Abstract
Most dinoflagellates in culture are bacterized, complicating the quantification of protein synthesis, as well as the analysis of its regulation. In bacterized cultures of Amphidinium carterae Hulbert, up to 80% of protein synthetic activity appears to be predominantly bacterial based on responses to inhibitors of protein synthesis. To circumvent this, axenic cultures of A. carterae were obtained and shown to respond to inhibitors of protein synthesis in a manner characteristic of eukaryotes. However, these responses changed with time in culture correlating with the reappearance of bacteria. Here we show that culture with kanamycin (50 μg/mL), carbenicillin (100 μg/mL), and streptomycin sulfate (50 μg/mL) (KCS), but not 100 units/mL of penicillin and streptomycin (PS), prevents the reappearance of bacteria and allows A. carterae protein synthesis to be quantified without the contribution of an associated bacterial community. We demonstrate that A. carterae can grow in the absence of a bacterial community. Furthermore, maintenance in KCS does not inhibit the growth of A. carterae cultures but slightly extends the growth phase and allows accumulation to somewhat higher saturation densities. We also show that cultures of A. carterae maintained in KCS respond to the eukaryotic protein synthesis inhibitors cycloheximide, emetine, and harringtonine. Establishment of these culture conditions will facilitate our ability to use polysome fractionation and ribosome profiling to study mRNA recruitment. Furthermore, this study shows that a simple and fast appraisal of the presence of a bacterial community in A. carterae cultures can be made by comparing responses to cycloheximide and chloramphenicol rather than depending on lengthier culture-based assessments.
Highlights
Amphidinium is a widespread dinoflagellate genus, found in temperate and tropical marine waters, in both free-living and endosymbiotic states
Strategies to develop axenic cultures of dinoflagellates usually involve a labor-intensive combination of microfiltration to remove bacteria, treatment with various antibiotic or chemical regimes, collection of phototactile cells and the generation of colonies from single cells [33]
Bacteria were not detected in reflected the absence of a bacterial community, we looked for the presence of bacteria by amplification axenic culture (Figure 3, lanes 1 and 2), but were detected after maintenance of this culture of 16Sthe rDNA
Summary
Amphidinium is a widespread dinoflagellate genus, found in temperate and tropical marine waters, in both free-living and endosymbiotic states. In addition to studying changes in mRNA recruitment, a polyribosome fractionation protocol can be used to isolate and characterize the translation factors and other proteins associated with mRNA on ribosomes and polysomes. To define translated reading frames better, the sites of translation initiation can be revealed using the protein synthesis inhibitor harringtonine to immobilize initiating ribosomes. To begin polysome studies in A. carterae, we needed to optimize use of the translational inhibitors, cycloheximide, emetine, and harringtonine, monitoring their effectiveness by 35 S-methionine incorporation. A. carterae, we purchased fresh axenic cultures of A. carterae Hulbert from Bigelow National Center for Marine Algae and Microbiota (CCMP 1314) to allow us to optimize the inhibition of translation by cycloheximide and other inhibitors of eukaryotic translation, as well as to enable us to quantitate protein synthetic activity in A. carterae and analyze mRNA recruitment.
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