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1.
Annu Rev Plant Biol ; 64: 1-17, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23157644

ABSTRACT

Presented is a historical perspective of one scientist's journey from war-torn Europe to the opportunities presented by a flexible US educational system. It celebrates the opening of the science establishment that began in the 1950s and its fostering of basic research, and recognizes individuals who were instrumental in guiding the author's education as well as those with whom she later participated in collaborative algal plant research. The initial discovery and later elucidation of phycobilisome structure are elaborated, including the structural connection with photosystem II. Furthermore, she summarizes some of her laboratory's results on carotenoids and its exploration of the isoprenoid pathway in cyanobacteria. Finally, she comments on the gender gap and how her generation benefited when opportunities for women scientists were enlarged.


Subject(s)
Botany/history , Rhodophyta/cytology , Science/education , Cyanobacteria/cytology , Cyanobacteria/physiology , Europe , History, 20th Century , Photosystem II Protein Complex , Phycobilisomes/physiology , Rhodophyta/physiology , United States , Workforce
2.
J Phycol ; 48(6): 1328-42, 2012 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27009986

ABSTRACT

The red seaweed Porphyra (Bangiophyceae) and related Bangiales have global economic importance. Here, we report the analysis of a comprehensive transcriptome comprising ca. 4.7 million expressed sequence tag (EST) reads from P. umbilicalis (L.) J. Agardh and P. purpurea (Roth) C. Agardh (ca. 980 Mbp of data generated using 454 FLX pyrosequencing). These ESTs were isolated from the haploid gametophyte (blades from both species) and diploid conchocelis stage (from P. purpurea). In a bioinformatic analysis, only 20% of the contigs were found to encode proteins of known biological function. Comparative analysis of predicted protein functions in mesophilic (including Porphyra) and extremophilic red algae suggest that the former has more putative functions related to signaling, membrane transport processes, and establishment of protein complexes. These enhanced functions may reflect general mesophilic adaptations. A near-complete repertoire of genes encoding histones and ribosomal proteins was identified, with some differentially regulated between the blade and conchocelis stage in P. purpurea. This finding may reflect specific regulatory processes associated with these distinct phases of the life history. Fatty acid desaturation patterns, in combination with gene expression profiles, demonstrate differences from seed plants with respect to the transport of fatty acid/lipid among subcellular compartments and the molecular machinery of lipid assembly. We also recovered a near-complete gene repertoire for enzymes involved in the formation of sterols and carotenoids, including candidate genes for the biosynthesis of lutein. Our findings provide key insights into the evolution, development, and biology of Porphyra, an important lineage of red algae.

3.
Plant Cell ; 23(8): 3055-69, 2011 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21862704

ABSTRACT

A few species in the genus Adonis are the only land plants known to produce the valuable red ketocarotenoid astaxanthin in abundance. Here, we ascertain the pathway that leads from the ß-rings of ß-carotene, a carotenoid ubiquitous in plants, to the 3-hydroxy-4-keto-ß-rings of astaxanthin (3,3'-dihydroxy-ß,ß-carotene-4,4'-dione) in the blood-red flowers of Adonis aestivalis, an ornamental and medicinal plant commonly known as summer pheasant's eye. Two gene products were found to catalyze three distinct reactions, with the first and third reactions of the pathway catalyzed by the same enzyme. The pathway commences with the activation of the number 4 carbon of a ß-ring in a reaction catalyzed by a carotenoid ß-ring 4-dehydrogenase (CBFD), continues with the further dehydrogenation of this carbon to yield a carbonyl in a reaction catalyzed by a carotenoid 4-hydroxy-ß-ring 4-dehydrogenase, and concludes with the addition of an hydroxyl group at the number 3 carbon in a reaction catalyzed by the erstwhile CBFD enzyme. The A. aestivalis pathway is both portable and robust, functioning efficiently in a simple bacterial host. Our elucidation of the pathway to astaxanthin in A. aestivalis provides enabling technology for development of a biological production process and reveals the evolutionary origin of this unusual plant pathway, one unrelated to and distinctly different from those used by bacteria, green algae, and fungi to synthesize astaxanthin.


