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Plant Physiol, August 2001, Vol. 126, pp. 1459-1470
Physiological and Molecular Biological Characterization of
Intracellular Carbonic Anhydrase from the Marine Diatom
Phaeodactylum tricornutum1
Dan
Satoh,2
Yasutaka
Hiraoka,2
Brian
Colman,3 and
Yusuke
Matsuda*
Department of Chemistry, Kwansei-Gakuin University,
1-1-155 Uegahara, Nishinomiya 662-8501, Japan
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ABSTRACT |
A single intracellular carbonic anhydrase (CA) was detected in
air-grown and, at reduced levels, in high CO2-grown cells
of the marine diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum (UTEX
642). No external CA activity was detected irrespective of growth
CO2 conditions. Ethoxyzolamide (0.4 mM), a
CA-specific inhibitor, severely inhibited high-affinity photosynthesis
at low concentrations of dissolved inorganic carbon, whereas 2 mM acetazolamide had little effect on the affinity for
dissolved inorganic carbon, suggesting that internal CA is crucial for
the operation of a carbon concentrating mechanism in P.
tricornutum. Internal CA was purified 36.7-fold of that of cell
homogenates by ammonium sulfate precipitation, and two-step column
chromatography on diethylaminoethyl-sephacel and
p-aminomethylbenzene sulfone amide agarose. The purified
CA was shown, by SDS-PAGE, to comprise an electrophoretically single polypeptide of 28 kD under both reduced and nonreduced conditions. The
entire sequence of the cDNA of this CA was obtained by the rapid
amplification of cDNA ends method and indicated that the cDNA encodes
282 amino acids. Comparison of this putative precursor sequence with
the N-terminal amino acid sequence of the purified CA indicated that it
included a possible signal sequence of up to 46 amino acids at the N
terminus. The mature CA was found to consist of 236 amino acids and the
sequence was homologous to -type CAs. Even though the zinc-ligand
amino acid residues were shown to be completely conserved, the amino
acid residues that may constitute a CO2-binding site
appeared to be unique among the -CAs so far reported.
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INTRODUCTION |
The aquatic environment is generally
CO2 limiting for photoautotrophs mainly because
of the limited capacity of water to hold gaseous
CO2 and the slow diffusion rate of
CO2(aq), which is about
10 4 times that in the atmosphere. It is well
established that a number of algae and cyanobacteria actively take up
and accumulate dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) intracellularly, which
allows algal cells to photosynthesize efficiently even under
atmospheric CO2. This DIC acquisition mechanism
is termed a carbon concentrating mechanism (CCM) and a number of
workers have suggested that carbonic anhydrase (CA) plays a key role in
the CCM (Kaplan and Reinhold, 1999 ).
CA (EC 4.2.1.1) is a zinc-containing enzyme that catalyzes the
reversible dehydration of HCO3
to CO2. This reaction is known to play important
roles in various biological processes such as ion exchange,
respiration, pH homeostasis, CO2 acquisition, and
photosynthesis (Tashian, 1989 ; Badger and Price, 1994 ; Smith and Ferry,
2000 , Moroney et al., 2001 ). CAs are widely distributed in living
organisms and are categorized, on the basis of their amino acid
sequence, into three distinct families designated as -, -, and
-type (Hewett-Emmett and Tashian, 1996 ; Smith et al., 1999 ; Smith
and Ferry, 2000 ), which do not share epitopes and are thought to have
evolved independently (Smith et al., 1999 ). -Type CA occurs in
animals, eubacteria, green algae, and cyanobacteria (Smith et al.,
1999 ) and is typified by mammalian forms and two periplasmic forms in
the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Hewett-Emmett and
Tashian, 1996 ; Smith and Ferry, 2000 ). -Type CAs have been found in
archaebacteria and eubacteria (Smith et al., 1999 ) and one has been
purified from the methanogen Methanosarcina thermophilia
(Alber and Ferry, 1994 ). A region of a gene for the cyanobacterial
carboxysomal protein, ccmM is also known to be homologous to
-type CAs (Price et al., 1993 ; Smith et al., 1999 ). Both - and
-type CAs have been shown to ligate with Zn by three His residues
(Kisker et al., 1996 ).
-Type CAs occur ubiquitously and have been separated into six
phylogenetic clades (Smith and Ferry, 1999 ; Smith et al., 1999 ). -CAs from monocots and dicots constitute independent groups. Another
two clades are exclusively prokaryotic and the other two are composed
of mixture of sequences from the eucarya to procarya domains, which
include -CAs from the green algae C. reinhardtii, and
Coccomyxa sp., the red alga Porphyridium
purpureum, and the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC
6803 (Smith et al., 1999 ). A high consensus sequence among -CAs,
that is
Cys-Xaan-His-Xaa2-Cys, is
known to constitute the Zn coordination site (Hewett-Emmett and
Tashian, 1996 ). X-ray crystallographic studies clarified the active
site of -CAs from pea (Pisum sativum; Kimber and Pai, 2000 ), the red algae P. purpureum (Mitsuhashi et al., 2000 ),
Escherichia coli (Cronk et al., 2000 ), and
Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum (Strop et al., 2001 ).
P. purpureum CA is thought to use an additional amino acid
to constitute the Zn coordination site; Asp at two amino acids down
toward the C-terminal end from the first Zn ligand, Cys, is also
considered to ligate with Zn.
