Abstract
Cells of the marine diatom. Phaeodactylum tricornutum Bohlin (UTEX 642) grown in 5% CO2 were transferred to air-level CO2 in the light or dark and allowed to acclimate to air. No accumulation of the transcript of the P. tricornutum β-carbonic anhydrase 1 (ptca1) was detected in 5% CO2-grown cells, but ptca1 mRNA accumulated and reached a peak after 6 h acclimation to air but decreased over the next 18 h. A similar accumulation time course was observed in cells air-acclimated in the dark, except that levels of mRNA were <50% those in the light. These results suggest that air-level [CO2] is required to trigger the transcription of ptca1 and that light affects the extent of acclimation. During acclimation to air for 120 h in the light, levels of ptca1 mRNA exhibited a periodic oscillation with a cycle of about 24 h, which, however, was not reflected in protein accumulation levels. A 5′-upstream region from the transcription-start site toward -1,292 bp of ptca1 was cloned by inverse polymerase chain reaction, and 5′-truncations were carried out on this fragment. The truncated promoter regions were fused with the β-glucuronidase gene (uidA) and introduced into P. tricornutum. The promoter fragments, truncated at positions -1,292, -824, -484, -225, and -70 bp, conferred on transformants clear CO2-responsive β-glucuronidase expressions. In contrast, the CO2-responsive regulation was severely impaired or completely abolished by truncations, respectively, at position -50 or -30 bp. These results indicate that critical cis-elements required for CO2-responsive transcription of ptca1 may be located between -70 and -30 bp relative to the transcription start site. © 2005 American Society of Plant Biologists.
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CITATION STYLE
Harada, H., Nakatsuma, D., Ishida, M., & Matsuda, Y. (2005). Regulation of the expression of intracellular β-carbonic anhydrase in response to CO2 and light in the marine diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum. Plant Physiology, 139(2), 1041–1050. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.105.065185
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