enrichment significantly increased the Chl a/Chl b ratio in ChloreUa pyrenoidosa, but not in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. The CO2 concentration had significant effects on CA and nitrate reductase activity. Elevating CO2 concentration to 186μmol/L caused a decline in intracellular and extracellullar CA activity. Nitrate reductase activity, under either light or dark conditions, in C. reinhardtii and C. pyrenoidosa was also significantly decreased with CO2 enrichment. From this study, it can be concluded that CO2 enrichment can affect biochemical composition, CA, and nitrate reductase activity, and that the biochemical response was species dependent.  相似文献   

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