The intracellular location of CA seems to be a crucial factor for the
operation of the CCM. One form of cyanobacterial -CA is present in
the carboxysome. Cells transformed to express human CAII in the
cytoplasm resulted in a high CO2-requiring
phenotype presumably due to stimulation of
HCO3 dehydration in the
cytoplasm and therefore an efflux of CO2 from the
cells (Price and Badger, 1989 ). Inactivation of -CA gene (icfA) was also found to induce a
high-CO2-requiring phenotype (Fukuzawa et al.,
1992 ). In eukaryotic algae, chloroplastic CAs are thought to be
required to supply CO2 to Rubisco in the stroma and/or the pyrenoid where the predominant species of inorganic carbon
is HCO3 because of the
alkaline conditions of the stroma (Badger and Price, 1994 ). As a
mechanism to enhance the rate of CO2 supply to
Rubisco in C. reinhardtii, it has been suggested that
-type CA (Cah3) is associated with photosystem II at the lumenal
side of the thylakoid membrane and catalyzes the dehydration of
HCO3 in the lumen to give an
ample efflux of CO2 to the stroma or the pyrenoid
(Karlsson et al., 1998 ; Park et al., 1999 , Moroney et al., 2001 ). These
data clearly indicate that intracellular CA plays a key role in the CCM
when it functions in particular cellular locations.
Diatoms are widespread in aquatic environments, and marine species are
considered to be some of the most important CO2
fixers in the hydrosphere (Apt et al., 1996 ). Two strains of
Phaeodactylum tricornutum have been documented to possess a
CCM in that they can take up both CO2 and
HCO3 actively (Colman and
Rotatore, 1995 ; Johnston and Raven, 1996 ). John-McKay and Colman (1997)
reported that all P. tricornutum strains they studied
possessed internal CA but that some of them also possessed external CA.
External CA in P. tricornutum was also shown to be essential
for carbon acquisition under carbon-limited conditions
(Iglesias-Rodriguez and Merrett, 1997 ). External CA therefore appears
to operate to maintain equilibrium CO2
concentration in the periplasmic layer from
HCO3 , predominant species of
DIC in seawater. In contrast, the function of the internal form of CA
in marine algae has not been studied extensively. Only one diatom CA
has been isolated, that from the marine diatom Thalassiosira
weissflogii (TWCA1; Roberts et al., 1997 ; Cox et al., 2000 ), and
the structure of its Zn coordination site was determined by x-ray
absorption spectrometry (Roberts et al., 1997 ; Cox et al., 2000 ). TWCA1
was shown to share no homology with other CAs but Zn coordination was
made with three His ligands, which is a structure very similar to that
of mammalian -CAs (Roberts et al., 1997 ; Cox et al., 2000 ),
suggesting a unique event of convergent molecular evolution. However,
it is not clear whether or not the distinct structure of TWCA1 is
common in the CAs of other diatom species.
Detailed molecular studies of CA from more marine diatom species is
certainly needed because it is one of the critical enzymes for carbon
acquisition in marine microalgae. In this study, internal CA of the
marine diatom P. tricornutum was related to the operation of
the CCM physiologically and characterized molecular biologically.
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RESULTS |
Effects of Sulfonamide on Photosynthetic Affinity for
DIC
The effect of two specific inhibitors of CA, ethoxyzolamide (EZA)
and acetazolamide (AZA), was used to determine the function of P. tricornutum CA in acquiring high-affinity photosynthesis (Table
I). EZA is highly permeable to biological
membranes and will inhibit both internal and external CA, whereas AZA
is only weakly permeable and inhibits only external CA. EZA of 0.4 mM completely abolished high-affinity
photosynthesis for DIC and DIC concentration at one-half-maximum rate
of photosynthesis (K0.5[DIC]) was 454 µM (Table I), whereas either 0.4 or 2 mM AZA did not (Table I,
K0.5[DIC] value of 29 and 44 µM, respectively).
K0.5[DIC] value without the addition of
sulfonamide was found to be 27 µM (Table I).
Although the maximum rate of photosynthesis
(Pmax) was suppressed both by EZA treatment
by about 39% and by 0.4 and 2 mM AZA treatment
to 65% to 70% that of the control (Table I), photosynthetic rates at
limited DIC was much lower in EZA-treated cells than those in
AZA-treated cells (data not shown). The absolute values of
O2 evolution rate at 100 µM of DIC in the medium were 20.0, 18.0, 14.9, and 2.2 nmol mL 1 min 1
with control cells, cells treated with 0.4 and 2 mM AZA, and 0.4 mM EZA,
respectively.
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Table I.
Photosynthetic parametersa
determined in air-grown P. tricornutum in the presence and the absence
of sulfonamides at pH 8.2 and 25°C
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Measurement of CA Activity in Intact Cell or Cell Lysate of
P. tricornutum
No CA activity was detected in intact cells of P. tricornutum grown in either air or high CO2
(Table II). However, CA activity was
detected in cell lysates: 26 ± 9.5 Wilbur-Anderson (WA) units mg 1 Chl were detected in
high-CO2-grown cells, whereas
114 ± 38.7 WA units mg 1 Chl were
found in air-grown cells (Table II). In a similar manner, strong CA
activity was detected on cellulose acetate plates after electrophoresis
of extracts from air-grown cells, whereas those from
high-CO2-grown cells contained very weak activity
at the same mobility on the plate as that from air-grown cells (Fig. 1). There were no isoforms detected on
cellulose acetate plates (Fig. 1).
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Table II.
CA activitya of whole cells
and supernatant of whole cell extracts of air- and
high-CO2-grown P. tricornutum
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Figure 1.
CA activity after cellulose acetate
electrophoresis of cell-free extracts of P. tricornutum
grown in 5% (w/v) CO2 and air. CA activity was
visualized by soaking the plate in the pH-indicating dye, bromocresol
purple, and exposing the plate to gaseous
CO2.
