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1.
Chlamydomonas raudensis UWO 241 and SAG 49.72 represent the psychrophilic and mesophilic strains of this green algal species. This novel discovery was exploited to assess the role of psychrophily in photoacclimation to growth temperature and growth irradiance. At their optimal growth temperatures of 8 degrees C and 28 degrees C respectively, UWO 241 and SAG 49.72 maintained comparable photostasis, that is energy balance, as measured by PSII excitation pressure. Although UWO 241 exhibited higher excitation pressure, measured as 1-qL, at all growth light intensities, the relative changes in 1-qL were similar to that of SAG 49.72 in response to growth light. In response to suboptimal temperatures and increased growth irradiance, SAG 49.72 favoured energy partitioning of excess excitation energy through inducible, down regulatory processes (Phi(NPQ)) associated with the xanthophyll cycle and antenna quenching, while UWO 241 favoured xanthophyll cycle-independent energy partitioning through constitutive processes involved in energy dissipation (Phi(NO)). In contrast to SAG 49.72, an elevation in growth temperature induced an increase in PSI/PSII stoichiometry in UWO 241. Furthermore, SAG 49.72 showed typical threonine-phosphorylation of LHCII, whereas UWO 241 exhibited phosphorylation of polypeptides of comparable molecular mass to PSI reaction centres but the absence of LHCII phosphorylation. Thus, although both strains maintain an energy balance irrespective of their differences in optimal growth temperatures, the mechanisms used to maintain photostasis were distinct. We conclude that psychrophily in C. raudensis is complex and appears to involve differential energy partitioning, photosystem stoichiometry and polypeptide phosphorylation.  相似文献   

2.
Beth Szyszka 《BBA》2007,1767(6):789-800
Chlamydomonas raudensis UWO 241 and SAG 49.72 represent the psychrophilic and mesophilic strains of this green algal species. This novel discovery was exploited to assess the role of psychrophily in photoacclimation to growth temperature and growth irradiance. At their optimal growth temperatures of 8 °C and 28 °C respectively, UWO 241 and SAG 49.72 maintained comparable photostasis, that is energy balance, as measured by PSII excitation pressure. Although UWO 241 exhibited higher excitation pressure, measured as 1-qL, at all growth light intensities, the relative changes in 1-qL were similar to that of SAG 49.72 in response to growth light. In response to suboptimal temperatures and increased growth irradiance, SAG 49.72 favoured energy partitioning of excess excitation energy through inducible, down regulatory processes (ΦNPQ) associated with the xanthophyll cycle and antenna quenching, while UWO 241 favoured xanthophyll cycle-independent energy partitioning through constitutive processes involved in energy dissipation (ΦNO). In contrast to SAG 49.72, an elevation in growth temperature induced an increase in PSI/PSII stoichiometry in UWO 241. Furthermore, SAG 49.72 showed typical threonine-phosphorylation of LHCII, whereas UWO 241 exhibited phosphorylation of polypeptides of comparable molecular mass to PSI reaction centres but the absence of LHCII phosphorylation. Thus, although both strains maintain an energy balance irrespective of their differences in optimal growth temperatures, the mechanisms used to maintain photostasis were distinct. We conclude that psychrophily in C. raudensis is complex and appears to involve differential energy partitioning, photosystem stoichiometry and polypeptide phosphorylation.  相似文献   

3.
4.
An unusual psychrophilic green alga was isolated from the deepest portion of the photic zone (<0.1% of incident PAR) at a depth of 17 m in the permanently ice‐covered lake, Lake Bonney, Antarctica. Here we identify and report the first detailed morphological and molecular examination of this Antarctic green alga, which we refer to as strain UWO 241. To determine the taxonomic identity, UWO 241 was examined using LM and TEM and partial sequences of the small subunit (SSU), internal transcribed spacer (ITS) 1 and ITS2 regions (including the 5.8S) of the ribosomal operon. These data were compared with those of previously described taxa. We identified UWO 241 as a strain of Chlamydomonas raudensis Ettl (SAG 49.72). Chlamydomonas raudensis is closely related to C. noctigama Korshikov (UTEX 2289) as well as foraminifer symbionts such as C. hedleyi Lee, Crockett, Hagen et Stone (ATCC 50216). In addition, its morphology, pigment complement, and phototactic response to temperature are reported. Chlamydomonas raudensis (UWO 241) contains relatively high levels of lutein and low chl a/b ratios (1.6±0.15), and the phototactic response was temperature dependent. The Antarctic isolate (UWO 241) included the typical photosynthetic pigments found in all chl a/b containing green algae. It possesses a small eyespot and, interestingly, was positively phototactic only at higher nonpermissive growth temperatures. Comparison of SSU and ITS rDNA sequences confirms the identification of the strain UWO 241 as C. raudensis Ettl and contradicts the previous designation as C. subcaudata Wille.  相似文献   

