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First published online February 16, 2007; 10.1104/pp.106.092536 Plant Physiology 143:1802-1816 (2007) © 2007 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Tracing the Evolution of the Light-Harvesting Antennae in Chlorophyll a/b-Containing Organisms1,[OA]Department of Biology, University of New Brunswick, Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada E3B 5A3 (A.G.K., D.G.D.); Department of Biology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada B3H 4J1 (T.B., R.W.L.); Institute of Biological Sciences, University of Tsukuba, Tsukaba, Ibaraki 3058572, Japan (K.-I.I.); and Department of Botany, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6T 1Z4 (P.K.)
The light-harvesting complexes (LHCs) of land plants and green algae have essential roles in light capture and photoprotection. Though the functional diversity of the individual LHC proteins are well described in many land plants, the extent of this family in the majority of green algal groups is unknown. To examine the evolution of the chlorophyll a/b antennae system and to infer its ancestral state, we initiated several expressed sequence tag projects from a taxonomically broad range of chlorophyll a/b-containing protists. This included representatives from the Ulvophyceae (Acetabularia acetabulum), the Mesostigmatophyceae (Mesostigma viride), and the Prasinophyceae (Micromonas sp.), as well as one representative from each of the Euglenozoa (Euglena gracilis) and Chlorarachniophyta (Bigelowiella natans), whose plastids evolved secondarily from a green alga. It is clear that the core antenna system was well developed prior to green algal diversification and likely consisted of the CP29 (Lhcb4) and CP26 (Lhcb5) proteins associated with photosystem II plus a photosystem I antenna composed of proteins encoded by at least Lhca3 and two green algal-specific proteins encoded by the Lhca2 and 9 genes. In organisms containing secondary plastids, we found no evidence for orthologs to the plant/algal antennae with the exception of CP29. We also identified PsbS homologs in the Ulvophyceae and the Prasinophyceae, indicating that this distinctive protein appeared prior to green algal diversification. This analysis provides a snapshot of the antenna systems in diverse green algae, and allows us to infer the changing complexity of the antenna system during green algal evolution.
Light-harvesting complexes (LHCs) are a superfamily of chlorophyll (Chl) and carotenoid-binding proteins present in photosynthetic eukaryotes that are responsible for the capture of light energy and its transfer to the photosynthetic reaction centers, where it is then used to drive oxygenic photosynthesis (Green and Durnford, 1996
The functional diversity and organization of the Chl a/b-binding protein family is best characterized in land plants; this provides a framework upon which one can examine and compare antenna complexity in other organisms. The antenna system is composed of distinct LHC proteins that are associated with PSI (LHCI) or PSII (LHCII). In Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), there are six LHCI genes (Lhca1Lhca6), three minor LHCII genes (Lhcb4 [CP29], Lhcb5 [CP26], and Lhcb6 [CP24]), and three classes of major LHCII genes (Lhcb1, Lhcb2, and Lhcb3; Jansson, 1999
The completion of the Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Ostreococcus tauri genomes has increased our understanding of the LHC family in green algae. In C. reinhardtii, the LHCI and LHCII proteins are each encoded by a multigene family, while the minor PSII light-harvesting polypeptides (CP26 and CP29) are each encoded by one gene (Teramoto et al., 2002
Six et al. (2005)
Both the euglenophytes and chlorarachniophytes contain Chl a/b-binding proteins and obtained their plastids from eukaryotes that likely resembled green algae (Keeling, 2004
We examined the evolution of the light-harvesting antennae in a very diverse cross section of Chl a/b-containing photosynthetic organisms consisting of land plants, green algae, euglenophytes, and chlorarachniophytes. The green algae/land plants are represented by two major evolutionary lineages, Chlorophyta and Streptophyta. The former contains the well-supported Ulvophyceae, Trebouxiophyceae, and Chorophyceae (UTC) clade plus the polyphyletic members of the Prasinophyceae that group at the base of the Chlorophyta (Lewis and McCourt, 2004
Complexity of the LHC Superfamily
A phylogenetic tree containing the sequences of the Chl a/b- and Chl a/c-containing organisms is shown in Fig. 1
