Abstract

BackgroundNitrogen starvation is known to cause drastic alterations in physiology and metabolism leading to the accumulation of lipid bodies in many microalgae, and it thus presents an important alternative for biofuel production. However, despite the importance of this process, the molecular mechanisms that mediate the metabolic remodeling induced by N starvation and especially by stress recovery are still poorly understood, and new candidates for bioengineering are needed to make this process useful for biofuel production.ResultsWe have studied the molecular changes involved in the adaptive mechanisms to N starvation and full recovery of the vegetative cells in the microalga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii during a four-day time course.High throughput mass spectrometry was employed to integrate the proteome and the metabolome with physiological changes. N starvation led to an accumulation of oil bodies and reduced Fv/Fm.. Distinct enzymes potentially participating in the carbon-concentrating mechanism (CAH7, CAH8, PEPC1) are strongly accumulated. The membrane composition is changed, as indicated by quantitative lipid profiles. A reprogramming of protein biosynthesis was observed by increased levels of cytosolic ribosomes, while chloroplastidic were dramatically reduced. Readdition of N led to, the identification of early responsive proteins mediating stress recovery, indicating their key role in regaining and sustaining normal vegetative growth.Analysis of the data with multivariate correlation analysis, Granger causality, and sparse partial least square (sPLS) provided a functional network perspective of the molecular processes. Cell growth and N metabolism were clearly linked by the branched chain amino acids, suggesting an important role in this stress. Lipid accumulation was also tightly correlated to the COP II protein, involved in vesicle and lysosome coating, and a major lipid droplet protein. This protein, together with other key proteins mediating signal transduction and adaption (BRI1, snRKs), constitute a series of new metabolic and regulatory targets.ConclusionsThis work not only provides new insights and corrects previous models by analyzing a complex dataset, but also increases our biochemical understanding of the adaptive mechanisms to N starvation in Chlamydomonas, pointing to new bioengineering targets for increased lipid accumulation, a key step for a sustainable and profitable microalgae-based biofuel production.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13068-014-0171-1) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • IntroductionGrown algae offer better solar energy conversion efficiency and a range of technical and ethical advances compared to traditional oil crops [7,8,9]

  • The stress adaption process is based in short- and long-term changes in metabolism affecting the morphological phenotype

  • The comprehensive analysis of systemic responses to N starvation and recovery in C. reinhardtii demonstrated that metabolism and growth are significantly affected at a system level

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Summary

Introduction

Grown algae offer better solar energy conversion efficiency and a range of technical and ethical advances compared to traditional oil crops [7,8,9] Considering their increasing importance as bioproducers and the need to achieve an optimized balance between lipid production and growth, thorough analyses of the underlying molecular mechanisms that mediate stress-induced accumulation of lipids in microalgae are necessary. These analyses are still in a very early stage [10]. The accumulation of lipid bodies in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii under N deficiency has been recently documented in detail [4,14,15], establishing a well-known environment in which changes in morphology and some key genes are defined

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