5.
Permanently cold habitats dominate our planet and psychrophilic microorganisms thrive in cold environments. Environmental adaptations unique to psychrophilic microorganisms have been thoroughly described; however, the vast majority of studies to date have focused on cold-adapted bacteria. The combination of low temperatures in the presence of light is one of the most damaging environmental stresses for a photosynthetic organism: in order to survive, photopsychrophiles (i.e. photosynthetic organisms adapted to low temperatures) balance temperature-independent reactions of light energy capture/transduction with downstream temperature-dependent metabolic processes such as carbon fixation. Here, we review research on photopsychrophiles with a focus on an emerging model organism, Chlamydomonas raudensis UWO241 (UWO241). UWO241 is a psychrophilic green algal species and is a member of the photosynthetic microbial eukaryote community that provides the majority of fixed carbon for ice-covered lake ecosystems located in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica. The water column exerts a range of environmental stressors on the phytoplankton community that inhabits this aquatic ecosystem, including low temperatures, extreme shade of an unusual spectral range (blue-green), high salinity, nutrient deprivation and extremes in seasonal photoperiod. More than two decades of work on UWO241 have produced one of our most comprehensive views of environmental adaptation in a cold-adapted, photosynthetic microbial eukaryote.  相似文献   

6.
Permanently low temperature environments are one of the most abundant microbial habitats on earth. As in most ecosystems, photosynthetic organisms drive primary production in low temperature food webs. Many of these phototrophic microorganisms are psychrophilic; however, functioning of the photosynthetic processes of these enigmatic psychrophiles (the "photopsychrophiles") in cold environments is not well understood. Here we describe a new chlorophyte isolated from a low temperature pond, on the Ross Ice Shelf near Bratina Island, Antarctica. Phylogenetic and morphological analyses place this strain in the Chlorella clade, and we have named this new chlorophyte Chlorella BI. Chlorella BI is a psychrophilic species, exhibiting optimum temperature for growth at around 10 degrees C. However, psychrophily in the Antarctic Chlorella was not linked to high levels of membrane-associated poly-unsaturated fatty acids. Unlike the model Antarctic lake alga, Chlamydomonas raudensis UWO241, Chlorella BI has retained the ability for dynamic short term adjustment of light energy distribution between photosystem II (PS II) and photosystem I (PS I). In addition, Chlorella BI can grow under a variety of trophic modes, including heterotrophic growth in the dark. Thus, this newly isolated photopsychrophile has retained a higher versatility in response to environmental change than other well studied cold-adapted chlorophytes.  相似文献   

7.
Chlamydomonas raudensis Ettl UWO241, a natural variant of C. raudensis, is deficient in state transitions. Its habitat, the deepest layer of Lake Bonney in Antarctica, features low irradiance, low temperature, and high salinity. Although psychrophily and low-light acclimation of this green alga has been described, very little information is available on the effect of salinity. Here, we demonstrate that this psychrophile is halotolerant, not halophilic, and it shows energy redistribution between photosystem I and II based on energy spillover under low-salt conditions. Furthermore, we revealed that C. raudensis exhibits higher non-photochemical quenching in comparison with the mesophile Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, when grown with low-salt, which is due to the lower proton conductivity across the thylakoid membrane. Significance of the C. raudensis UWO241 traits found in the low salinity culture are implicated with their natural habitats, including the high salinity and extremely stable light environments.  相似文献   