. There were five major divisions within the tree, including the Chl a/b-binding proteins (Lhcb/Lhca genes), the LI818 and LI818-like proteins, the red algal/cryptomonad LHCs (Lhcr/Lhcc genes), the fucoxanthin-Chl a/c-binding proteins (Lhcf genes), and a new clade that we called Lhcz (Lhcz genes) that was composed of members from the cryptomonads, haptophytes, and chlorarachniophytes. Lhcz was used as there is no biochemical evidence hinting at functions or localizations, so z was selected as temporary designations to denote a unique class of genes. The most pronounced division (with support of 1.00, 84, 91) was between the genes that code for the Chl a/b-binding proteins (the green line) and the genes encoding the red algal/cryptomonad PSI-associated light-harvesting antenna proteins, the Chl a/c-binding proteins, and the LI818 proteins (the red line). The four clades within the red line (LI818, Lhcr/Lhcc, Lhcz, and Lhcf genes; Fig.1) were strongly supported though the relationships between them were not resolved. The LI818 branch is unique in that it contains homologs from many of the major groups of algae, including green algae (C. reinhardtii, Micromonas sp., M. viride, and O. tauri), chlorarachniophytes (B. natans), diatoms (Cyclotella cryptica and Phaeodactylum tricornutum), and haptophytes (Isochrysis galbana), agreeing with previous reports (Eppard et al., 2000
The positions of three chlorarachniophyte antenna proteins were hard to resolve in this analysis. B. natans LI818;2.2 groups within the LI818 clade (1.00, 89, 92), while the position of a more divergent LHC did not significantly associate with any of the five major clades, thus we called it Lhcy1. The third chlorarachniophyte Lhc (B. natans Lhcz1) is particularly interesting as it associates specifically with a diverse group of organisms composed of cryptomonads (Guillardia theta and Rhodomonas sp.) and haptophytes (Pavlova lutheri and I. galbana) with very good support (0.99, 91, 94). To our knowledge, this is the first reported Lhc clade that includes diverse organisms possessing only secondary/tertiary plastids. While we were able to resolve a separation between the green and red line LHCs, resolution of distinct clusters within the Chl a/b clade was generally weak in this global analysis with the exception of the prasinophyte-type Lhcp (1.00, 100, 100).
We further analyzed the LHC proteins in the Chl a/b clade to determine the presence of LHC homologs and to infer when they evolved. A phylogenetic tree of a larger number of diverse Chl a/b-binding LHC-like proteins with the LI818 proteins as the outgroup is shown in Figure 2 .
The minor PSII antenna protein, CP29 (Lhcb4), was identified in all the cDNA libraries we surveyed, with the exception of Micromonas sp., and support for the CP29 clade was very strong (Fig. 2; 0.98, 95, 85). Additionally, all CP29 homologs shared a unique insert prior to the first transmembrane helix, supporting this identification. Another minor PSII antenna protein, CP26 (Lhcb5), was also identified in the green algal lineages containing primary plastids, including Micromonas sp. and M. viride (Fig. 2). We also detected an Lhcb5 homolog in A. acetabulum, but because the sequence was not full length we excluded it from the final analysis. However, clear Lhcb5 orthologs were not detected in the protists with secondarily derived plastids E. gracilis and B. natans. The third minor PSII-associated antenna in land plants, CP24 (Lhcb6; Jansson, 1999
The major LHCII proteins of C. reinhardtii, A. acetabulum, Arabidopsis, B. natans, and M. viride grouped together, but lacked support. There are multiple paralogs for the LHCII proteins for each organism and these consistently formed taxon-specific clades, though support for these branches was often poor. The presence of taxon-specific LHCII groups was an indication that there were no orthologs to either the C. reinhardtii or the Arabidopsis LHCII gene complements (Table I
). Many of the E. gracilis LHCII sequences were at the base of the main LHCII group (Fig. 2). The position of the novel LHCQ protein with an unknown function is unresolved. Previously, Lhcq homologs have been discovered in genome projects of C. reinhardtii (Elrad and Grossman, 2004
The primary antenna for prasinophytes has long been recognized as unusual, both in sequence divergence and in pigment-binding properties (Rhiel and Mörschel, 1993
Our understanding of LHCI diversity and function is defined by work in land plants, but it is clear that in green algae there is a large diversity in LHCI-like genes (Teramoto et al., 2002
If the green algal LHCI antennae are compared, it is clear that there are orthologs for the C. reinhardtii Lhca2 and Lhca9 genes in the green algae examined (Fig. 2). It also appears that Lhca2 and Lhca9 are close paralogs as they form a strongly supported group in all three analyses (1.00, 88, 97). Due to the high sequence identity between these paralogs, the separation between Lhca2 and Lhca9 is moderately supported (Fig. 2). We also found an Lhca2 sequence in the O. tauri genome (http://bioinformatics.psb.ugent.be/blast/public/?project=ostreococcus) not previously reported by Six et al. (2005) It is interesting to note that we detected no LHCI homologs in either of the two species examined with secondarily derived plastids. E. gracilis possesses a cluster of proteins that are referred to LHCI simply due to their exclusion from the LHCII branch. The E. gracilis LHCI branch was monophyletic (1.00, 95, 100), but its position in relation to other LHCs is unresolved.
