Co-ordination of NDH and Cup proteins in CO2 uptake in cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803

NdhD4 and NdhF4 are essential for the assembly of CupB-containing complexes. Both NDH and Cup proteins are involved in CO2-uptake systems and co-ordinate CO2 uptake activity.


Introduction
Cyanobacteria possess a CO 2 -concentrating mechanism (CCM) that enables the accumulation of inorganic carbon (HCO 3 and CO 2 , collectively called Ci) at the carboxylation site to a level for efficient CO 2 fixation despite the low affinity of their Rubisco for CO 2 (Kaplan and Reinhold, 1999;Ogawa and Kaplan, 2003). The CCM requires the coordination of two systems, an inorganic carbon transporter system and the carboxysome containing Rubisco. To date, five inorganic carbon transporters have been found, including two Na +dependent HCO 3 transporters (BicA and SbtA), one ATPasedependent HCO 3 transporter (BCT1), and two CO 2 -uptake NDH-1 complexes, in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 (hereafter Synechocystis 6803) and other cyanobacterial strains (Ogawa and Kaplan, 2003;Ogawa and Mi, 2007;Price, 2011). One of the CO 2 uptake complexes, the NDH-1MS′ complex, consists of NdhD4, NdhF4 and CupB (ChpX) and is a constitutive system with weaker uptake affinity for CO 2 ; another one, the NDH-1MS complex, consists of NdhD3, NdhF3 and CupA (ChpY), and is inducible at limiting Ci conditions and has a higher uptake affinity for CO 2 (Ohkawa et al., 2000b;Shibata et al., 2001;Maeda et al., 2002). According to the mutant phenotype, the expression of the ndhF3-ndhD3-cupA-sll1735 operon is induced in both Synechocystis 6803 and Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 cells grown under low CO 2 condition (Ohkawa et al., 2000b;Shibata et al., 2001;Maeda et al., 2002). Further research showed that the proteins encoded by ndhF3-ndhD3-cupA-sll1735 form a small complex, NDH-1S, in which CupA and a small protein, CupS, were identified as subunits by proteomic analysis (Zhang et al., 2004(Zhang et al., , 2005. The ndhB-defective mutant M55 was shown to be unable to grow under low CO 2 conditions even when NDH-1S was present, suggesting that the normal operation of the CO 2 -uptake system requires both NDH-1M and NDH-1S. A complex (NDH-1MS) containing both NDH-1S and NDH-1M has been isolated from a Thermosynechococcus elongatus strain in which the C-terminus of NdhL has been tagged with 6xHis. This complex is easily dissociated into NDH-1M and NDH-1S complexes (Zhang et al., 2005;Battchikova et al., 2011). NDH-1MS has been characterized as a U-shape structure by analysis by single particle electron microscopy after purification from the thylakoid membranes of Thermosynechoccus elongates (Arteni et al., 2006). CupA is responsible for the U-shape by binding at the tip of the membrane-bound arm of NDH-1MS in Thermosynechoccus elongatus and Synechocystis 6803 (Folea et al., 2008). Although the constitution and the function of NDH-1MS have been studied, the underlying mechanism explaining the functional link between NDH-1M and NDH-1S or NDH-1S′ still remains to be resolved.
Reverse genetic studies have indicated an essential role for the cupB gene, a homolog of cupA, in constitutive CO 2 uptake and suggest that the proteins encoded by ndhF4-ndhD4 and cupB form the small complex, NDH-1S′ (Shibata et al., 2001;Maeda et al., 2002). In a previous study, we reported that the CupB protein in Synechocystis resides in the thylakoid membrane but is missing from the ndhD4 deletion mutant (Xu et al., 2008). Based on the purification of a 450 kDa complex containing both NdhH and CupB proteins, we suggested that the complex is NDH-1MS′ residing in the thylakoid membranes. However, the function of NDH-1MS′ still needs elucidation.
It has been suggested that there exist two independent CO 2 uptake systems, NDH-1MS and NDH-1MS′, in which NdhDs function in proton pumping (Battchikova et al., 2011), Cups function in CO 2 hydration as carbonic anhydrase (CA)-like proteins (Kaplan and Reinhold, 1999;Price, 2011). However, whether NDH-1MS induced by low CO 2 exists or functions under high CO 2 conditions, and whether or how it relates to the constitutive type NDH-1MS′ still remain to be clarified.
In this work, we investigated the function of NDH-1MS and NDH-1MS′ in CO 2 uptake using reverse genetics and biochemical methods. Our results suggest that NDH-1MS and NDH-1MS′ are essential for efficient CO 2 uptake especially under changed pH conditions. We proposed a model for the function of CO 2 uptake systems in Synechocystis 6803.