8.
Here we investigated whether there is evidence of local adaptation in strains of an ancestrally marine dinoflagellate to the lacustrine environment they now inhabit (optimal genotypes) and/or if they have evolved phenotypic plasticity (a range of phenotypes). Eleven strains of Polarella glacialis were isolated and cultured from three different environments: the polar seas, a hyposaline and a hypersaline Antarctic lake. Local adaptation was tested by comparing growth rates of lacustrine and marine strains at their own and reciprocal site conditions. To determine phenotypic plasticity, we measured the reaction norm for salinity. We found evidence of both, limited local adaptation and higher phenotypic plasticity in lacustrine strains when compared with marine ancestors. At extreme high salinities, local lake strains outperformed other strains, and at extreme low salinities, strains from the hyposaline lake outperformed all other strains. The data suggest that lake populations may have evolved higher phenotypic plasticity in the lake habitats compared with the sea, presumably due to the high temporal variability in salinity in the lacustrine systems. Moreover, the interval of salinity tolerance differed between strains from the hyposaline and hypersaline lakes, indicating local adaptation promoted by different salinity.  相似文献   

9.
The psychrophilic Antarctic alga, Chlamydomonas raudensis Ettl (UWO241), grows under an extreme environment of low temperature and low irradiance of a limited spectral quality (blue‐green). We investigated the ability of C. raudensis to acclimate to long‐term imbalances in excitation caused by light quality through adjustments in photosystem stoichiometry. Log‐phase cultures of C. raudensis and C. reinhardtii grown under white light were shifted to either blue or red light for 12 h. Previously, we reported that C. raudensis lacks the ability to redistribute light energy via the short‐term mechanism of state transitions. However, similar to the model of mesophilic alga, C. reinhardtii, the psychrophile retained the capacity for long‐term adjustment in energy distribution between PSI and PSII by modulating the levels of PSI reaction center polypeptides, PsaA/PsaB, with minimal changes in the content of the PSII polypeptide, D1, in response to changes in light quality. The functional consequences of the modulation in PSI/PSII stoichiometry in the psychrophile were distinct from those observed in C. reinhardtii. Exposure of C. raudensis to red light caused 1) an inhibition of growth and photosynthetic rates, 2) an increased reduction state of the intersystem plastoquinone pool with concomitant increases in nonphotochemical quenching, 3) an uncoupling of the major light‐harvesting complex from the PSII core, and 4) differential thylakoid protein phosphorylation profiles compared with C. reinhardtii. We conclude that the characteristic low levels of PSI relative to PSII set the limit in the capacity of C. raudensis to photoacclimate to an environment enriched in red light.  相似文献   

10.
The Antarctic psychrophilic green alga Chlamy‐domonas sp. UWO 241 is an emerging model for studying microbial adaptation to polar environments. However, little is known about its evolutionary history and its phylogenetic relationship with other chlamydomonadalean algae is equivocal. Here, we attempt to clarify the phylogenetic position of UWO 241, specifically with respect to Chlamydomonas rau‐densis SAG 49.72. Contrary to a previous report, we show that UWO 241 is a distinct species from SAG 49.72. Our phylogenetic analyses of nuclear and plastid DNA sequences reveal that UWO 241 represents a unique lineage within the Moewusinia clade (sensu Nakada) of the Chlamydomonadales (Chlorophyceae, Chlorophyta), closely affiliated to the marine species Chlamydomonas parkeae SAG 24.89.  相似文献   