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Purification of CA
The purification procedure of P. tricornutum CA is
summarized in Table III. By ammonium
sulfate precipitation, about 42% of the activity of soluble CA was
retrieved. The specific activity of CA at this stage was found to be 59 WA units mg 1 protein. Anion-exchange
chromatography on a DEAE-sephacel column increased the specific
activity up to 3-fold and CA was eluted at about 110 mM
Na2SO4 (data not shown).
The fraction with CA activity was then subjected to affinity
chromatography on a p-aminomethylbenzene sulfone amide
(p-AMBS) agarose column and was eluted as a single peak by
25 mM
Tris-H2SO4 (pH 8.5)
containing 0.3 M NaClO4
(Fig. 2A). This step improved the
specific activity about 7.6-fold and the specific activity of CA was
found to be 1,114 WA units mg 1 protein. CA was
purified to 36.7-fold from the homogenate (Table III).

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Figure 2.
Purification of P. tricornutum CA on a
p-AMBS agarose column (A) and subsequent SDS-PAGE analysis
(B). A, The column (2 mL of bed volume) was pre-equilibrated with 50 mM Bicine-NaOH (pH 8.3) and washed with 25 mM
Tris-H2SO4 containing 0.1 M
Na2SO4. CA was eluted with
25 mM
Tris-H2SO4 containing 0.3 M NaClO4 with the flow rate
at 0.2 mL min 1. B, Molecular mass markers (lane
M) and 10 µg of protein from the peak fraction (no. 46) was applied
to 12% (w/v) polyacrylamide gel. CA was treated with 0.5%
(w/v) SDS in the presence (lane R) and absence (lane NR) of 5%
(v/v) -mercaptoethanol prior to the electrophoresis.
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The purified CA gave a single band on SDS-PAGE under both reducing and
nonreducing conditions, confirming uniformity of this protein (Fig.
2B). Treatment with the reducing agent did not cause any shift in the
mobility of the band and the molecular mass estimated by SDS-PAGE was
28 kD (Fig. 2B). AZA concentration at one-half-maximum inhibition
(I50[AZA]) of P. tricornutum
CA was found to be 5 × 10 8 M.
Molecular Cloning of Full-Length cDNA and Determination of
Nucleotide Sequence
The protein sequence of 50 amino acid residues from the N terminus
of the purified CA revealed that this CA may be homologous to -type
CAs, which prompted us to clone the CA gene of P. tricornutum with the aid of the published sequences of -type
CAs (Mitsuhashi and Miyachi, 1996 ; Hiltonen et al., 1998 ). The first
PCR gave a mixture of hetero-sized products ranging from 50 to 2,000 bp (data not shown). The second PCR gave several sizes of products but the
major one corresponded in size to approximately 250 bp (data not
shown). This 250-bp fragment was cloned into the plasmid vector and was
sequenced. The deduced amino acid sequence of the 250-bp fragment
included a part of the N-terminal amino acid sequence of purified
P. tricornutum CA (data not shown).
Utilizing the 250-bp fragment as a "core" sequence, the full-length
cDNA sequence was determined by a RACE method with high-fidelity DNA
polymerase (Fig. 3A). The full-length
cDNA of P. tricornutum CA was 995 bp and was shown to
comprise 61 bp of a 5'-untranslated region, 846 bp of an open reading
frame, a termination codon, 58 bp of a 3'-untranslated region, and 27 bp of poly(A+) tail (Fig. 3A). The open reading
frame (Fig. 3A, 62-907) encodes a polypeptide of 282 amino acids (Fig.
3A, 46-236), whereas the N-terminal amino acid sequence of purified
CA started at Ala 46 amino acids down toward C terminus from the
initial Met (Fig. 3A). These data indicate that the mature CA in
P. tricornutum can be categorized as a -type and is
composed of 236 amino acids (Fig. 3A, +1-236) whose molecular mass was
calculated to be 26,354 D. The 46 amino acids at the upstream of N
terminus of mature CA appear to be a signal sequence (Fig. 3B).

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Figure 3.
Sequences of cDNA and deduced amino acids of
P. tricornutum CA (A) and a comparison of N-terminal
sequence with those of some algal proteins (B). A, The amino acid
sequence is numbered from the N terminus of the mature protein. The
putative cleavage site of signal peptide is indicated by a white
triangle. The single-underlined region was initially sequenced at
protein bases upon purification of P. tricornutum CA.
Double underline indicates an overlapped sequence between the 5'-RACE
and the 3'-RACE products. Arrows indicate primers used for the RACE.
The termination codon and the putative polyadenylation signal are
indicated by an asterisk and a box, respectively. B, Forty-six amino
acids of the N terminus of P. tricornutum CA (Pha CA) were
compared with fucoxanthin chlorophyll protein 3 of P. tricornutum (Pha FCP3), internal CA of Chlorella
sorokiniana (Csoro CA), periplasmic CA, CAH1, of C. reinhardtii (Chlam CAH1), and plasma membrane CA of
Dunaliella salina (Duna CA). Hydrophobic amino acid residues
are indicated by white letters on a gray background. The white
triangles indicate putative cleavage sites of signal peptides.
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RNA and Genomic DNA Gel-Blot Analysis
The size of CA mRNA was found to be 1.0 kb by RNA gel-blot
analysis (Fig. 4A), which agreed well
with the size of CA cDNA (995 bp). The same hybridization signal was
clearly detected for transcripts from
high-CO2-grown cells, but its intensity was
significantly lower than that of air-grown cells (Fig. 4A). The number
of CA genes in the genome was estimated by Southern-blot analysis (Fig. 4B). CA cDNA did not possess any recognition sites for any of the four
restriction enzymes used. The 5'-RACE product of CA cDNA (1-574) was
prepared as a probe. One or two hybridization bands with different
mobilities were detected in the four digests; one band was observed in
BamHI, EcoRV, and PstI digest, whereas
two bands were observed in EcoRI digest (Fig. 4B),
suggesting the presence of at least one intron that contains an
EcoRI site.

