Author:
Spalding Martin H.,Van Kyujung,Wang Yingjun,Nakamura Yoshiko
Abstract
Aquatic organisms, including Chlamydomonas reinhardtii,
are faced with a variable supply of dissolved inorganic carbon (Ci).
Accordingly, C. reinhardtii has the ability to acclimate
to the changing Ci supply through a variety of responses, including induction
of a CO2 concentrating mechanism (CCM) when Ci is
limiting. The CCM uses active Ci uptake to accumulate a high internal
concentration of bicarbonate, which is dehydrated by a specific thylakoid
carbonic anhydrase to supply CO2, the substrate used in
photosynthesis. In addition to the changes demonstrably related to the
function of the CCM, C. reinhardtii exhibits several
other acclimation responses to limiting Ci, such as changes in cellular
organization and induction or upregulation of several genes. A key area
currently under investigation is how C. reinhardtii
cells recognize the change in Ci or CO2 concentration,
and transduce that signal into needed gene expression changes. Mutational
analyses are proving very useful for learning more about the CCM and about the
acclimation response to changes in Ci availability. Cloning of the gene
disrupted in cia5, a mutant apparently unable to
acclimate to limiting Ci, has opened opportunities for more rapid progress in
understanding the signal transduction pathway. The Cia5
gene appears to encode a transcription factor that may control, either
directly or indirectly, much of the gene expression responses to limiting Ci
in C. reinhardtii. Several additional new mutants with
potential defects in the signal transduction pathway have been isolated,
including three new alleles of cia5.
Subject
Plant Science,Agronomy and Crop Science