Bacterial exometabolites influence Chlamydomonas cell cycle and double algal productivity

Author:

Windler Miriam1,Stuart Rhona2ORCID,Deutzmann Joerg S1,Mayali Xavier2ORCID,Navid Ali2,D'haeseleer Patrik2,Marcu Oana E3,Lipton Mary4,Nicora Carrie4,Spormann Alfred M15

Affiliation:

1. Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering , Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, United States

2. Physical and Life Sciences Directorate, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory , Mountain View, CA 94035, United States

3. SETI Institute, NASA Ames Research Center , Livermore, CA 94550, United States

4. Pacific Northwest National Laboratories , Richland, WA 99354, United States

5. Department of Chemical Engineering, Stanford University , Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, United States

Abstract

Abstract Algal-bacterial interactions provide clues to algal physiology, but mutualistic interactions are complicated by dynamic exchange. We characterized the response of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii to the presence of a putative alga-benefitting commensal bacterium (Arthrobacter strain ‘P2b’). Co-cultivation promoted chlorophyll content, biomass, average cell size, and number of dividing cells, relative to axenic cultures. Addition of bacterial spent medium (whole, size-fractionated and heat-treated) had similar effects, indicating P2b does not require algal interaction to promote growth. Nutrients and pH were excluded as putative effectors, collectively indicating a commensal interaction mediated by Arthrobacter-released small exometabolite(s). Proteogenomic comparison revealed similar response to co-cultivation and spent media, including differential cell cycle regulation, extensive downregulation of flagellar genes and histones, carbonic anhydrase and RubisCO downregulation, upregulation of some chlorophyll, amino acid and carbohydrate biosynthesis genes, and changes to redox and Fe homeostasis. Further, Arthrobacter protein expression indicated some highly expressed putative secondary metabolites. Together, these results revealed that low molecular weight bacterial metabolites can elicit major physiological changes in algal cell cycle regulation, perhaps through a more productive G1 phase, that lead to substantial increases in photosynthetically-produced biomass. This work illustrates that model commensal interactions can be used to shed light on algal response to stimulating bacteria.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Ecology,Microbiology

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