| Literature DB >> 23536869 |
James A Raymond1, Rachael Morgan-Kiss.
Abstract
The green alga Chlamydomonas raudensis is an important primary producer in a number of ice-covered lakes and ponds in Antarctica. A C. raudensis isolate (UWO241) from Lake Bonney in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, like many other Antarctic algae, was found to secrete ice-binding proteins (IBPs), which appear to be essential for survival in icy environments. The IBPs of several Antarctic algae (diatoms, a prymesiophyte, and a prasinophyte) are similar to each other (here designated as type I IBPs) and have been proposed to have bacterial origins. Other IBPs (type II IBPs) that bear no resemblance to type I IBPs, have been found in the Antarctic Chlamydomonas sp. CCMP681, a putative snow alga, raising the possibility that chlamydomonad IBPs developed separately from the IBPs of other algae. To test this idea, we obtained the IBP sequences of C. raudensis UWO241 by sequencing the transcriptome. A large number of transcripts revealed no sequences resembling type II IBPs. Instead, many isoforms resembling type I IBPs were found, and these most closely matched a hypothetical protein from the bacterium Stigmatella aurantiaca. The sequences were confirmed to encode IBPs by the activity of a recombinant protein and by the matching of predicted and observed isoelectric points and molecular weights. Furthermore, a mesophilic sister species, C. raudensis SAG49.72, showed no ice-binding activity or PCR products from UWO241 IBP primers. These results confirm that algal IBPs are required for survival in icy habitats and demonstrate that they have diverse origins that are unrelated to the taxonomic positions of the algae. Last, we show that the C. raudensis UWO241 IBPs can change the structure of ice in a way that could increase the survivability of cells trapped in the ice.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23536869 PMCID: PMC3594216 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0059186
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Effects of Chlamydomonas raudensis UWO241 ice-binding proteins on ice.
A, Irregular ice dendrites growing from a prism face of ice in spent UWO241 medium. B, Pitted basal plane of ice grown in spent UWO241 medium. C, D, Featureless ice crystals (left) grown in the presence of unspent medium (C) and spent SAG49.72 medium (D). E, Effect of UWO241 IBP on the structure of saline ice. Unspent culture medium (700 mM NaCl with 1× Bold) (left) and cell-free spent culture medium containing a natural concentration of UWO241 IBP (right) frozen at −5.9°C. The percentages of liquid and ice in the two tubes are the same (41% and 59%, respectively). Distortion of growing ice by the IBP greatly reduces the size of brine pockets. F, Basal plane of an ice crystal growing in an aqueous solution of recombinant UWO241 isoform 1 IBP. Scale bars, 1 mm, except in E where scale bar is 1 cm.
Figure 2Neighbor-joining tree constructed from amino acid sequences of selected IBP and IBP-like proteins.
The C. raudensis IBPs (olive) are closest to IBP-like proteins in several bacteria and relatively distant from other algal IBPs. All of the fungal and algal proteins have confirmed ice-binding activities. Among the archaeal and bacterial IBPs, only those of Colwellia and Flavobacterium 3519-10 have confirmed ice-binding activities. The tree was rooted with the Flavobacterium 3519-10 IBP. Numbers at nodes indicate bootstrap values for 500 replications. Values less than 50 are not shown. Colors: black, fungi; light green, diatoms; dark green prasinophyte and prymnesiophyte; blue, archaea; red, bacteria; olive, C. raudensis.