11.
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Atriplex (Halimione) portulacoides is a halophytic, C(3) shrub. It is virtually confined to coastal salt marshes, where it often dominates the vegetation. The aim of this study was to investigate its growth responses to salinity and the extent to which these could be explained by photosynthetic physiology. METHODS: The responses of young plants to salinity in the range 0-700 mol m(-3) NaCl were investigated in a glasshouse experiment. The performance of plants was examined using classical growth analysis, measurements of gas exchange (infrared gas analysis), determination of chlorophyll fluorescence characteristics (modulated fluorimeter) and photosynthetic pigment concentrations; total ash, sodium, potassium and nitrogen concentrations, and relative water content were also determined. KEY RESULTS: Plants accumulated Na(+) approximately in proportion to external salinity. Salt stimulated growth up to an external concentration of 200 mol m(-3) NaCl and some growth was maintained at higher salinities. The main determinant of growth response to salinity was unit leaf rate. This was itself reflected in rates of CO(2) assimilation, which were not affected by 200 mol m(-3) but were reduced at higher salinities. Reductions in net photosynthetic rate could be accounted for largely by lower stomatal conductance and intercellular CO(2) concentration. Apart from possible effects of osmotic shock at the beginning of the experiment, salinity did not have any adverse effect on photosystem II (PSII). Neither the quantum efficiency of PSII (Phi(PSII)) nor the chlorophyll fluorescence ratio (F(v)/F(m)) were reduced by salinity, and lower mid-day values recovered by dawn. Mid-day F(v)/F(m) was in fact depressed more at low external sodium concentration, by the end of the experiment. CONCLUSIONS: The growth responses of the hygro-halophyte A. portulacoides to salinity appear largely to depend on changes in its rate of photosynthetic gas exchange. Photosynthesis appears to be limited mainly through stomatal conductance and hence intercellular CO(2) concentration, rather than by effects on PSII; moderate salinity might stimulate carboxylation capacity. This is in contrast to more extreme halophytes, for which an ability to maintain leaf area can partially offset declining rates of carbon assimilation at high salinity.  相似文献   

12.
Maximum photosynthetic capacity indicates that the Antarctic psychrophile Chlamydomonas raudensis H. Ettl UWO 241 is photosynthetically adapted to low temperature. Despite this finding, C. raudensis UWO 241 exhibited greater sensitivity to low‐temperature photoinhibition of PSII than the mesophile Chlamydomonas reinhardtii P. A. Dang. However, in contrast with results for C. reinhardtii, the quantum requirement to induce 50% photoinhibition of PSII in C. raudensis UWO 241 (50 μmol photons) was comparable at either 8°C or 29°C. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a photoautotroph whose susceptibility to photoinhibition is temperature independent. In contrast, the capacity of the psychrophile to recover from photoinhibition of PSII was sensitive to temperature and inhibited at 29°C. The maximum rate of recovery from photoinhibition of the psychrophile at 8°C was comparable to the maximum rate of recovery of the mesophile at 29°C. We provide evidence that photoinhibition in C. raudensis UWO 241 is chronic rather than dynamic. The photoinhibition‐induced decrease in the D1 content in C. raudensis recovered within 30 min at 8°C. Both the recovery of the D1 content as well as the initial fast phase of the recovery of Fv/Fm at 8°C were inhibited by lincomycin, a chloroplast protein synthesis inhibitor. We conclude that the susceptibility of C. raudensis UWO 241 to low‐temperature photoinhibition reflects its adaptation to low growth irradiance, whereas the unusually rapid rate of recovery at low temperature exhibited by this psychrophile is due to a novel D1 repair cycle that is adapted to and is maximally operative at low temperature.  相似文献   

13.
Seo PJ  Park JM  Kang SK  Kim SG  Park CM 《Planta》2011,233(1):189-200
The plasma membrane is an important cellular organ that perceives incoming developmental and environmental signals and integrates these signals into cellular regulatory mechanisms. It also acts as a barrier against unfavorable extracellular factors to maintain cell viability. Despite its importance for cell viability, molecular components determining cell viability and underlying mechanisms are largely unknown. Here, we show that a plasma membrane-localized MtN3 protein SAG29 regulates cell viability under high salinity in Arabidopsis. The SAG29 gene is expressed primarily in senescing plant tissues. It is induced by osmotic stresses via an abscisic acid-dependent pathway. Whereas the SAG29-overexpressing transgenic plants (35S:SAG29) exhibited an accelerated senescence and were hypersensitive to salt stress, the SAG29-deficient mutants were less sensitive to high salinity. Consistent with this, the 35S:SAG29 transgenic plants showed reduced cell viability in the roots under normal growth condition. In contrast, cell viability in the SAG29-deficient mutant roots was indistinguishable from that in the roots of control plants. Notably, the mutant roots exhibited enhanced cell viability under high salinity. Our observations indicate that the senescence-associated SAG29 protein is associated with cell viability under high salinity and other osmotic stress conditions. We propose that the SAG29 protein may serve as a molecular link that integrates environmental stress responses into senescing process.  相似文献   