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Figure 4.
RNA (A) and DNA (B) gel-blot analyses of cloned
CA. A, Total RNA (15 µg) obtained from P. tricornutum
grown in 5% (v/v) CO2 and air was
separated on 1.0% (w/v) agarose gel, blotted onto nylon
membrane, and hybridized with the 5'-RACE product of CA labeled by
alkaline-phosphatase. Hybridization signal was visualized by
fluorography using CDPstar (top half). Quantities of RNAs were
normalized with rRNA (bottom half). The molecular size corresponds to
1.0 kb and is indicated by a white arrow. B, Ten micrograms of genomic
DNA was digested independently with four restriction enzymes,
BamHI, EcoRI, EcoRV, and
PstI, and was separated by 0.8% (w/v) agarose gel,
blotted onto nylon membrane, and hybridized with the CA probe described
above. Hybridization signal was visualized as described above. The
molecular sizes are indicated by white arrows.
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Comparison of Deduced Amino Acid Sequence of P. tricornutum CA with CAs in Other Species
The sequence similarity analysis of P. tricornutum CA
was carried out with the DNA Data Bank of Japan homology search system. Eight sequences that were moderately homologous to P. tricornutum CA were retrieved, namely CA in Coccomyxa
sp. (Hiltonen et al., 1998 ), N and C halves of CA1 in P. purpureum (Mitsuhashi and Miyachi, 1996 ), CynT product
in E. coli (Guilloton et al., 1992 ), and CAs in pea (Majeau
and Coleman, 1991 ), Spinacea oleracea (Burnell et al.,
1989 ), M. thermoautotrophicum (Smith and Ferry, 1999 ), and
Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The identities of the amino acid were 25.9% (Coccomyxa sp.), 20.0% (P. purpureum), 26.2% (E. coli), 20.1% (pea), 25.5%
(S. oleracea), 20.9% (M. thermoautotrophicum), and 22.3% (S. cerevisiae), respectively (Fig.
5). These sequences are aligned at their
maximum match in Figure 5 and amino acid residues that have been shown
either to constitute Zn ligands or to orient toward Zn (Kimber and Pai,
2000 ; Mitsuhashi et al., 2000 ) are indicated by circles and asterisks,
respectively. Given the alignment, Zn-binding residues were found to be
highly conserved, whereas amino acids possibly related to the catalytic
site (Kimber and Pai, 2000 ; Mitsuhashi et al., 2000 ) appeared to be
different in P. tricornutum CA (Fig. 5). The amino acid,
Leu70, does not correspond to any other known -CAs and Phe92 does
not correspond to -CAs of either algal or higher plant origin but it
corresponds to that in S. cerevisiae (Fig. 5).

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Figure 5.
Comparison of sequences of -CAs from several
different origins. -CA of P. tricornutum (Pha) was
compared with that of Coccomyxa sp. (Coc; accession no.
U49976), N and C half of P. purpureum -CA (PorN and PorC,
respectively; accession no. D86050), E. coli Cyn T product
(Eco; accession no. M23219), chloroplastic -CA of pea, (Pis;
accession no. M63627), chloroplastic -CA of S. oleracea
(Spi; accession no. M27295), -CA of S. cerevisiae (Sac;
accession no. Z71312), and -CA of M. thermoautotrophicum
(Met; accession no. AE000918). The row of Pha is numbered from the N
terminus amino acid sequence of the putative -CA precursor deduced
from the full-length cDNA. Sequences were aligned with CLUSTAL W at
their maximum match and the amino acids identical with those of
P. tricornutum CA are shown as white letters on black
background. Circles and asterisks indicate putative zinc-ligand
residues and residues orient toward Zn, respectively. White and black
symbols are marked to the alignment based upon the information from the
x-ray crystallographic analyses of P. purpureum CA and pea
CA, respectively.
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DISCUSSION |
The marine environment differs from that of freshwater primarily
in salinity and alkalinity, which creates distinct DIC equilibria in
seawater (Goyet and Poisson, 1989 ) and stable pH at slightly above 8.0. The DIC equilibrium at this pH gives rise to a low CO2 concentration that may cause
CO2 limitation to photoautotrophs. However, it
has been shown in most of the marine microalgae so far investigated
that under light-saturating conditions, photosynthesis is saturated at
air equilibrium CO2 concentrations, presumably due to an efficient use of
HCO3 , which is abundant in
seawater (Raven, 1997 ; Tortell et al., 1997 ). The occurrence of direct
HCO3 uptake has been shown in
various marine microalgae (Burns and Beardall, 1987 ; Colman and
Rotatore, 1995 ; Nimer et al., 1997 , Raven, 1997 ). The data obtained in
the present study also showed that photosynthetic
O2 evolution rate at limited [DIC] greatly exceeded the actual CO2 formation rate in the
bulk medium, strongly suggesting a direct uptake of
HCO3 ; irrespective of the
presence of AZA, O2 evolution rate at 100 µM DIC was about 15 to 20 nmol
mL 1 min 1, which is
about 30-fold the un-catalyzed rate of CO2
formation (Matsuda et al., 2001 ) in artificial seawater enriched with
one-half-strength of Guillard's "F" solution (f/2; F2AW; Harrison
et al., 1980 ) at pH 8.2. An
HCO3 -dependent photosynthesis
was also observed in another strain of P. tricornutum
(UTEX640; Matsuda et al., 2001 ).
