Mechanism of carbon partitioning towards starch and triacylglycerol in Chlorella vulgaris under nitrogen stress through whole-transcriptome analysis

This study aims to elucidate the mechanism of carbon partitioning towards starch and triacylglycerol (TAG) under nitrogen stress. Whole-transcriptome analysis was performed using RNA sequencing before being validated with qRT-PCR. The strain, Chlorella vulgaris UPSI-JRM01, exhibited a two-stage resp...

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Published inBiomass & bioenergy Vol. 138; p. 105600
Main Authors Nordin, Norazela, Yusof, Norjan, Maeda, Toshinari, Mustapha, Nurul Asyifah, Mohd Yusoff, Mohd Zulkhairi, Raja Khairuddin, Raja Farhana
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.07.2020
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Summary:This study aims to elucidate the mechanism of carbon partitioning towards starch and triacylglycerol (TAG) under nitrogen stress. Whole-transcriptome analysis was performed using RNA sequencing before being validated with qRT-PCR. The strain, Chlorella vulgaris UPSI-JRM01, exhibited a two-stage response to nitrogen stress: i) carbohydrate accumulation, plastid protein degradation and amino acid biosynthesis; and ii) lipid accumulation, carbohydrate degradation and DNA damage. In the first stage, the genes responsible for plastid protein degradation (CD4A), amino acid biosynthesis (arg, GLSN, AHCY, win1), carbon fixation (RuBisCO, GapC, fba, TK) and starch synthesis (SS, SBE2) were upregulated. In the second stage, the upregulation of genes responsible for starch degradation (SP), glycolysis (PFO, PK, ACS), fatty acid biosynthesis (FabH, accD) and TAG accumulation (DGAT2) were observed. By contrast, the components of photosystem I (PsbD, PsbC, PsbB), photosystem II (PsaA), cytochrome b6/f (PetA, PetG) and F-type ATPase (beta, alpha) were downregulated. The results suggested that nitrogen stress triggered high starch accumulation before the carbon was partitioned towards triacylglycerol (TAG) for long-term energy storage by two different pathways: chloroplastic TAG synthesis and glycerolipid metabolism. The starch build-up functions served as a rapid response to nitrogen stress, whereas subsequent lipid accumulation benefited the long-term storage of energy. This research provides in-depth understanding of the metabolic changes triggered by nitrogen stress. [Display omitted] •Chlorella vulgaris exhibits a two-stage response to nitrogen stress.•Stage 1: carbohydrate accumulation, protein degradation and amino acid synthesis.•Stage 2: lipid accumulation, carbohydrate degradation and DNA damage.•Carbon is partitioned to TAG by glycerolipid metabolism and chloroplastic pathway.•PFO reaction as a substitution of PDH for acetyl-CoA production is discovered.
ISSN:0961-9534
1873-2909
DOI:10.1016/j.biombioe.2020.105600