Login / Signup

Simultaneous CAS9 editing of cp SRP43 , LHCA6 , and LHCA7 in Picochlorum celeri lowers chlorophyll levels and improves biomass productivity.

Anagha KrishnanMelissa CanoDevin A J KarnsTyson A BurchMaria LikhogrudMoena AquiShaun BaileyJohn VerrutoWilliam LambertFedor KuzminovMahva NaghiporYingjun WangChristopher C EbmeierJoseph C WeissmanMatthew C Posewitz
Published in: Plant direct (2023)
High cellular pigment levels in dense microalgal cultures contribute to excess light absorption. To improve photosynthetic yields in the marine microalga Picochlorum celeri , CAS9 gene editing was used to target the molecular chaperone cpSRP43. Depigmented strains (>50% lower chlorophyll) were generated, with proteomics showing attenuated levels of most light harvesting complex (LHC) proteins. Gene editing generated two types of cpSRP43 transformants with distinct lower pigment phenotypes: (i) a transformant (Δ srp43 ) with both cp SRP43 diploid alleles modified to encode non-functional polypeptides and (ii) a transformant (STR30309) with a 3 nt in-frame insertion in one allele at the CAS9 cut site (non-functional second allele), leading to expression of a modified cpSRP43. STR30309 has more chlorophyll than Δ srp43 but substantially less than wild type. To further decrease light absorption by photosystem I in STR30309, CAS9 editing was used to stack in disruptions of both LHCA6 and LHCA7 to generate STR30843, which has higher (5-24%) productivities relative to wild type in solar-simulating bioreactors. Maximal productivities required frequent partial harvests throughout the day. For STR30843, exemplary diel bioreactor yields of ~50 g m -2  day -1 were attained. Our results demonstrate diel productivity gains in P. celeri by lowering pigment levels.
Keyphrases
  • crispr cas
  • genome editing
  • wild type
  • wastewater treatment
  • energy transfer
  • climate change
  • mass spectrometry
  • water soluble
  • resistance training
  • high intensity
  • electron transfer