Materials and methods
Cell culture conditions Wild type(WT)and mutant cells of Synechocystis 6803 were grown at 30 °C in 50 ml liquid BG11 medium buffered with 5 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0) and bubbled with 3% v/v CO 2 in air at 3 ml min -1 . The mutant strains were grown in liquid BG11 medium with appropriate antibiotics, and cell cultures were harvested at the logarithmic phase (OD 730 =0.6-0.8). Solid medium was BG11 supplemented with 1.5% agar. Continuous illumination was provided by fluorescent lamps, generating 50 μmol of photons m -2 s -1 .

Construction and isolation of mutants
Construction of single mutants, such as ΔcupA, ΔcupB, ΔndhD1, ΔndhD2, ΔndhD3, ΔndhD4, ΔndhL, ΔndhK, and M55, has been described in previous studies (Ogawa, 1991;Ohkawa et al., 2000a;Shibata et al., 2001). BHM is a Synechocystis 6803 mutant with CupB tagged with 6xHis-cMyc at the C-terminus, which has also been described before (Xu et al., 2008). Those constructions of single mutants were used to transform various appropriate mutants to generate the double mutants or triple mutants, i.e. ΔcupA/B, ΔndhD1/D2, ΔndhD3/D4, and ΔndhD1/D2/D3. The ΔndhF4/BHM and ndhL-YFP-6His were also described in previous studies (Xu et al., 2008;Birungi et al., 2010). To construct the ΔndhF1 mutant, its coding region was inserted by a chloramphenicol (CM) resistance cassette as follows. The ndhF1 upstream and downstream regions were amplified using primer pairs hxl108/hxl109 and hxl112/113, with CM resistance cassette using primers hxl110/hxl111 (see Supplementary Table S1 at JXB online). These three fragments were used as the template to synthesize an Up-CM-Dn fragment through overlap PCR, and this was ligated into the T-vector to make the construct for transforming the wild type of Synechocystis 6803 ( Supplementary Fig. S1A). The ΔndhF3 mutant was made with the same strategy, using primer pairs hxl114/hxl115 and hxl118/119, with the CM resistance cassette using the primers pair hxl116/hxl117 (see Supplementary Table S1). The plasmids were separately transformed into BHM to generate the double mutants, ΔndhF1/BHM and ΔndhF3/BHM. The mutated genes in the transformants were segregated to homogeneity (by successive streak purification) as determined by PCR amplification (see Supplementary Fig. S1B).

Isolation of soluble fractions and total membrane fractions
Soluble fractions and total membrane fractions of Synechocystis 6803 cells were isolated as described previously with slight modifications .

Electrophoresis and immunoblotting
SDS-PAGE of thylakoid membranes from Synechocystis 6803 was carried out on a 1.0 mm thick, 12% polyacrylamide gel (Laemmli, 1970). Blue native (BN)-PAGE of Synechocystis 6803 membranes was performed as described previously with modifications from . After electrophoresis, the proteins were electrotransferred to polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) membranes and detected with specific antibodies. Finally, an ECL assay kit was used according to the manufacturer's protocol. The CupB antibody was prepared against 156 amino acids of the C-terminus, which was expressed in a pET-51b(+) vector and isolated with a His tag in our lab (see Supplementary Fig. S2); it was made by the Shanghai Immune Biotech Co. Ltd (China). Antibodies against NdhA, NdhB, NdhK, and YFP were raised in our laboratory and were used in previously published work (Hu et al., 2013).

CO 2 uptake measurements
Wild type and mutants of Synechocystis 6803 were grown in BG11 medium bubbled with 3% v/v CO 2 in air until logarithmic phase. Cell cultures were harvested by centrifugation at 5000 g for 10 min and suspended in BG11 buffer, pH 8.0, to a final concentration of OD 730nm of 100. Then, 30 µl of the cells were spotted on agar plates containing BG11 buffer at pH 8.0. A slice (1 cm×1 cm) of solid BG11 medium containing the cells was cut off and put on a piece of microscope coverglass. After that, CO 2 uptake was measured by an Li-6400 XT portable photosystem with the concentration of CO 2 controlled at 2%, 1% or 0.04% (v/v in air) as described previously (Chen et al., 2016). Three independent measurements were performed and CO 2 uptake activities were calculated from concentration of chlorophyll. Light intensity and temperate were 100 µmol photons m -2 s -1 and 30 °C, respectively.

