The Metabolic Status Drives Acclimation of Iron Deficiency Responses in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii as Revealed by Proteomics Based Hierarchical Clustering and Reverse Genetics.

Höhner R, Barth J, Magneschi L, Jaeger D, Niehues A, Bald T, Grossman A, Fufezan C, Hippler M

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Iron is a crucial cofactor in numerous redox-active proteins operating in bioenergetic pathways including respiration and photosynthesis. Cellular iron management is essential to sustain sufficient energy production and minimize oxidative stress. To produce energy for cell growth, the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii possesses the metabolic flexibility to use light and/or carbon sources such as acetate. To investigate the interplay between the iron-deficiency response and growth requirements under distinct trophic conditions, we took a quantitative proteomics approach coupled to innovative hierarchical clustering using different "distance-linkage combinations" and random noise injection. Protein co-expression analyses of the combined data sets revealed insights into cellular responses governing acclimation to iron deprivation and regulation associated with photosynthesis dependent growth. Photoautotrophic growth requirements as well as the iron deficiency induced specific metabolic enzymes and stress related proteins, and yet differences in the set of induced enzymes, proteases, and redox-related polypeptides were evident, implying the establishment of distinct response networks under the different conditions. Moreover, our data clearly support the notion that the iron deficiency response includes a hierarchy for iron allocation within organelles in C. reinhardtii. Importantly, deletion of a bifunctional alcohol and acetaldehyde dehydrogenase (ADH1), which is induced under low iron based on the proteomic data, attenuates the remodeling of the photosynthetic machinery in response to iron deficiency, and at the same time stimulates expression of stress-related proteins such as NDA2, LHCSR3, and PGRL1. This finding provides evidence that the coordinated regulation of bioenergetics pathways and iron deficiency response is sensitive to the cellular and chloroplast metabolic and/or redox status, consistent with systems approach data.

Details about the publication

JournalMolecular and Cellular Proteomics (MCP)
Volume12
Issue10
Page range2774-90
StatusPublished
Release year2013 (30/10/2013)
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1074/mcp.M113.029991

Authors from the University of Münster

Bald, Till
Plant Biochemistry and Biotechnology - Group Prof. Michael Hippler
Barth, Johannes
Plant Biochemistry and Biotechnology - Group Prof. Michael Hippler
Fufezan, Christian
Plant Biochemistry and Biotechnology - Group Prof. Michael Hippler
Hippler, Michael
Plant Biochemistry and Biotechnology - Group Prof. Michael Hippler
Höhner, Ricarda
Plant Biochemistry and Biotechnology - Group Prof. Michael Hippler
Jaeger, Daniel
Plant Biochemistry and Biotechnology - Group Prof. Michael Hippler
Magneschi, Leonardo
Institute of Plant Biology and Biotechnology