Affiliation:
1. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, UCLA, Box 951569, Los Angeles, California 90095-1569
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Previously, we had identified FOX1 and FTR1 as iron deficiency-inducible components of a high-affinity copper-dependent iron uptake pathway in
Chlamydomonas
. In this work, we survey the version 3.0 draft genome to identify a ferrireductase, FRE1, and two ZIP family proteins, IRT1 and IRT2, as candidate ferrous transporters based on their increased expression in iron-deficient versus iron-replete cells. In a parallel proteomic approach, we identified FEA1 and FEA2 as the major proteins secreted by iron-deficient
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii
. The recovery of FEA1 and FEA2 from the medium of
Chlamydomonas
strain CC425 cultures is strictly correlated with iron nutrition status, and the accumulation of the corresponding mRNAs parallels that of the
Chlamydomonas FOX1
and
FTR1
mRNAs, although the magnitude of regulation is more dramatic for the
FEA
genes. Like the
FOX1
and
FTR1
genes, the
FEA
genes do not respond to copper, zinc, or manganese deficiency. The 5′ flanking untranscribed sequences from the
FEA1
,
FTR1
, and
FOX1
genes confer iron deficiency-dependent expression of
ARS2
, suggesting that the iron assimilation pathway is under transcriptional control by iron nutrition. Genetic analysis suggests that the secreted proteins FEA1 and FEA2 facilitate high-affinity iron uptake, perhaps by concentrating iron in the vicinity of the cell. Homologues of
FEA1
and
FRE1
were identified previously as high-CO
2
-responsive genes,
HCR1
and
HCR2
, in
Chlorococcum littorale
, suggesting that components of the iron assimilation pathway are responsive to carbon nutrition. These iron response components are placed in a proposed iron assimilation pathway for
Chlamydomonas
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology