| Literature DB >> 29151886 |
Yuting Wang1,2,3, Xinqin Jiang1,3, Changxing Hu1,3, Ting Sun1,3, Zhiyong Zeng1,3, Xiaoqi Cai1,3, Hui Li1,3, Zhangli Hu1,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is an ideal model organism not only for the study of basic metabolic processes in both plants and animals but also the production of biofuels including hydrogen. Transgenic analysis of C. reinhardtii is now well established and very convenient, but inducible exogenous gene expression systems remain under-studied. The most commonly used heat shock-inducible system has serious effects on algal cell growth and is difficult and costly to control in large-scale culture. Previous studies of hydrogen photoproduction in Chlamydomonas also use this heat-inducible system to activate target gene transcription and hydrogen synthesis.Entities:
Keywords: Bio-hydrogen production; Chlamydomonas reinhardtii; Light-inducible system; MicroRNA; Microalga; Optogenetic
Year: 2017 PMID: 29151886 PMCID: PMC5678773 DOI: 10.1186/s13068-017-0941-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol Biofuels ISSN: 1754-6834 Impact factor: 6.040
Fig. 1Schematic of the blue light-inducible exogenous gene expression system in C. reinhardtii. The GAL4 BD domain and VP16 activator are fused with CIB1 and CRY2, respectively. Blue light enables CIB1 and CRY2 heterodimerization and brings GAL4 BD and VP16 together to activate downstream gene transcription. The absence of blue light reverses the interaction. UAS upstream activation sequence
Fig. 2Construction of vectors in the blue light-inducible exogenous gene expression system. The top portion of the figure diagrams the promoter and resistance modification elements of the vector backbone. The bottom portion diagrams the fusion protein fragments. The middle portion shows the construction of the two vectors used in the blue light-inducible exogenous gene expression system. Red and black arrows indicate the replacement and insertion of fragments, respectively
Fig. 3Algal transformation and screening. Step 1: the pDb124-Gal4 BD-CIB1 vector was transformed into CC-849, and the algae were screened with zeocin. Step 2: the pDh124-VP16-CRY2-UAS-amiRNA vector was transformed into transgenic algae from step 1, and the algae were screened with hygromycin B. Red arrows in the picture indicate positive clones, i.e., transgenic algal strains containing the blue light-inducible exogenous gene expression system
Fig. 4H2 production of CC-849 and transgenic alga in continuous red light and after 8-h blue light illumination. 250 ml algal cells were cultured in TAP (Tris–acetate-phosphate) medium at 22 °C, and the Y-axis is the total H2 yield in the culture bottle
Fig. 5Quantitative transcript analysis of amiR-D1 (a) and psbA (b) in CC-849 and the transgenic algal strain before and after blue light irradiation. U4 and ACTIN were used as the reference genes. ND not detected
Fig. 6H2 production of CC-849 and transgenic alga in blue light, red light, and white light. The column chart shows the total H2 yields of equal culture volumes of CC-849 and amiR-D1 transgenic algae in the culture bottles; yield was calculated from the H2 peak areas detected by gas chromatography (GC). The diagrams beneath the column chart summarize the blue light-induced transcription mechanism