14.
The legume genus Lotus includes glycophytic forage crops and other species adapted to extreme environments, such as saline soils. Understanding salt tolerance mechanisms will contribute to the discovery of new traits which may enhance the breeding efforts towards improved performance of legumes in marginal agricultural environments. Here, we used a combination of ionomic and gas chromatography‐mass spectrometry (GC‐MS)‐based metabolite profilings of complete shoots (pooling leaves, petioles and stems) to compare the extremophile Lotus creticus, adapted to highly saline coastal regions, and two cultivated glycophytic grassland forage species, Lotus corniculatus and Lotus tenuis. L. creticus exhibited better survival after exposure to long‐term lethal salinity and was more efficient at excluding Cl from the shoots than the glycophytes. In contrast, Na+ levels were higher in the extremophile under both control and salt stress, a trait often observed in halophytes. Ionomics demonstrated a differential rearrangement of shoot nutrient levels in the extremophile upon salt exposure. Metabolite profiling showed that responses to NaCl in L. creticus shoots were globally similar to those of the glycophytes, providing little evidence for metabolic pre‐adaptation to salinity. This study is the first comparing salt acclimation responses between extremophile and non‐extremophile legumes, and challenges the generalization of the metabolic salt pre‐adaptation hypothesis.  相似文献   

15.
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17.
Chlamydomonas sp. UWO 241 (UWO 241) is a psychrophilic green alga isolated from Antarctica. A unique characteristic of this algal strain is its inability to undergo state transitions coupled with the absence of photosystem II (PSII) light-harvesting complex protein phosphorylation. We show that UWO 241 preferentially phosphorylates specific polypeptides associated with an approximately 1,000-kD pigment-protein supercomplex that contains components of both photosystem I (PSI) and the cytochrome b6/f (Cyt b6/f) complex. Liquid chromatography nano-tandem mass spectrometry was used to identify three major phosphorylated proteins associated with this PSI-Cyt b6/f supercomplex, two 17-kD PSII subunit P-like proteins and a 70-kD ATP-dependent zinc metalloprotease, FtsH. The PSII subunit P-like protein sequence exhibited 70.6% similarity to the authentic PSII subunit P protein associated with the oxygen-evolving complex of PSII in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Tyrosine-146 was identified as a unique phosphorylation site on the UWO 241 PSII subunit P-like polypeptide. Assessment of PSI cyclic electron transport by in vivo P700 photooxidation and the dark relaxation kinetics of P700+ indicated that UWO 241 exhibited PSI cyclic electron transport rates that were 3 times faster and more sensitive to antimycin A than the mesophile control, Chlamydomonas raudensis SAG 49.72. The stability of the PSI-Cyt b6/f supercomplex was dependent upon the phosphorylation status of the PsbP-like protein and the zinc metalloprotease FtsH as well as the presence of high salt. We suggest that adaptation of UWO 241 to its unique low-temperature and high-salt environment favors the phosphorylation of a PSI-Cyt b6/f supercomplex to regulate PSI cyclic electron transport rather than the regulation of state transitions through the phosphorylation of PSII light-harvesting complex proteins.The Antarctic psychrophilic green alga Chlamydomonas sp. UWO 241 (UWO 241) originates from the lowest trophic zone of Lake Bonney, which is characterized by an extremely stable environment of low temperatures (4°C–6°C), low irradiance (less than 50 µmol photons m−2 s−1), high salt concentrations (700 mm), and a narrow spectral distribution enriched in the blue-green region (Lizotte and Priscu, 1992; Morgan-Kiss et al., 2006). Adaptation of UWO 241 to this unique natural aquatic environment has resulted in the evolution of a structurally and functionally distinct photosynthetic apparatus relative to the mesophilic strains Chlamydomonas raudensis SAG 49.72 (SAG 49.72; Pocock et al., 2004) and the model green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Morgan et al., 1998; Morgan-Kiss et al., 2006). UWO 241 is a halotolerant psychrophile (Morgan-Kiss et al., 2006; Takizawa et al., 2009) that dies at temperatures of 20°C or higher (Possmayer et