Abstract

BackgroundNeutral lipid storage is enhanced by nitrogen deprivation (ND) in numbers of green microalgal species. However, little is known about the metabolic pathways whose transcription levels are most significantly altered following ND in green microalgae, especially the nonmodel species.ResultsTo start gaining knowledge on this, we performed transcriptome profiling of the nonmodel green microalga Botryosphaerella sudeticus cells in response to ND. Transcriptome of B. sudeticus is de novo assembled based on millions of HiSEQ short sequence reads using CLC Genomics Workbench software. The resulting non-redundant ESTs are annotated based on the best hits generated from the BLASTX homology comparison against the “best” proteins in the model microalgae Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Chlorella variabilis. By using a pathway-based approach according to KEGG databases, we show that ESTs encoding ribosomal proteins and photosynthetic functions are the most abundantly expressed ESTs in the rapidly growing B. sudeticus cells. We find that ESTs encoding photosynthetic function but not the ribosomal proteins are most drastically downregulated upon ND. Notably, ESTs encoding lipid metabolic pathways are not significantly upregulated. Further analyses indicate that chlorophyll content is markedly decreased by 3-fold and total lipid content is only slightly increased by 50%, consistent with the transcriptional profiling. On the other hand, carbon content and photosynthesis efficiency are only marginally decreased by 7% and 20%, respectively, indicating that photosynthesis is only slightly reduced upon drastic downregulation of photosynthetic ESTs and chlorophyll content upon ND. In addition, TAG content is found to be greatly increased by 50-fold, though total lipid content is only slightly increased by 1.5-fold.ConclusionsTaken together, our results suggest that light-harvesting proteins and chlorophylls are in excess in B. sudeticus. Degradation of excess photosynthesis proteins is most likely a mechanism for recycling of nitrogen-rich molecules to synthesize new proteins for preparation of gametogenesis and zygospore formation in adaptation and survival upon ND. Furthermore, our analyses indicate that TAG accumulation is largely attributed to the modification of other pre-existing lipid molecules, rather than de novo synthesis. We propose that this is likely an evolutionarily conserved mechanism in many green microalgae species.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1471-2164-14-715) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Neutral lipid storage is enhanced by nitrogen deprivation (ND) in numbers of green microalgal species

  • Gametogenesis and lipid accumulation are enhanced by nitrogen deprivation (ND) in B. sudeticus B. sudeticus (UTEX2629) was often found to overgrown in cultures of B. braunii (UTEX572) (Sun and Liu, unpublished data)

  • Though the growth rate of B. sudeticus remained to be similar as that of C. reinhardtii, the maximal cell density of B. sudeticus was increased by ~25% in 1xBB medium and nearly by 100% in 2x Bold’s modified Bristol (BB) medium compared to that of C. reinhardtii

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Summary

Introduction

Neutral lipid storage is enhanced by nitrogen deprivation (ND) in numbers of green microalgal species. It has been proposed that microalgae farming could avoid competing with food crops for arable land and fresh water and the energy yield from algae per acre per year would be much higher than other crops [1,2,3]. Current microalgal species and cultivation methodologies are thought to hamper production of algae-based energy in an economically viable manner [1,4]

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