1 / 19

Ursula Goodenough

Algal Lipid Bodies: Stress Induction, Purification, and Biochemical Characterization in Wild-Type and Starchless Chlamydomonas reinhardtii

turi
Télécharger la présentation

Ursula Goodenough

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Algal Lipid Bodies: Stress Induction, Purification, and Biochemical Characterization in Wild-Type and Starchless Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Zi T. Wang*, Nico Ullrich, Sunjoo Joo*, Sabine Waffenschmidt, and Ursula Goodenough* (Washington University*, Institut fur Biochemie, Universitat zu Koln, Germany) Eukaryotic Cell, 2009, 8:1856–1868 Ursula Goodenough Sabine Waffenschmidt

  2. BIOFUELS (A role for algae?) • Potential to have no net increase in [CO2] in atmosphere • Renewable and sustainable • Ethanol • Produced now from corn starch (sugar cane in Brazil) by fermentation w/yeast or bacteria and distillation • Biodiesel • Produced now from vegetable oil (triacylglycerols or triglycerides), less polluting than Petrodiesel • Other possible fuels • Butanol • Long-chain hydrocarbons • Hydrogen (H2) (combustion does not produce any greenhouse gas)

  3. Soybean Corn Sunflower Safflower Peanut Cottonseed Rapeseed (canola) Olive Palm Coconut

  4. Chemical conversion step: Oil (triglycerides) to Biodiesel R= 16-22 carbons Petro Diesel: C10H20 to C15H28

  5. Chlamydomonas reinhardti: A model system for Biofuel production

  6. Chlamydomonas reinhardtii • Model genetic organism for photosynthesis/bioenergetics and cell motility • Grows rapidly, autotrophically or heterotrophically • Controlled sexual or asexual reproduction • All 3 genomes have been sequenced and are transformable: • Nuclear (125,000 KB; 15,000 genes) • Chloroplast (200 KB; 100 genes) • Mitochondrion (16 KB; 12 genes) • Can knock-down genes with RNAi

  7. FIG. 1. Confocal microscopy surveys of cw15 (A) and cw15 sta6 (B) cell samples starved for N for 24 h. Red, chlorophyll autofluorescence; yellow, Nile Red fluorescence cw15 cw15sta6 (no starch synthesis) Wang, Z. T. et al. 2009. Eukaryotic Cell 8(12):1856-1868 Conclusion: nitrogen starvation increases lipid bodies (LBs), and so does knocking out starch synthesis

  8. FIG. 2. (A) Optical sections of cw15 cells (top) and cw15 sta6 cells (bottom) starved for N for 24 h. (B) Three-dimensional reconstructions of through-focal optical sections of cw15 cells (top) and cw15 sta6 cells (bottom) starved for N for 24 h. Red, chlorophyll autofluorescence; yellow, Nile Red fluorescence cw15 sta6 Wang, Z. T. et al. 2009. Eukaryotic Cell 8(12):1856-1868 LBs are in the cytoplasm, sticking to the chloroplast surface

  9. Movies Figures A1 & A2. Through-focal optical sections of two cw15sta6 cells N-starved for 48 h. Red, chlorophyll autofluorescence; yellow, Nile-Red fluorescence.

  10. FIG. 3. Size distributions of LBs from: (A) through-focal optical sections of cw15 cells starved for N for 24 h and cw15 sta6 cells starved for N for 24 and 48 h Popped cells after 24 h of N starvation (B), and washed LBs after 18 h of N starvation (C)‏

  11. FIG. 4. Confocal fluorescence microscopy images of cw15 sta6 cells popped in situ Used this Popped-cell assay to do relative quantification of LBs.

  12. FIG. 5. Popped cw15 and cw15 sta6 cells stained with Nile Red after 24 and 48 h of N starvation. Nos. are based on summed area of fluorescence pixels/cell Wang, Z. T. et al. 2009. Eukaryotic Cell 8(12):1856-1868

  13. FIG. 6. Pooled distributions of LB contents in popped cw15 and cw15sta6 cells after 0, 24, and 48 h of N starvation sta6 data skewed to the right; authors suggest LB production may be limited by cell autolysis/autophagy in the 48 h culture. “moribund”

  14. FIG. 7. Washed LB preparation

  15. FIG. 8. (A and B) MS-GC spectra of Fatty acids derived from TAG, in washed LB preparations from cw15 (A) and cw15 sta6 (B) cells Conclusions: 90% of the LB is TAG, 10% C16-C18 species only, no longer-chain FA

  16. FIG. 10. Thin-layer chromatographs (TLC) of NGLs and CGLs from cw15 cells and from initial LB preparations from cw15 sta6 cells LBs do not have much contamination with plastid lipids (NGLs), consistent with an ER origin.

  17. FIG. 11. TAG contents of five independent washed LB preparations from cw15 sta6 and cw15 cells after 18 h of N starvation Estimate yield of ~ 400 mg TAG/liter of culture (107 cells/ml) with cw15 sta6

  18. Strengths and weaknesses of this paper:Strengths:1. Quality of data/results is high2. Novel finding (Chlamy was thought to not be a good TAG accumulator)3. Variety of methods used (and developed)4. It is relevant to Biofuels.Weaknesses: 1. Have to centrifuge cells and replace the medium (not practical at large scale).2. Did not detect proteins clearly assoc. with LBs.3. Use of vague term (“Moribund”) cells to explain LB size distribution in sta6 after 48 h.

More Related