PLANT PHYSIOLOGY , Vol 108, Issue 4 1641-1646, Copyright © 1995 by American Society of Plant Biologists
|
GENE REGULATION AND MOLECULAR GENETICS |
Opposite Regulation of the Copy Number and the Expression of Plastid and Mitochondrial Genes by Light and Acetate in the Green Flagellate Chlorogonium
J. Kroymann, W. Schneider and K. Zetsche
Institut fur Pflanzenphysiologie der Justus-Liebig-Universitat Giessen, Heinrich-Buff-Ring 54-62, 35392 Giessen, Germany
In the unicellular green alga Chlorogonium elongatum (Chlamydomonadaceae),
the formation of both the photosynthetic and the respiratory apparatus is
under the control of light and acetate. Autotrophically cultured cells
possess a 3-fold higher copy number of the plastid genes rbcL and psbA than
cells cultivated in the dark with acetate (heterotrophic cells). Under
mixotrophic conditions (light and acetate), both genes are present at an
intermediate level. This pattern is repeated at the mRNA level. The amounts
of rbcL and psbA mRNAs are approximately 3-fold higher in autotrophic cells
than in heterotrophic ones and are intermediate in mixotrophic cells. As
expected, the copy number of the nuclear-encoded rbcS gene is constant
irrespective of the applied culture conditions. RbcS mRNA, however, is
7-fold more frequent in autotrophic than in heterotrophic cells. Again,
mixotrophic cells show an intermediate level. In contrast to genes encoding
plastid proteins, the copy number and transcript level of the mitochondrial
cob gene are approximately 5-fold higher in heterotrophic cells than in
autotrophic ones. As before, mixotrophic cells take an intermediate
position. Therefore, light and acetate control the genes involved in the
formation of either the photosynthetic or the respiratory apparatus in a
coordinated but opposite manner.