Quinacridine fluorescence quenching
Fluorescence of quinacridine (QA) at 503 nm was measured using the PAM chlorophyll fluorometer (Maxi-version, Walz, Effeltrich, Germany) attached to a US-370 emitter with an emission peak at 375 nm and a PM-101/D detector as described previously (Xu et al., 2014;Chen et al., 2016). Cells were harvested at logarithmic phase and suspended in reaction mixture of fresh BG11 medium with 5 μM QA at a final chlorophyll concentration of 10 μg ml -1 . The quenching of QA fluorescence was induced by illuminating the cells with actinic light (60 μmol photons m -2 s -1 ) after the background fluorescence became stable after about 2 min.

Carbonic anhydrase activity measurement
The carbonic anhydrase assay was based on the rate of change in pH value after the injection of a standard amount of CO 2 -saturated water, as described previously with modification (Jiang et al., 2013). The cell cultures (1 l) were harvested at the logarithmic phase and were broken by vortexing five times at the highest speed for 20 s at 4 °C with a beadbeater (Biospec) followed by 3 min cooling on ice. Then the thylakoid membranes were separated and suspended in assay buffer (20 mM sodium barbital, pH 8.2, 10 mM MgCl 2 and 0.5 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride) at a final chlorophyll concentration of 1 mg ml -1 . Then the sample corresponding to 100 μg chlorophyll was added to 8 ml 20 mM sodium barbital, pH 8.2 with a pH electrode inserted into the assay solution. After the temperature equilibrated at 4 °C, 4 ml ice-cold CO 2 -saturated water was injected, and then the time for the pH to change from 8.0 to 7.0 was recorded. The buffer without membrane fraction was used as the control. CA activity was calculated as the difference in the initial rate of CO 2 hydration between the control and the samples. CA activity is expressed in Wilbur-Anderson units (WAU) per mg of chlorophyll. One WAU is defined as 10×(t 0 -t)/t, where t 0 and t are the times required for the pH change in the control and the sample, respectively (Jiang et al., 2013).

Oxygen exchange
The rate of O 2 evolution in the cells of wild type and mutants was determined using a Clark-type O 2 electrode at 30 °C as described previously . The cell at logarithmic phase was used for the measurement in the presence of 10 μM NaHCO 3 and the light intensity used to induce the photosynthetic oxygen evolution was 1000 μmol photons m -2 s -1 .

Results
Growth and CO 2 -uptake characteristics Figure 1A-C shows the growth of the WT, ΔcupA (deleted cupA), ΔcupB (deleted cupB), ΔcupA/B (both cupA and cupB deleted) and M55 (deleted ndhB) strains of Synechocystis 6803 on agar plates containing BG11 medium buffered at pH 8.0, 7.0 and 6.5, respectively, under 3% CO 2 . Five days after inoculation, there was no significant difference between the WT and ΔcupA strain in growth under the given conditions. The growth of ΔcupB, ΔcupA/B, and M55 mutants was slightly slower than the WT at pH 8.0. However, the growth of these mutants was severely suppressed at pH 7.0 and they hardly grew at all at pH 6.5, where Ci is predominantly, if not totally, supplied as CO 2 . The results indicate that CO 2 is not supplied by diffusion even under 3% CO 2 in the absence of the CO 2 -uptake systems.
Measurement of the rate of CO 2 uptake in the WT and mutants under various CO 2 concentrations revealed that inactivation of cupA had little effect on the activity, being consistent with the growth characteristics of the ΔcupA mutant (Fig. 1D). In contrast, inactivation of cupB decreased the activity to less than half that of the WT at 1% and 2% CO 2 but had no effect at 0.04% CO 2 (Fig. 1D). The ΔcupA/B and M55 mutants were unable to take up CO 2 even at 2% CO 2 , consistent with the inability of these mutants to grow at pH 7.0. Since the expression of cupA is induced by low CO 2 , the growth of cells is mainly supported by CupB under high CO 2 conditions below pH 7, where the contribution of HCO 3 transporters is limited. Taken together, these data suggest that CupB is the key component under high CO 2 condition and the CO 2 uptake ability of the CupB-containing complex is dependent on the ndh and cupB genes.