As an alternative mechanism for
HCO3 use from the bulk medium,
CA, located in the periplasmic space, has been shown to facilitate an
indirect use of HCO3 by
catalyzing CO2 formation close to the
plasmalemma. This external CA has been shown to occur both in marine
algae (including P. tricornutum) and in freshwater algae
(Aizawa and Miyachi, 1986 ; Williams and Colman, 1993 ;
Iglesias-Rodriguez et al., 1997 ; Nimer et al., 1999 ). However, recent
studies have shown that external CA is not necessarily essential for
growth under CO2 limitation in C. reinhardtii (Moroney and Somanchi, 1999 ; Van and Spalding 1999 )
but rather that internal CA activity may be crucial under these
conditions (Funke et al., 1997 ). P. tricornutum UTEX642 was previously shown to lack external CA (John-Mckay and Colman, 1997 ).
In the present study, no external CA activity was detected either in
air- or high-CO2-grown cells of P. tricornutum. This was confirmed further by sulfonamide inhibition
experiments in which up to 2 mM AZA did not lower
the photosynthetic affinity for DIC (Table I). A single major band of
CA activity, detected on cellulose acetate plates after electrophoresis
of lysates of both air- and high-CO2-grown cells
(Fig. 1), thus appeared to be an intracellular form of CA, which is
encoded by a single gene, and no other isoform was detected (Fig.
1) in this study. However, these data do not exclude the possibility of
the occurrence of trace levels of other CA isoforms that may also have
a role in the CCM in P. tricornutum.
The function of internal CA in the CCM of marine microalgae is largely
unknown. The data in the present study demonstrate that EZA drastically
inhibited high-affinity photosynthesis repeat and confirm the results
of previous studies on P. tricornutum (Badger et al., 1998 ).
Because EZA is also believed to possess direct inhibitory effects on
photosystem II and DIC uptake (Badger et al., 1998 ), the reason for the
EZA inhibition of high-photosynthetic affinity for DIC is not clear at
present. Nevertheless, it has been shown in most of the freshwater
algae studied that CA plays a crucial role in the operation of the CCM
and this may hold true also in the case of marine diatoms. In the
present study, EZA reduced Pmax to about
40% that of the control and a similar, but weaker effect was also
observed by prolonged treatment with high concentrations of AZA,
presumably due to permeation of AZA at trace concentration into the
cells. Therefore, it is plausible that internal CA may also take part
in supplying CO2 to photosynthesis and determine
the Pmax in P. tricornutum. EZA
treatment of the green alga Chlorella ellipsoidea also
lowered the cells' affinity for DIC to the level that resembled that
of high-CO2-grown cells, but
Pmax was not affected by EZA (Y. Matsuda, unpublished data).
Internal CA detected in this study is clearly a
low-CO2-inducible protein and this regulation
occurs at the transcriptional level even though there was a
constitutive level of accumulation of transcript observed in
high-CO2-grown cells. The photosynthetic affinity
of P. tricornutum cells for DIC appeared to increase concomitant with internal CA activity (data not shown). However, it has
been indicated that the regulation of CA expression in response to
CO2 is not necessarily related to the CCM. The
thylakoid-lumenal form of CA, Cah3, in C. reinhardtii
appeared to be expressed semiconstitutively despite changes in the
ambient [CO2], whereas the expression of the
periplasmic CAs, Cah1 and Cah2, and the mitochondrial CAs, -CA1 and
-CA2, which are possibly less crucial isoforms with respect to the
operation of the CCM, have been shown to be highly dependent on changes
in the ambient [CO2] (Moroney and Chen, 1998 ). The regulation mechanism of internal CA expression in response to
CO2 is yet to be studied and to be related
functionally with CCM in P. tricornutum.
P. tricornutum CA was purified effectively by anion-exchange
chromatography on DEAE-sephacel and on p-AMBS, an affinity
column with a sulfonamide ligand. CA from P. tricornutum was
eluted from the p-AMBS column with 0.3 M NaClO4 (Fig. 1), which is
a lower concentration than that used for the -type CAs in C. sorokiniana (Satoh et al., 1998 ) and C. reinhardtii
(Yang et al., 1985 ; Rawat and Moroney, 1991 ). It should be noted that
the affinity of P. tricornutum CA for sulfonamides might be
lower than those in known -CAs but higher than that of -CA
isolated from microalgae, i.e. AZA concentration at one-half-maximum
inhibition (I50[AZA]) of P. tricornutum. CA was found to be about seven and 17 times higher than those observed in -CA from C. sorokiniana (Satoh et
al., 1998 ) and C. reinhardtii CAH1 and 2 (Tachiki et al.,
1992 ), respectively, but 20 times lower than that of
Coccomyxa -CA (Hiltonen et al., 1995 ).
The primary structure of P. tricornutum CA shows that it can
be classified as a -type CA and is homologous to -CAs in other algae and higher plants (Figs. 3A and 5). The molecular mass of P. tricornutum CA was estimated to be 28 kD by SDS-PAGE
(Fig. 2B), whereas it is calculated to be 26.4 kD from the primary
structure of the mature protein (Fig. 3A). This difference in molecular mass of approximately 2 kD may indicate the possible occurrence of
posttranslational modification such as glycosylation, but a potential
attachment site for an N-linked carbohydrate chain (Asn-Xaa-Ser/Thr) was not found in the polypeptide sequence.