After an exhaustive search of all the EST databases, we only detected PsbS in A. acetabulum. Two different sequences were found in this library (PsbS1 and PsbS2), and both sequences have four predicted transmembrane helices, a characteristic of PsbS (Kim et al., 1992
Examining diverse members of the green algae for the presence/absence of specific LHC homologs should allow us to assess the evolutionary changes in light harvesting and to predict the ancestral state of the antenna. Though the LHC antenna systems in the green and red lines evolved independently as they share few orthologous Lhc complexes, the LI818 clade is the notable exception as LI818-like sequences are present in a diverse group of photosynthetic organisms as shown here and elsewhere (Eppard et al., 2000
PSII Antenna System
In considering the composition of an early PSII antenna system, CP29 is clearly an important component as orthologs to this LHC are present in all classes of green algae examined here, and are also present in the species with secondary plastids (Figs. 2 and 4). Although we did not find a Micromonas sp. CP29 homolog it has recently been identified in another member of the Mamiellales, O. tauri (Six et al., 2005
The minor antennae (CP29 and 26) are clearly ancestral and their presence in most Chl a/b-containing organisms suggests they have important roles in the structure and/or function of the light-harvesting antenna system. These minor antennae bind higher amounts of carotenoid than LHCII and act as the interface between LHCII trimers and PSII and it has also been proposed that they are the sites of nonphotochemical quenching (NPQ; Bassi et al., 1993
An important role for CP29 in the early antenna system may have been energy redistribution between the reaction centers. In land plants and green algae, overexcitation of PSII induces LHCII phosphorylation and an association of the LHCII antenna with PSI in an attempt to balance electron flow; a process called state transitions (Haldrup et al., 2001
In this study, for all of the Chl a/b-containing organisms that possess LHCII homologs, there is evidence for the trimerization motif (WYGPDR; Hobe et al., 1995
In Arabidopsis, there are six distinct LHCI genes (Lhca1Lhca6), of which five (Lhca1Lhca5) are expressed (Jansson, 1999
We identified two green algal-specific Lhca genes that are labeled Lhca2 (which is different from the plant Lhca2 gene) and Lhca9 (Fig. 2; Table I). This means there are three well-defined LHCI classes in green algae and it seems likely that the PSI belt of green algae consists of the plant homolog of Lhca3 and the green algal-specific proteins encoded by the Lhca2 and 9 genes. When an LHCI oligomeric complex was purified from a psaB deletion mutant of C. reinhardtii it was deficient in proteins encoded by the Lhca2, 3, and 9 genes (Takahashi et al., 2004
While there are a total of five to six distinct LHCI proteins in O. tauri (Six et al., 2005
We did not detect any plant or green algal LHCI homologs in the libraries from the Chl a/b-containing algae with secondary plastids E. gracilis and B. natans. The E. gracilis sequences presumed to be LHCI were clearly part of the Chl a/b-binding protein clade and always form a monophyletic group. In B. natans, the non-LHCII proteins were all excluded from the Chl a/b-binding clade. While the majority of these sequences were LI818 related, we also found a single LHC protein that was strongly related to cryptomonad and haptophyte Lhc sequences (Lhcz clade) and one weakly associated with the Lhcf genes (Lhcy1). The discovery of cryptomonad/haptophyte-like genes in a green lineage might suggest that in addition to LI818-like proteins, these homologs existed before the red and green algal lineages diverged. However, given the propensity of lateral gene transfer reported in chlorarachniophytes, such a conclusion would be premature (Archibald et al., 2003
As E. gracilis and B. natans acquired their plastids secondarily from green algae, it is curious that LHCI homologs have not been detected. We cannot, however, rule out the possibility that such homologs were not detected due to the depth of EST sampling or the conditions under which the organisms were grown. With E. gracilis 25,595 ESTs were clustered, while the B. natans project was considerably smaller (3,462 ESTs). Nevertheless, we found considerable diversity in other organisms with similarly sized EST projects, indicating that if LHCI homologs are present, they are poorly expressed. Regardless, it is likely, especially with E. gracilis, that there were dramatic changes in the antennae system following secondary plastid acquisition. An explanation for these changes hinges on when and from which organisms E. gracilis and B. natans acquired their plastids, of which there is little information. Recent evidence from B. natans suggests that its plastid was acquired relatively late from within the UTC clade (Rogers et al., 2007