Photosynthetic oxygen evolution was decreased in Cup-deletion mutants in response to different pH values
To confirm the function of both CupA and CupB, we further compared photosynthetic capacities in response to different pH values between the cells of wild type and cupdeletion mutants (Fig. 1E). By comparison with the value of 250 μmol O 2 mg -1 Chl h -1 in wild type at pH 8.0, the rate of photosynthetic oxygen evolution was suppressed slightly in ΔcupA (92%), significantly in ΔcupB (71%), more evidently in ΔcupA/B (65%), and most severely in M55 (42%) under the same growth condition. The suppression of photosynthetic oxygen evolution was less in ΔcupA at pH 6.5 (96%) but more evidently at pH 10.0 (86%), severely in ΔcupB (68%) and in ΔcupA/B (63%), and almost completely in M55 at pH 6.5 or pH 10.0. The results indicate that Cup proteins as well as NdhB contribute to the photosynthetic capacity especially under changed pH conditions.

Identification of large and small complexes containing CupB
To study CupB-containing complexes in more detail, we made polyclonal CupB antibody, which cross-reacted specifically with CupB but not with CupA (see Supplementary  Fig. S2). Total membrane fractions isolated from the WT and BHM cells grown under 3% CO 2 at pH 8.0 were solubilized by n-dodecyl-β-D-maltoside and subjected to BN-PAGE followed by SDS-PAGE in the second dimension. Immunoblotting of the proteins electrotransferred to a PVDF membrane with antibody against CupB or α-Myc revealed three CupB-containing bands: a large band of about 500 kDa and a small one of about 200 kDa, as well as free CupB ( Fig. 2A, B). The large and small bands correspond to the NDH-1MS′ and NDH-1S′ complexes, respectively.

Assembly of CupB to NDH-1MS′ was dependent on NdhD4 and NdhF4
Genetic studies have suggested that CupB might be associated with NdhD4 and NdhF4 (Xu et al., 2008). To test this possibility, thylakoid membranes of the WT and mutants were subjected to two-dimensional BN-PAGE/SDS-PAGE analysis. The immunoblot profiles of the ΔndhD1/D2 and ΔndhD3 mutants showed the profile of NDH-1MS′, NDH-1S′ and free CupB bands to be essentially similar to that of WT ( Fig. 2A). To the contrary, none of these bands was found in the thylakoid membrane of the ΔndhD4 mutant. Similar results were obtained with the ndhF-deletion mutants: deletion of ndhF1 and ndhF3 had no effect on the CupB-containing bands but deletion of ndhF4 completely abolished these bands in the thylakoid membrane (Fig. 2B). It is evident that CupB is associated with NdhD4 and NdhF4 in the CupB-containing complexes. The NDH-1S′ complex is similar to NDH-1S in size and the NDH-1MS′ complex is similar to NDH-1MS in size. Analysis of the membranes and soluble fractions by western blot indicated that CupB was localized in the thylakoid membrane in the WT whereas in the ΔndhF4 mutant it was present only in the soluble fraction (Fig. 2C), indicating that NdhF4 is essential for attachment of CupB to the thylakoid membranes. The absence of NDH-1MS′ in M55 and ΔndhB/BHM suggests that the assembly of NDH-1MS′ requires NdhB ( Fig. 2A, B). The amount of CupA expressed was less than CupB grown under high CO 2 conditions but was induced under low CO 2 conditions (Fig. 2D), consistent with a previous observation of transcript levels (Shibata et al., 2001).