Although the subcellular location of P. tricornutum CA is
not known, this enzyme is soluble and therefore seems to be located in
the hydrophilic matrix of the cell and not in the membranes. This is in
contrast to the internal CAs in C. reinhardtii of which about 95% of the total CA is insoluble (Funke et al., 1997 ) and one
isoform, Cah3, was postulated to function in the CCM as a thylakoid
membrane-associated form (Raven, 1997 ; Karlsson et al., 1998 ; Park et
al., 1999 ). In contrast, the predominant form of internal CA in
Chlorella spp. was shown to be soluble when the cells have
an operational CCM (Williams and Colman, 1993 ; Satoh et al., 1998 ). The
amino acid sequence of P. tricornutum CA may give some
indication of its intracellular location. The N-terminal region, from
the first Met to Ser (Fig. 3A, 46 to 1) shows the typical features
of a signal sequence (von Heijne, 1983 ) which includes several
hydrophobic core residues in the N termini,: the residues at the
position 1 and 3 are small, and the position at 2 is bulky. This
region has similarities to the signal peptide of the
fucoxanthin-chlorophyll a/c proteins (FCPs) in P. tricornutum (Grossman et al., 1990 ), C. reinhardtii
CAH1 (Fukuzawa et al., 1990 ), C. sorokiniana CA (Satoh et
al., 1998 ), and the plasma membrane CA in D. salina (Fisher
et al., 1996 ; Fig. 3B). This region was also predicted to be a signal
for import to the endoplasmic reticulum by analysis with TargetP, which
is a neural network algorithms (Emanuelsson et al., 2000 ) and several
other analyses for predicting protein-targeting sites. It has been
shown in P. tricornutum that three proteins in the
fucoxanthin-chlorophyll a/c complex associated with
photosystem II are encoded by the nuclear genome and have the
endoplasmic reticulum signal peptide (Grossman et al., 1990 ).
Bhaya and Grossman (1991) further suggested that some of the
cytoplasmically synthesized proteins of P. tricornutum required an endoplasmic reticulum signal to be directed to the plastids
because the signal peptide of FCP3, one of the FCPs, can be
cotranslationally processed and transported into microsomes in vitro.
This suggests that P. tricornutum CA could be located in organelles. The intracellular location of P. tricornutum
CA needs to be determined cytochemically and physiologically to
investigate its biochemical and cell structural organization when CA
functions in relation to carbon acquisition in marine autotrophs.
The tertiary structures of -type CAs have been determined by x-ray
crystallography using enzymes obtained from the unicellular red algae,
P. purpureum (Mitsuhashi et al., 2000 ), the pea plant (Kimber and Pai, 2000 ), and M. thermoautotrophicum (Strop et
al., 2001 ). It is interesting that despite the striking similarity in
the primary structures of the active site, their tertiary structures and proposed mechanisms of catalysis were quite different among these
-CAs. The subunit of P. purpureum CA was shown to be
divided into two almost identical parts, i.e. N and C halves that
revealed the typical primary structure of -CA (Mitsuhashi et al.,
2000 ). Each one-half contained a Zn coordination site constituted of four amino acid residues, Cys, Asp, His, and Cys, which forms an active
center with a hydrophobic domain primarily composed of Pro, Phe, and
Leu in the other one-half chain (Mitsuhashi et al., 2000 ). Binding of
Zn by four amino acid ligands, including that of Asp, and a cooperative
conformation to utilize trans-located subdomains are a unique feature
of the active center of CA and hence the CO2
hydration mechanism is thought to use water, which does not bind to Zn
directly (Mitsuhashi et al., 2000 ). In contrast to this unique
structure of red algal -CA, pea CA was shown to possess an active
site that is a mirror image of that of -CA and thus is assumed to
share a similar mechanism of catalysis to -CAs (Kimber and Pai,
2000 ).
The tertiary structure of P. purpureum -CA was shown to
be unique as described above and hence might not occur in P. tricornutum -CA (Fig. 5). If the catalysis mechanism of
P. tricornutum CA resembles that of -CA as in the case of
pea CA, the critical amino acid residues involved in the
CO2 hydration may be quite different from that of
pea. The residues His42, Leu70, and Phe92, which correspond to Gln151,
Phe179, and Tyr205 in pea CA, may form a
CO2-binding site, and the proton of the imidazole
group in His42 would interact with the oxygen of
CO2 in place of the amide group in Gln151 in pea
CA (Kimber and Pai, 2000 ).
The subunit structure of -CAs varies depending on species. Higher
plant -CA possess hexa- to octameric structures (Sültemeyer et
al., 1993 ; Kimber and Pai, 2000 ) whereas those in Monera and Protista
have been shown to possess di- to tetrameric structures (Hiltonen et
al., 1998 ; Mitsuhashi et al., 2000 ). The molecular mass of the native
form of P. tricornutum CA could not be determined by gel
filtration because no distinct sharp peak was detected and the CA was
distributed in a broad range of fractions that correspond to the
molecular mass of 800 to 29 kD (data not shown). This result was always
obtained with different batches of preparations (data not shown),
suggesting that the quaternary structure of this enzyme may be very
large and be disassembled during purification or by interaction with
the matrix of the column. In an alternate manner, monomeric
polypeptides might merely aggregate to form a large pseudo complex in vitro.
Intracellular CA appears to play a major role in acquiring and
supplying substrate for photosynthesis in marine diatoms. The P. tricornutum CA described in this study is the first -CA to be
detected in a diatom species. The other diatom CA so far isolated is
from T. weissflogii (TWCA1), which showed no homology to the known algal CAs and therefore a fundamental difference of carbon acquisition among algal phyla was proposed by the authors (Roberts et
al., 1997 ). In contrast, the present study indicates that the primary
structure of CA in a diatom is not markedly distinctive as far as one
of the major neritic species, P. tricornutum, is concerned.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Cells and Culture Condition
The marine diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum (UTEX
642) was obtained from the University of Texas Culture Collection
(Austin) and was cultured axenically in F2AW (Harrison et al., 1980 )
under continuous illumination of photon flux density of 100 µmol
m 2 s 1 at 20°C. The culture was aerated
with 5% CO2 (high-CO2-grown cells) or air
(air-grown cells).