al., 2011). This is consistent with the fact that temperature-response curves for light-saturated rates of CO2-saturated oxygen evolution indicate that UWO 241 photosynthesizes maximally at 8°C at rates that are comparable to rates of the mesophile, C. reinhardtii, grown and measured at 29°C (Pocock et al., 2007). Although UWO 241 exhibits a low quantum requirement for photoinhibition and the degradation of the PSII reaction center polypeptide D1 (PsbA), this is complemented by a rapid, light-dependent recovery of PSII photochemistry associated with the de novo biosynthesis of D1 at low temperature (Pocock et al., 2007). Thus, this psychrophile appears to be photosynthetically adapted to growth at low temperature (Pocock et al., 2007).UWO 241 exhibits significantly enhanced fatty acid unsaturation associated with all of the major thylakoid lipid classes (monogalactosyldiacylglyceride, digalactosyldiacylglyceride, sulfoquinovosyldiacylglyceride, and phosphatidyldiacylglyceride) as well as a 2- to 10-fold increase in the unique, unsaturated fatty acid 16:4, depending on the specific thylakoid lipid species (Morgan-Kiss et al., 2002a). Consequently, the biophysical determination of the critical temperature for thylakoid membrane destabilization for UWO 241 (40°C) was significantly lower than that for C. reinhardtii (50°C), which is consistent with the adaptation of UWO 241 to low temperature (Morgan-Kiss et al., 2002a).Biochemical analyses of the chlorophyll-protein complexes coupled with immunoblots of their constituent polypeptides indicate that UWO 241 exhibits abundant PSII light-harvesting complex (LHCII) associated with a low chlorophyll a/b (Chl a/b) ratio (1.8–2) relative to the mesophiles, SAG 49.72 and C. reinhardtii (Chl a/b ratio = 3). In addition, UWO 241 exhibits an unusually low level of PSI such that the stoichiometry of PSI/PSII was estimated to be about 0.5 in UWO 241, whereas the mesophiles, SAG 49.72 and C. reinhardtii, grown under optimal growth conditions, exhibited a PSI/PSII of about 1. These biochemical data were confirmed by measurements of P700 photooxidation (Morgan-Kiss et al., 2002b; Szyszka et al., 2007), which indicated that UWO 241 exhibits high rates of PSI cyclic electron flow (CEF; Morgan-Kiss et al., 2002b).Recently, we reported that acclimation of UWO 241 to low temperature and low growth irradiance results in alterations in the partitioning of excess excitation energy to maintain cellular energy balance compared with the mesophile, SAG 49.72 (Szyszka et al., 2007). While SAG 49.72 favors energy partitioning for photoprotection through the induction of the xanthophyll cycle, the psychrophilic strain, UWO 241, favors energy partitioning for photoprotection through constitutive quenching processes involved in energy dissipation, even though UWO 241 exhibits an active xanthophyll cycle (Pocock et al., 2007; Szyszka et al., 2007). Although the molecular basis of the constitutive quenching process for photoprotection has not been elucidated unequivocally, this may reflect the differences in the predisposition for energy dissipation through either the Q2 or the Q1 site in PSII-LHCII supercomplexes (Jahns and Holzwarth 2012; Derks et al., 2015) or, alternatively, it may indicate quenching through PSII reaction centers, as suggested previously (Hüner et al., 2006; Sane et al., 2012). Regardless of the mechanism, one consequence of this enhanced energy-quenching capacity of UWO 241 is that the psychrophile does not exhibit any pigment change in response to photoacclimation (Morgan-Kiss et al., 2006), typically observed for other mesophilic green algae such as C. reinhardtii, Dunaliella tertiolecta (Escoubas et al., 1995), Dunaliella salina (Smith et al., 1990; Maxwell et al., 1995), and Chlorella vulgaris (Maxwell et al., 1995; Wilson et al., 2003). In addition, maximum growth rates of UWO 241 are sensitive to light quality, since rates of growth and photosynthesis are inhibited under red light, which results in increased excitation pressure in the psychrophile (Morgan-Kiss et al., 2005).However, the most unusual feature of UWO 241 is that it represents a natural variant that is deficient in state transitions (Morgan-Kiss et al., 2002b; Takizawa et al., 2009). State transitions have been well documented as a short-term mechanism for photoacclimation employed by algae and plants to balance light excitation between PSII and