NDH-1MS and NDH-1MS′ independently exist
To distinguish NDH-1MS′ from NDH-1MS, thylakoid membranes of the WT and ΔndhD1/D2/D3 strains were subjected to two-dimensional BN/SDS-PAGE analyses. Immunoblotting with antibodies against CupB, NdhK, and NdhI confirmed that CupB-containing complexes (NDH-1MS′ andNDH-1S′) appeared in ΔndhD1/D2/D3 strains as well as in wild type where CupB co-localized with Ndh subunits such as NdhI and NdhK (Fig. 3A). In NdhB deletion mutant M55, both NDH-1MS and NDH-1MS′ were degraded, but NDH-1S and NDH-1S′ were still detected in ndhB deletion mutant M55 (Fig. 3B) and in ndhM deletion mutant (Fig. 3C). Furthermore, to know whether NDH-1MS and NDH-1MS′ are associated, we checked the localization of the complexes in different background mutants. As shown in Fig. 3D, detection of NDH-1MS′ and NDH-1S′ in ΔndhD3 and ΔcupA was unchanged from the wild type (Zhang et al., 2004). This is also true for detection of the NDH-1MS and NDH-1S complexes in ΔndhD4 and ΔcupB. The NDH-1MS′ and NDH-1MS complexes were degraded in the mutants ΔndhD4 and ΔndhD3, respectively ( Fig. 2A). These results indicate that both NDH-1MS and NDH-1MS′ exist independently. , and pH 6.5 (C) and grown in a CO 2 concentration of 3% for 5 days. (D) A portable photosynthesis system capable of recording the rate of CO 2 uptake was used for measurement of CO 2 uptake of wild-type, ΔcupA, ΔcupB, ΔcupA/B, and M55 under 2%, 1% and 0.04% CO 2 concentrations on agar plates. (E) The rate of photosynthetic oxygen evolution was compared among wild type and the mutants under different pH values in the presence of 10 μM NaHCO 3 .

Analysis of proton gradient across thylakoid membranes in the NDH-1 mutant backgrounds
It has been suggested that cyanobacterial NDH-1 provides ATP for CO 2 uptake (Ogawa, 1991). To confirm whether the NDH-1 complex contributes to the proton gradient across thylakoid membranes, a driving force for synthesis of ATP, light-induced quenching of quinacridine (QA) fluorescence for the determination of ΔpH across the thylakoid membrane for intact cells of Synechocystis 6803 (Teuber et al., 2001) was measured in different NDH-1 mutants backgrounds. As shown in Fig. 4A, the quenching of QA fluorescence was remarkably suppressed in M55 (by 97%), ΔndhD3/4 (by 84%), ΔcupA/B (by 72%), ΔndhD4 (by 69%), ΔndhD1/D2 (by 67%), ΔcupB (by 49%), partly in ΔndhD3 (by 16%) and slightly in ΔcupA (by 8%) compared with wild type. Those results suggested that both NDH and Cup proteins are involved in building up the proton gradient across thylakoid membrane and NdhD4 is a key component in this process.

NdhD4 and NdhF4 are essential for the assembly of CupB-containing complexes
Although NDH-1MS′ was identified, its assembly is still unclear. In this work, we show evidence that NdhD4 and NdhF4 are crucial for the assembly of NDH-1MS′, based on the result that when ndhF4 was knocked out, the CupB was completely missing from the thylakoid membrane, but was found soluble in the cytoplasm (Fig. 2C), probably resulting in no detection of NDH-1MS′ or NDH-1S′ (Fig. 2B).
On the other hand, when ndhD4 was deleted, this significantly decreased the accumulation of CupB in the thylakoid membrane (Fig. 2C), as reported in our previous study (Xu et al., 2008), and also resulted in degradation of NDH-1MS′ or NDH-1S′ ( Fig. 2A). We further show that NdhD4 is  Recently an NDH-1S′ complex containing NdhD4, NdhF4, and CupB has been isolated from a Thermosynechoccus elongatus with twin-strep tagged to NdhL (Wulfhorst et al., 2014). We also found that when ndhB is deleted, NDH-1S′ can still be normally assembled (Figs 2A and 3B), but the ability to take up CO 2 is severely compromised (Fig. 1D), indicating that NDH-1S′ alone is not functional in CO 2 uptake.