Subject(s)
Adonis/enzymology , Plant Proteins/metabolism , beta Carotene/metabolism , Adonis/chemistry , Adonis/genetics , Adonis/metabolism , Base Sequence , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Evolution, Molecular , Flowers/chemistry , Flowers/enzymology , Flowers/genetics , Flowers/metabolism , Gene Library , Genetic Complementation Test , Molecular Sequence Data , Oxidoreductases/genetics , Oxidoreductases/metabolism , Phylogeny , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plants, Medicinal , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Xanthophylls/biosynthesis , Xanthophylls/chemistry
4.
Photosynth Res ; 107(1): 1-6, 2011 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21190136

ABSTRACT

The integrated functioning of two photosystems (I and II) whether in cyanobacteria or in chloroplasts is the outstanding sign of a common ancestral origin. Many variations on the basic theme are currently evident in oxygenic photosynthetic organisms whether they are prokaryotes, unicellular, or multicellular. By conservative estimates, oxygenic photosynthesis has been around for at least ca. 2.2-2.7 billions years, consistent with cyanobacteria-type microfossils, biomarkers, and an atmospheric rise in oxygen to less than 1.0% of the present concentration. The presumptions of chloroplast formation by the cyanobacterial uptake into a eukaryote prior to 1.6 BYa ago are confounded by assumptions of host type(s) and potential tolerance of oxygen toxicity. The attempted dating and interrelationships of particular chloroplasts in various plant or animal lineages has relied heavily on phylogenomic analysis and evaluations that have been difficult to confirm separately. Many variations occur in algal groups, involving the type and number of accessory pigments, and the number(s) of membranes (2-4) enclosing a chloroplast, which can both help and complicate inferences made about early or late origins of chloroplasts. Integration of updated phylogenomics with physiological and cytological observations remains a special challenge, but could lead to more accurate assumptions of initial and extant endosymbiotic event(s) leading toward stable chloroplast associations.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Chloroplasts/metabolism , Cyanobacteria/metabolism , Oxygen/metabolism , Photosynthesis , Chlorophyta/metabolism , Chloroplasts/classification , Chloroplasts/genetics , Glaucophyta/metabolism , Models, Biological , Photosynthesis/genetics , Photosystem I Protein Complex/genetics , Photosystem II Protein Complex/genetics , Rhodophyta/metabolism , Symbiosis , Time Factors
5.
J Bacteriol ; 192(6): 1700-9, 2010 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20081034

ABSTRACT

Plastoglobulins (PGL) are the predominant proteins of lipid globules in the plastids of flowering plants. Genes encoding proteins similar to plant PGL are also present in algae and cyanobacteria but in no other organisms, suggesting an important role for these proteins in oxygenic photosynthesis. To gain an understanding of the core and fundamental function of PGL, the two genes that encode PGL-like polypeptides in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 (pgl1 and pgl2) were inactivated individually and in combination. The resulting mutants were able to grow under photoautotrophic conditions, dividing at rates that were comparable to that of the wild-type (WT) under low-light (LL) conditions (10 microeinsteins x m(-2) x s(-1)) but lower than that of the WT under moderately high-irradiance (HL) conditions (150 microeinsteins x m(-2) x s(-1)). Under HL, each Deltapgl mutant had less chlorophyll, a lower photosystem I (PSI)/PSII ratio, more carotenoid per unit of chlorophyll, and very much more myxoxanthophyll (a carotenoid symptomatic of high light stress) per unit of chlorophyll than the WT. Large, heterogeneous inclusion bodies were observed in cells of mutants inactivated in pgl2 or both pgl2 and pgl1 under both LL and HL conditions. The mutant inactivated in both pgl genes was especially sensitive to the light environment, with alterations in pigmentation, heterogeneous inclusion bodies, and a lower PSI/PSII ratio than the WT even for cultures grown under LL conditions. The WT cultures grown under HL contained 2- to 3-fold more PGL1 and PGL2 per cell than cultures grown under LL conditions. These and other observations led us to conclude that the PGL-like polypeptides of Synechocystis play similar but not identical roles in some process relevant to the repair of photooxidative damage.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial/physiology , Light , Synechocystis/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Mutation , Oxidative Stress , Phenotype , Synechocystis/genetics , Synechocystis/radiation effects
6.
Photosynth Res ; 92(2): 245-59, 2007 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17634749

ABSTRACT

Carotenoids are indispensable pigments of the photosynthetic apparatus in plants, algae, and cyanobacteria and are produced, as well, by many bacteria and fungi. Elucidation of biochemical pathways leading to the carotenoids that function in the photosynthetic membranes of land plants has been greatly aided by the use of carotenoid-accumulating strains of Escherichia coli as heterologous hosts for functional assays, in vivo, of the otherwise difficult to study membrane-associated pathway enzymes. This same experimental approach is uniquely well-suited to the discovery and characterization of yet-to-be identified enzymes that lead to carotenoids of the photosynthetic membranes in algal cells, to the multitude of carotenoids found in nongreen plant tissues, and to the myriad flavor and aroma compounds that are derived from carotenoids in plant tissues. A portfolio of plasmids suitable for the production in E. coli of a variety of carotenoids is presented herein. The use of these carotenoid-producing E. coli for the identification of cDNAs encoding enzymes of carotenoid and isoprenoid biosynthesis, for characterization of the enzymes these cDNAs encode, and for the production of specific carotenoids for use as enzyme substrates and reference standards, is described using the flowering plant Adonis aestivalis to provide examples. cDNAs encoding nine different A. aestivalis enzymes of carotenoid and isoprenoid synthesis were identified and the enzymatic activity of their products verified. Those cDNAs newly described include ones that encode phytoene synthase, beta-carotene hydroxylase, deoxyxylulose-5-phosphate synthase, isopentenyl diphosphate isomerase, and geranylgeranyl diphosphate synthase.