Determination of Photosynthetic Affinity for DIC
Cells were harvested by centrifugation at 1,500g
for 10 min at 25°C, washed twice with 350 µM NaCl
buffered with 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH6.8), and resuspended in
CO2-free F2AW buffered with 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH
8.2) under N2 at a chlorophyll a
concentration of 10 µg mL 1. The rate of photosynthesis
was measured with a Clark-type oxygen electrode as described previously
(Matsuda and Colman, 1995 ) with or without the addition of CA
inhibitors, EZA (0.4 mM; Sigma-Aldrich Japan, Tokyo) or AZA
(0.4 or 2 mM; Sigma-Aldrich Japan). The apparent K0.5[DIC] was determined as described by
Rotatore and Colman (1991) . Cell suspension (1.5 mL) was placed in the
O2 electrode chamber, illuminated with a fiber optic
illuminator (Megalight100, Hoya-Schott Co., Tokyo) at a photon flux
density of 2,600 µmol m 2 s 1 and the cells
allowed to reach CO2 compensation concentration. The photon
flux density was then increased to 6,400 µmol m 2
s 1 and aliquots of KHCO3 were added
sequentially to the cell suspension to create increasing DIC
concentrations. Chlorophyll a concentration was
determined by the spectrophotometric method described by Jeffrey and
Humphrey (1975) .
Measurement of CA Activity
CA activity was measured by the potentiometric method described
by Wilbur and Anderson (1948) with some modifications. Twenty microliters of enzyme solution or cell suspension was added to 1.48 mL
of 20 mM Veronal buffer (pH 8.3) in a water-jacketed
acrylic chamber maintained at 4°C. The reaction was initiated by the
addition of 0.5 mL of ice-cold CO2-saturated water and the
time required for the pH to drop from 8.3 to 8.0 was determined. The WA
unit was defined as follows: WA unit = Tc/T 1, where Tc and T are the time required for the pH drop in the
absence and presence of enzyme solution, respectively. For the
qualitative determination of CA activity, electrophoresis on cellulose
acetate plates (Titan III Zip Zone, Helena Laboratories, Mississauga,
Canada) was carried out as described by Williams and Colman
(1993) .
Extraction and Purification of CA
A culture of air-grown cells (20 L) at mid-logarithmic phase
(OD730 0.2-0.4) was harvested by centrifugation at
1,500g for 10 min at 25°C. The cells were resuspended
in a minimum volume of 50 mM Bicine (N, N-Bis
2-hydroxymethyl Gly)-NaOH buffer (pH 8.5) and then mixed with 400 g of glass beads (0.105-0.125 mm: 0.177-0.250 mm: 0.350-0.500
mm = 1: 1: 2, Iuchi Seieido, Osaka). Cells were homogenized by
vigorous vortexing for 1 min and chilled on ice for 5 min. This
procedure was repeated 15 times. A cell-free lysate was obtained from
the homogenate by centrifugation at 26,000g for 60 min
at 4°C. CA activity was recovered from the resulting supernatant by
ammonium sulfate precipitation between 30% and 65% saturation.
This CA fraction was subjected to a two-step purification using a
DEAE-sephacel (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Little Chalfont, UK) column
(i.d. 1.0 × 6.3 cm) followed by affinity chromatography on a
p-AMBS agarose (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis) column
(i.d. 0.8 × 4 cm). The DEAE-Sephacel column was equilibrated with
50 mM Bicine-NaOH (pH 7.9) and protein was eluted with a
linear gradient of Na2SO4 from 0 to 0.25 M. p-AMBS column was equilibrated by 50 mM Bicine-NaOH (pH 8.3) and protein was eluted with 25 mM Tris-H2SO4 buffer containing 0.1 M Na2SO4 and the same buffer
containing 0.3 M NaClO4. Protein concentration
was determined by the Bradford method using bovine serum albumin as the standard.
Determination of Molecular Mass
The CA fraction eluted from the p-AMBS agarose
column was applied to SDS-PAGE under both nonreducing and reducing
conditions with 5% (v/v) -mercaptoethanol using a 12% (w/v)
polyacrylamide gel and molecular-mass standards (DAIICHI III,
Daiichi Pure Chemicals, Co., Ltd., Tokyo). The molecular mass of CA was
also determined by molecular sieving on a Superdex 200 (Amersham
Pharmacia Biotech) column (i.d. 1.0 × 30 cm).
Determination of Amino Acid Sequence of N-Terminal End
CA was blotted electrophoretically onto polyvinylidene
difluoride membrane (Immobilon, Millipore, Bedford, MA) followed by Coomassie Brilliant Blue staining. The CA band was cut out of the
membrane and subjected to amino acid sequencing analysis of the
N-terminal end using PPSQ-23 (Shimadzu Corp., Kyoto).
Extraction of Total RNA and Molecular Cloning of CA
cDNA
Air-grown cells (3.0 L) at late logarithmic phase
(OD730 = 0.4) were harvested as described above. The
cells were frozen immediately, disrupted in liquid N2, and
total RNA was extracted as described by Chomczynski and Sacchi (1987) .
cDNA was synthesized with M-MuLV Reverse Transcriptase (New England Bio
Labs Inc., Beverly, MA) and oligo (dT)15 primer.
Degenerate primers were designed according to the amino acid sequence
of the N-terminal end of the purified CA (PtCAF1: 5'-CGC GGA TCC GAY
ATI ACI GAR ATH TTY GAY GG-3') and according to two published
nucleotide sequences of -CAs from Coccomyxa sp.