PSI (Allen et al., 1981; Allen, 2003; Eberhard et al., 2008; Rochaix, 2011, 2014). Overexcitation of PSII relative to PSI results in the phosphorylation of several peripheral Chl a/b-binding LHCII proteins, which causes their dissociation from the PSII core and subsequent association with PSI (Eberhard et al., 2008; Rochaix, 2011). As a result, excitation energy is redistributed in favor of PSI at the expense of PSII. Phosphorylation of LHCII polypeptides is essential in the regulation of state transitions and energy distribution between the two photosystems (Allen, 2003; Eberhard et al., 2008; Kargul and Barber, 2008; Rochaix, 2011, 2014). LHCII phosphorylation is initiated by modulation of the redox state of the plastoquinone (PQ) pool, which is sensed through the preferential binding of plastoquinol to the quinone-binding site of the cytochrome b6/f (Cyt b6/f) complex. As a consequence, the thylakoid protein kinases STT7 in C. reinhardtii and its ortholog, STN7, in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) are activated and LHCII is phosphorylated (Rochaix, 2011, 2014; Wunder et al., 2013). Similar to all other photosynthetic organisms, the LHCII polypeptides represent the major phosphorylated polypeptides detected in thylakoids of the mesophile, SAG 49.72 (Szyszka et al., 2007). Consistent with a deficiency in state transitions, UWO 241 does not phosphorylate the major LHCII polypeptides in response to changes in either growth irradiance or growth temperature (Morgan-Kiss et al., 2002b; Szyszka et al., 2007; Takizawa et al., 2009). In fact, UWO 241 exhibits a unique thylakoid membrane phosphorylation profile compared with either SAG 49.72 or C. reinhardtii (Morgan-Kiss et al., 2005; Szyszka et al., 2007; Takizawa et al., 2009). Rather than phosphorylation of LHCII polypeptides, UWO 241 preferentially phosphorylates several novel high-molecular-mass polypeptides (greater than 70 kD; Morgan-Kiss et al., 2002b; Szyszka et al., 2007).The Cyt b6/f complex of the photosynthetic intersystem electron transport chain is essential in the regulation of state transitions and the activation of the STT7 kinase (Rochaix, 2011, 2014). The Cyt b6/f complex of UWO 241 exhibits a unique cytochrome f (Cyt f) that is 7 kD smaller than the expected molecular mass of 41 kD exhibited by C. reinhardtii based on SDS-PAGE (Morgan-Kiss et al., 2006; Gudynaite-Savitch et al., 2006, 2007). No other differences in the structure and composition of the Cyt b6/f complex are apparent. Sequencing of the entire Cytochrome f gene (petA) from UWO 241 indicated that the amino acid sequence of Cyt f from UWO 241 exhibited 79% identity to that of C. reinhardtii. Through domain swapping between petA of UWO 241 and that of C. reinhardtii and subsequent transformation of a ΔpetA mutant of C. reinhardtii with the chimeric gene constructs, we reported that the apparent differences in molecular masses observed for petA in UWO 241 are due to differences in the amino acid sequences of the small domain of Cyt f. However, complementation of the ΔpetA mutant of C. reinhardtii with the entire petA from either UWO 241 or C. reinhardtii completely restored the capacity for state transitions in the ΔpetA mutant. Thus, we concluded that the changes in the amino acid sequence of the small domain of Cyt f of UWO 241 cannot account for the inability of UWO 241 to undergo state transitions (Gudynaite-Savitch et al., 2006, 2007).Since state transitions are inhibited in UWO 241, we hypothesized that the unique protein phosphorylation pattern observed in UWO 241 reflects an alternative mechanism to regulate energy flow within the photosynthetic apparatus of this Antarctic psychrophile. Thus, the objective of this research was to identify and characterize the high-molecular-mass polypeptides phosphorylated in the psychrophile, UWO 241. We report that UWO 241 preferentially phosphorylates specific polypeptides associated with a PSI-Cyt b6/f supercomplex. The role of the PSI-Cyt b6/f supercomplex and its phosphorylation status in the regulation of PSI cyclic electron transport in UWO 241 are discussed. We suggest that adaptation of UWO 241 to its unique low-temperature and low-light environment favors the phosphorylation of a PSI-Cyt b6/f supercomplex to regulate PSI cyclic electron transport rather than the regulation of state transitions through the phosphorylation of LHCII proteins.  相似文献   