Subject(s)
Adonis/enzymology , Carotenoids/biosynthesis , Flowers/enzymology , Plasmids , Adonis/genetics , Carotenoids/metabolism , Carotenoids/standards , Erythritol/analogs & derivatives , Erythritol/metabolism , Gene Library , Genetic Complementation Test , Sugar Phosphates/metabolism , Terpenes/metabolism
7.
Eukaryot Cell ; 6(3): 533-45, 2007 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17085635

ABSTRACT

Cyanidioschyzon merolae is considered to be one of the most primitive of eukaryotic photosynthetic organisms. To obtain insights into the origin and evolution of the pathway of carotenoid biosynthesis in eukaryotic plants, the carotenoid content of C. merolae was ascertained, genes encoding enzymes of carotenoid biosynthesis in this unicellular red alga were identified, and the activities of two candidate pathway enzymes of particular interest, lycopene cyclase and beta-carotene hydroxylase, were examined. C. merolae contains perhaps the simplest assortment of chlorophylls and carotenoids found in any eukaryotic photosynthetic organism: chlorophyll a, beta-carotene, and zeaxanthin. Carotenoids with epsilon-rings (e.g., lutein), found in many other red algae and in green algae and land plants, were not detected, and the lycopene cyclase of C. merolae quite specifically produced only beta-ringed carotenoids when provided with lycopene as the substrate in Escherichia coli. Lycopene beta-ring cyclases from several bacteria, cyanobacteria, and land plants also proved to be high-fidelity enzymes, whereas the structurally related epsilon-ring cyclases from several plant species were found to be less specific, yielding products with beta-rings as well as epsilon-rings. C. merolae lacks orthologs of genes that encode the two types of beta-carotene hydroxylase found in land plants, one a nonheme diiron oxygenase and the other a cytochrome P450. A C. merolae chloroplast gene specifies a polypeptide similar to members of a third class of beta-carotene hydroxylases, common in cyanobacteria, but this gene did not produce an active enzyme when expressed in E. coli. The identity of the C. merolae beta-carotene hydroxylase therefore remains uncertain.


Subject(s)
Carotenoids/biosynthesis , Mixed Function Oxygenases/genetics , Photosynthesis/physiology , Rhodophyta/physiology , Amino Acid Sequence , Carotenoids/metabolism , Chlorophyll/metabolism , Cyanobacteria/enzymology , Cyanobacteria/metabolism , Evolution, Molecular , Genes, Bacterial/genetics , Genes, Plant/genetics , Intramolecular Lyases/genetics , Intramolecular Lyases/metabolism , Lycopene , Mixed Function Oxygenases/metabolism , Photosynthesis/genetics , Phylogeny , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Xanthophylls , Zeaxanthins , beta Carotene/biosynthesis
8.
Plant J ; 41(3): 478-92, 2005 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15659105

ABSTRACT

The red ketocarotenoid astaxanthin (3,3'-dihydroxy-4,4'-diketo-beta,beta-carotene) is widely used as an additive in feed for the pigmentation of fish and crustaceans and is frequently included in human nutritional supplements as well. There is considerable interest in developing a plant-based biological production process for this valuable carotenoid. Adonis aestivalis (Ranunculaceae) is unusual among plants in synthesizing and accumulating large amounts of astaxanthin and other ketocarotenoids. The formation of astaxanthin requires only the addition of a carbonyl at the number 4 carbon of each beta-ring of zeaxanthin (3,3'-dihydroxy-beta,beta-carotene), a carotenoid typically present in the green tissues of higher plants. We screened an A. aestivalis flower library to identify cDNAs that might encode the enzyme that catalyzes the addition of the carbonyls. Two closely related cDNAs selected in this screen were found to specify polypeptides similar in sequence to plant beta-carotene 3-hydroxylases, enzymes that convert beta-carotene (beta,beta-carotene) into zeaxanthin. The Adonis enzymes, however, exhibited neither 4-ketolase nor 3-hydroxylase activity when presented with beta-carotene as the substrate in Escherichia coli. Instead, the products of the Adonis cDNAs were found to modify beta-rings in two distinctly different ways: desaturation at the 3,4 position and hydroxylation of the number 4 carbon. The 4-hydroxylated carotenoids formed in E. coli were slowly metabolized to yield compounds with ketocarotenoid-like absorption spectra. It is proposed that a 3,4-desaturation subsequent to 4-hydroxylation of the beta-ring leads to the formation of a 4-keto-beta-ring via an indirect and unexpected route: a keto-enol tautomerization.