PsbS is an LHC-related protein that is predicted to have four MSRs (Kim et al., 1992
Figure 4 summarizes the evolution of the LHC family in the context of diversity within the green line with a specific emphasis on antennae evolution in Arabidopsis, C. reinhardtii, and O. tauri. There are no LHC homologs yet identified in cyanobacteria, indicating that the LHCs are a eukaryotic invention. The glaucophytes, however, are the only eukaryotic group from which true LHC proteins have not yet been found, tentatively indicating that they appeared following the divergence of the glaucophytes from the green/red algal line. The glaucophytes do, however, possess a carotenoid-rich protein that shares epitopes with the LHCs but this may be structurally unique (Rissler and Durnford, 2005
Unlike all other LHCs, LI818-like homologs are broadly distributed in algal groups with different pigmentation, spanning the classic red and green lines (Fig. 4), thus it is one of the earliest diverging LHCs that can be identified with the current evidence and its extant distribution indicates that it probably appeared prior to the red/green split (Richard et al., 2000 Following the emergence of different green algal groups, the peripheral LHCII and LHCI antennae system continued to change independently in different lineages, driven by gene duplications and divergence as these organisms adapted to varying niches in an attempt to optimize light harvesting and photoprotection. This is particularly evident with LHCII where the major antenna genes radiated independently in different groups. Evidence of the changing complexity of the antennae system is also present in LHCI where a number of family-specific LHCI genes were identified, indicative of a late emergence. In both cases, it seems that a core antennae were retained and further modifications built upon this existing structure. The antenna structures of E. gracilis and B. natans are particularly interesting as the secondary origin of these plastids seemed to affect the evolution of the antennae systems, particularly for LHCI for which the available evidence is suggestive of a replacement of this antenna system. Though this must be a tentative conclusion until a genome project determines the exact complement of Lhc genes, it does appear as though the massive transfer of genes to the nucleus during plastid evolution was not without its share of gene losses and/or rapid divergence as the organism adapted to a photosynthetic lifestyle.
cDNA Libraries and Data Mining
Complementary DNA libraries for Bigelowiella natans (CCMP621), Euglena gracilis (strain Z), Micromonas sp. (CCMP490), and Mesostigma viride CCMP2046 (NIES 296) were commercially prepared from RNA provided from member labs of the protist EST project. The Acetabularia acetabulum cDNA library was provided by Dina Mandoli at the University of Washington. Bacterial plating, picking, DNA preparation, and sequencing were conducted at the Atlantic Genome Centre (Halifax, Nova Scotia) and the British Columbia Cancer Agency (Vancouver). Sequence traces were vector trimmed, clustered, and the processed sequence deposited into the Taxonomically Broad EST Database. Taxonomically Broad EST Database was mined for potential LHC-like genes using the in-house BLAST search program, Anabench BLAST (Badidi et al., 2003
The amino acid sequences inferred from EST clusters were aligned using version 1.83 of the Clustal W multiple sequence alignment program (Thompson et al., 1994
The nomenclature used in this manuscript was based on the guidelines established for land plants and green algae by Jansson et al. 1992
Phylogenetic analyses used included Neighbor-Joining Distance (NJD), Bayesian algorithms, and maximum likelihood. The ProtTest program (Abascal et al., 2005
The PHYML program (Guindon and Gascuel, 2003
MrBayes v3.1.2 (Huelsenbeck and Ronquist, 2001
Hydrophobicity plots were performed on the ExPaSy server (www.expasy.ch) using ProtScale (Gasteiger et al., 2005 Sequence data from this article can be found in the Third Party Annotation Section of the DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank databases under the accession numbers TPA: BK005977 to BK006046. Received November 2, 2006; accepted February 7, 2007; published February 16, 2007.
1 This work was supported by grants from Genome Canada, Genome Atlantic, and Genome British Columbia as part of the Protist EST Program and supported through the Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada. The author responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantphysiol.org) is: Dion G. Durnford (durnford{at}unb.ca).
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.106.092536 * Corresponding author; e-mail durnford{at}unb.ca; fax 5064533583.
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