18.
Thermophilic mutants were isolated from mesophilic Bacillus subtilis and Bacillus pumilus by plating large numbers of cells and incubating them for several days at a temperature about 10 degrees C above the upper growth temperature limit for the parent mesophiles. Under these conditions we found thermophilic mutant strains that were able to grow at temperatures between 50 degrees C and 70 degrees C at a frequency of less than 10(-10). The persistence of auxotrophic and antibiotic resistance markers in the thermophilic mutants confirmed their mesophilic origin. Transformation of genetic markers between thermophilic mutants and mesophilic parents was demonstrated at frequencies of 10(-3) to 10(-2) for single markers and about 10(-7) for two unlinked markers. With the same procedure we were able to transfer the thermophilic trait from the mutant strains of Bacillus to the mesophilic parental strains at a frequency of about 10(-7), suggesting that the thermophilic trait is a phenotypic consequence of mutations in two unlinked genes.  相似文献   

19.
Earlier, we described a new family of mesophilic, strictly autotrophic Fe(2+)-oxidizing archaebacteria, Ferroplasmaceae, which belongs to the order Thermoplasmales and includes the genus Ferroplasma and species F. acidiphilum (strain YT) [1]. The present work is concerned with a comparative study of phenotypic characteristics of the type strain YT and a new strain, F. acidiphilum Y-2, isolated from dense pulps produced during oxidation of arsenogold concentrates from the Bakyrchikskoe (Kazakhstan) and Olimpiadinskoe (Krasnoyarsk Krai) ore deposits, respectively. The G + C content of DNA from strains YT and Y-2 comprised 35.1 and 35.2 mol%, respectively; the level of DNA-DNA homology between the strains was 84%. Restriction profiles of chromosomal DNA from both strains exhibited a similarity coefficient of 0.87. Genotypic characteristics of these strains indicate their affiliation to the same species. The cells of both strains are polymorphic and lack cell walls. Strains of F. acidiphilum oxidized ferrous oxide and pyrite as the sole source of energy and fixed carbon dioxide as the sole carbon source. Strains required yeast extract as a growth factor. Optimum pH for cell growth ranged from 1.7 to 1.8; the temperature optima for the growth of strains YT and Y-2 were 34-36 and 40-42 degrees C, respectively. Comparative analysis of total lipids revealed their close similarity in the strains; two glycophospholipids comprised 90% of total lipids: lipid I, beta-D-glucopyranosylcaldarchaetidylglycerol (about 55%), and lipid II, trihexosylcaldarchaetidylglycerol (26%), whose isopranyl chains contained no cyclopentane rings. The carbohydrate fraction of lipid I hydrolysate contained only D-glucose, whereas hydrolysate of lipid II contained both D-glucose and D-galactose in a molar ratio of 2:1. Thus, it was established that the intraspecific phylogenetic divergence within F. acidiphilum is manifested in two the strains by different temperature optima against the background of similarity in other phenotypic properties.  相似文献   

20.
Microbial growth under extreme conditions is often slow. This is partly because large amounts of energy are diverted into cellular mechanisms that allow survival under hostile conditions. Because this challenge is universal and diversity in extreme environments is low compared to non-extreme environments, slow-growing microorganisms are not overgrown by other species. In some cases, especially when nutrients are scarce, slow growth was even shown to increase stress tolerance. And in at least some species of extremotolerant and extremophilic fungi, growth rate appears to be coupled with their very unusual morphologies, which in turn may be an adaptation to extreme conditions. However, there is more than one strategy of survival in extreme environments. Fungi that thrive in extremes can be divided into (i) ubiquitous and polyextremotolerant generalists and (ii) rarely isolated specialists with narrow ecological amplitudes. While generalists can compete with mesophilic species, specialists cannot. When adapting to extreme conditions, the risk of an evolutionary trade-off in the form of reduced fitness under mesophilic conditions may limit the maximum stress tolerance achievable by polyextremotolerant generalists. At the same time, specialists are rarely found in mesophilic environments, which allows them to evolve to ever greater extremotolerance, since a reduction of mesophilic fitness is likely to have little impact on their evolutionary success.  相似文献   

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