Subject(s)
Adonis/enzymology , Carotenoids/biosynthesis , Flowers/enzymology , Adonis/genetics , Adonis/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Carotenoids/chemistry , DNA, Complementary , Escherichia coli/genetics , Flowers/genetics , Flowers/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Molecular Structure , Organisms, Genetically Modified , Phylogeny , Plant Proteins/chemistry , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/physiology , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Substrate Specificity
9.
J Bacteriol ; 186(14): 4685-93, 2004 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15231801

ABSTRACT

In cyanobacteria many compounds, including chlorophylls, carotenoids, and hopanoids, are synthesized from the isoprenoid precursors isopentenyl diphosphate (IPP) and dimethylallyl diphosphate. Isoprenoid biosynthesis in extracts of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis strain PCC 6803 grown under photosynthetic conditions, stimulated by pentose phosphate cycle substrates, does not appear to require methylerythritol phosphate pathway intermediates. The sll1556 gene, distantly related to type 2 IPP isomerase genes, was disrupted by insertion of a Kanr cassette. The mutant was fully viable under photosynthetic conditions although impaired in the utilization of pentose phosphate cycle substrates. Compared to the parental strain the Deltasll1556 mutant (i) is deficient in isoprenoid biosynthesis in vitro with substrates including glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate, fructose-6-phosphate, and glucose-6-phosphate; (ii) has smaller cells (diameter ca. 13% less); (iii) has fewer thylakoids (ca. 30% less); and (iv) has a more extensive fibrous outer wall layer. Isoprenoid biosynthesis is restored with pentose phosphate cycle substrates plus the recombinant Sll1556 protein in the Deltasll1556 supernatant fraction. IPP isomerase activity could not be demonstrated for the purified Sll1556 protein under our in vitro conditions. The reduction of thylakoid area and the effect on outer wall layer components are consistent with an impairment of isoprenoid biosynthesis in the mutant, possibly via hopanoid biosynthesis. Our findings are consistent with an alternate metabolic shunt for biosynthesis of isoprenoids.


Subject(s)
Cyanobacteria/genetics , Cyanobacteria/metabolism , Gene Silencing , Genes, Bacterial/physiology , Pentose Phosphate Pathway/physiology , Terpenes/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/isolation & purification , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Carotenoids/biosynthesis , Cell Wall/ultrastructure , Chlorophyll/biosynthesis , Cyanobacteria/ultrastructure , Fructosephosphates/metabolism , Genes, Bacterial/genetics , Glucose-6-Phosphate/metabolism , Glyceraldehyde 3-Phosphate/metabolism , Hemiterpenes/metabolism , Mutagenesis, Insertional , Organophosphorus Compounds/metabolism , Thylakoids/ultrastructure
10.
J Bacteriol ; 184(18): 5045-51, 2002 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12193620

ABSTRACT

The photosynthetic cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. strain PCC6803 possesses homologs of known genes of the non-mevalonate 2-C-methyl-D-erythritol 2-phosphate (MEP) pathway for synthesis of isopentenyl diphosphate (IPP) and dimethylallyl diphosphate (DMAPP). Isoprenoid biosynthesis in extracts of this cyanobacterium, measured by incorporation of radiolabeled IPP, was not stimulated by pyruvate, an initial substrate of the MEP pathway in Escherichia coli, or by deoxyxylulose-5-phosphate, the first pathway intermediate in E. coli. However, high rates of IPP incorporation were obtained with addition of dihydroxyacetone phosphate (DHAP) and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate (GA3P), as well as a variety of pentose phosphate cycle compounds. Fosmidomycin (at 1 micro M and 1 mM), an inhibitor of deoxyxylulose-5-phosphate reductoisomerase, did not significantly inhibit phototrophic growth of the cyanobacterium, nor did it affect [(14)C]IPP incorporation stimulated by DHAP plus GA3P. To date, it has not been possible to unequivocally demonstrate IPP isomerase activity in this cyanobacterium. The combined results suggest that the MEP pathway, as described for E. coli, is not the primary path by which isoprenoids are synthesized under photosynthetic conditions in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC6803. Our data support alternative routes of entry of pentose phosphate cycle substrates derived from photosynthesis.


Subject(s)
Cyanobacteria/metabolism , Fosfomycin/analogs & derivatives , Hemiterpenes , Organophosphorus Compounds/metabolism , Pentose Phosphate Pathway/physiology , Pentosephosphates/pharmacology , Pyruvic Acid/pharmacology , Carbon Radioisotopes/metabolism , Carbon-Carbon Double Bond Isomerases/metabolism , Culture Media , Cyanobacteria/growth & development , Fosfomycin/pharmacology , Photosynthesis
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