(Hiltonen et al., 1998 ) and P. purpreum (Mitsuhashi and
Miyachi, 1996 ; PtCAR1: 5'-CCG GAA TTC CCA TNG CNK CYT GIA CHA T-3'),
which corresponded to the sequences of DITEIFDG and IVQ(A/D) AW(A/D),
respectively. A partial nucleotide sequence of CA cDNA was amplified by
PCR, on the assumption that P. tricornutum CA is
homologous to -CAs. The PCR profile was as follows: five cycles of
94°C for 30 s, 50°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 90 s,
followed by 35 cycles of 94°C for 30 s, 60°C for 30 s,
and 72°C for 90 s. The resulting PCR products were separated by
agarose gel electrophoresis and the bands corresponding in size to
approximately 400 to 600 bp were cut out of the gel and the extract was
used as a template for a second PCR. The nested-degenerate primers were
designed according to the amino acid sequence of the N-terminal end of
purified CA (PtCAF2: 5'-CCG GAA TTC GAY GCI GCN TAY TTY GAY AC-3') and
according to the two published nucleotide sequences of -CAs
described above (PtCAR2: 5'-CCG GAA TTC TAR TGI CCR CAN ACI ARD ATR
TG-3'), which corresponded to the sequences of DAAYFDT and HILVCGH,
respectively. The PCR profile was as follows: three cycles of 94°C
for 30 s, 53°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 90 s, followed
by 37 cycles of 94°C for 30 s, 55°C for 30 s, and 72°C
for 90 s. The amplified fragment was purified by electrophoresis
and cloned into a plasmid vector (pT7Blue T-Vector, Novagen, Madison,
WI). Cloned cDNA was sequenced by using Thermo Sequenase Cycle sequence
Kit and Cy5.5 labeled primers by the Long-Read Tower System (Amersham
Pharmacia Biotech).
A full-length sequence of CA cDNA was determined by RACE method for the
5' and 3' ends of CA cDNA. SMART RACE cDNA Amplification Kit and
high-fidelity DNA polymerase (CLONTECH Laboratories Inc., Palo Alto,
CA) were used according to the manufacturer's protocols. CA
gene-specific primers, PtCASP1: 5'-GGA TGC GTC GAT GCC CGT GCT CCT
CCG-3', were designed based upon the partial nucleotide sequence of CA
cDNA. The 3'-RACE was carried out with PtCASP1 and the universal primer
provided by manufacturer. The resulted PCR product was cloned into the
plasmid vector and sequenced.
CA gene-specific primers, PtCASP2: 5'-GGT GAC ACG GGG ATC GCA GCA GGG
GCG-3' and PtCASP3: 5'-GGA GGG GCA TGG TCC ACG TTG GCG ACG G-3', were
designed according to the cDNA sequence of 3' region determined by
3'-RACE. The 5'-RACE was carried out with PtCASP2 and the universal
primer provided by manufacturer. The second PCR was carried out with
PtCASP3 and the universal primer provided by manufacturer as described
above on the product of first PCR and the resulted PCR product was
cloned into a plasmid vector and sequenced. The sequence data was
analyzed by the GENETYX System (Software development Co., Ltd., Tokyo).
A homology search was carried out using the DNA Data Bank of Japan
homology search system (release 42, July 2000) and the deduced amino
acid sequence of P. tricornutum CA was compared with
several known CA sequences (Burnell et al., 1989 ; Majeau and Coleman,
1991 ; Guilloton et al., 1992 ; Mitsuhashi and Miyachi, 1996 ; Hiltonen et
al., 1998 ; Smith and Ferry, 1999 ).
RNA Gel-Blot Analysis
Total RNA (15 µg) from 5% (v/v) CO2- and
air-grown cells at mid-logarithmic phase was separated by 1.1%
(v/v) formaldehyde-agarose gel electrophoresis and blotted onto
nylon membrane (Hybond N+, Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). The
membrane was hybridized with the PCR product of 5'-RACE described
above. The labeling of the probe and hybridization were carried out
using Gene Images random prime labeling module (Amersham Pharmacia
Biotech). Hybridized probe was reacted with CDPstar (Amersham Pharmacia
Biotech) and visualized by fluorography.
Genomic DNA Gel-Blot Analysis
Two liters of high-CO2-grown cells
(OD730 = 0.625) was harvested, frozen, and disrupted
in liquid N2. The homogenate was resuspended in 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 0.1 M EDTA, and 0.5%
(w/v) sarcosyl and was treated with 40 µg mL 1 RNaseA
(Sigma-Aldrich) at 37°C for 2 h followed by treatment with 80 µg mL 1 proteinase K (Sigma-Aldrich) at 50°C for
2 h. Protein was removed with dialysis method as described by
Sambrook et al. (1989) . Twelve micrograms of genomic DNA was digested
separately with BamHI (Roche Diagnostics, Basel),
EcoRI, EcoRV (Takara Shuzo Co., Ltd.,
Otsu, Japan), or PstI (Toyobo Co., Ltd., Osaka) and
subjected to DNA gel-blot analysis. Probe preparation and visualization
of hybridized band were carried out as described in RNA gel-blot analysis.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENT |
The authors would like to thank Mr. Goro Hirozumi for his
technical assistance.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received February 16, 2001; returned for revision April 26, 2001; accepted May 18, 2001.
1
This work was supported in part by a grant from
Invitation for Research Institute of Innovative Technology for the
Earth Research Proposals and in part by Kwansei-Gakuin University
(Special Grant for Individual Researcher to Y.M. and a visiting
professorship to B.C.).
2
These authors contributed equally to the paper.
3
Present address: Department of Biology, York University,
4700 Keele Street, Toronto, Canada M3J 1P3.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail yusuke{at}kwansei.ac.jp; fax
81-798-51-0914.
 |
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