Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1280808 International Journal of Hydrogen Energy 2006 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Sulfate nutrient-deprivation in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii   brings about prompt degradation of Rubisco and a concomitant substantial accumulation of starch. These changes precede hydrogen (H2H2) photoevolution by the cells. The cause-and-effect relationship between Rubisco loss, starch accumulation and subsequent H2H2-photoevolution in C. reinhardtii, and the role of illumination for these changes to occur, was investigated in this work. A Rubisco-less and acetate-requiring mutant of C. reinhardtii   (CC2653) was employed as a tool in this investigation and compared to the wild type (WT) in terms of protein and starch metabolic flux and H2H2-evolution upon sulfur deprivation. Results showed a prompt Rubisco degradation and concomitant 10-fold starch accumulation in the WT in the light, which was completed within 48 h of S-deprivation. This was followed by a regulated starch degradation and concomitant H2H2-photoevolution, which lasted for up to 120 h in S-deprivation. This massive flux of primary metabolites (protein and starch) did not occur in the dark in the WT, suggesting a strictly light-dependent and integrated process in metabolite rearrangement and H2H2-photoevolution in C. reinhardtii  . The Rubisco-less CC2653 mutant failed to accumulate starch upon S-deprivation in the light or dark and also failed to evolve H2H2 gas. These results suggested a temporal cause-and-effect relationship between the light-dependent catabolism of Rubisco and starch accumulation, and the subsequent ability of the cell to perform a light-dependent starch degradation and H2H2-photoevolution. The regulated starch breakdown in the light apparently provides the endogenous substrate that supports H2H2-evolution, both by feeding electrons into the plastoquinone pool in chloroplasts, and indirectly by sustaining mitochondrial respiration for the maintenance of anaerobiosis in the cell.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Electrochemistry
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