Co-ordination of NdhDs and Cup proteins in CO 2 uptake activity
By resolution of mitochondrial complex I structure, it has been suggested that complex I regulates the transmembrane proton gradient by its conformation change during electron transfer (Royer et al., 2006;Efremov et al., 2010;Vinothkumar et al., 2014). The similar function has been proposed in NDH-1 previously (Battchikova et al., 2011). In this work, we further found that the proton gradient across the thylakoid membrane was significantly suppressed in ΔndhD4 and even more in ΔndhD3/D4, ΔndhD1/D2, and M55 (Fig. 4A), suggesting NdhD subunits, mainly NdhD4, function as a proton pump to provide a proton gradient across the thylakoid membranes, as it is homologous to subunit M in complex I, which drives the ATPase, to synthesize ATP for active CO 2 uptake and for regulation of pH in the cytosol. The lesser contribution of NdhD3 to proton pumping than NdhD4 might be attributable to its lesser expression (Ohkawa et al., 1998) and lesser amount (Fig. 2D) under the high CO 2 culture condition. The partial suppression of QA fluorescence in ΔcupB suggests that CupB is also involved in building up a sufficient proton gradient across the thylakoid membrane (Fig. 4A).
Although the formation of the transthylakoid membrane ∆pH was only slightly affected in ΔcupA, it was significantly decreased in ΔcupA/B (Fig. 4A), which led us to conclude that the formation of ∆pH by NDH-1MS and NDH-1MS′ complexes requires the coordination of Cup proteins for providing protons in the hydration of CO 2 to HCO 3 - (Fig. 5).

The possible role of CupA/CupB and NDH-1M in regulation of CO 2 uptake
There are four kinds of carbonic anhydrase forming a small complex located in Complex I of Arabidopsis that are suggested to be crucial for the balance of CO 2 and HCO 3 - (Meyer et al., 2011;Li et al., 2013;Wydro et al., 2013). Kaplan et al also suggested that a similar structure of the carbonic anhydrase might exist in cyanobacteria (Kaplan and Reinhold, 1999). The low carbonic anhydrase activity in ΔcupA/B (Fig. 4B) indicates that Cup proteins, mainly CupB, function as a carbonic anhydrase to convert CO 2 into HCO 3 -. On the other hand, in the NDH-1MS′ degradation mutants, including ΔndhD4, ΔndhD3/D4, and M55 (Fig. 2), not only the building up of a transthylakoid membrane proton gradient ( Fig. 4A) but also the activity of carbonic anhydrase (Fig. 4B) was suppressed. This allows us to conclude that Ndh subunits are required for the activation of the carbonic anhydrase. The function of carbonic anhydrase depends on the environment. Carbonic anhydrase converts CO 2 into HCO 3 under alkaline conditions while the conversion is reversed under acidic conditions (Kupriyanova and Pronina, 2011). CupA or CupB might have a similar function as they also display CA activity (Fig. 4B). In cyanobacterial cytosol, the inorganic carbon source exists as HCO 3 whose accumulation might require an alkaline environment. Based on our results in Fig. 4, we suggest that the transthylakoid membrane proton gradient through NdhDs coupled with the cyclic electron flow around PS I mediated by NDH-1M  might create a strong alkaline region in the cytosol (lumen becomes more acidic and cytosol become more alkaline) as suggested previously (Kaplan and Reinhold, 1999), suitable for Cup proteins to hydrate CO 2 into HCO 3 in the cytosol (Fig. 5).

The relationship of CupB and CupA in the CO 2 uptake pathway
CupB is a homologous protein of CupA with 40% similarity. Xu et al. (2008) found that the expression of CupB is constitutive and not affected by CO 2 concentration, while the expression of CupA is induced by low CO 2 and is involved in CO 2 uptake under low CO 2 conditions. In this work, we found that in addition to the main function of CupB, CupA also functioned at high CO 2 conditions (Figs 1 and 2), in Fig. 5. A model of the proposed function of CO 2 uptake systems in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC6803. CupA or CupB converts CO 2 into HCO 3 under alkaline conditions, while the conversion is reversed under acidic conditions. Under light conditions, photosynthetic electron transfer couples to the formation of a transthylakoid membrane proton gradient, subsequently forming a strong alkaline region inside the U-type structure for CupA or CupB activity, which leads to the accumulation of HCO 3 after CO 2 has diffused into the cytosol. After HCO 3 enters the carboxysome, it is converted into CO 2 by CA for carbon assimilation by Rubisco. (This figure is available in color at JXB online.) accordance with the results of the isolated NDH-1S from high CO 2 -cultured cells (Wulfhorst et al., 2014), suggesting CupA was also expressed under high CO 2 conditions. The mutant defective in both CupA and CupB hardly grew on the agar plate at pH lower than 7.0 even at 3% CO 2 (Fig. 1B), and the photosynthetic oxygen evolution was also evidently suppressed (Fig. 1E), suggesting that diffusion of CO 2 through cells to the carboxylation site is insignificant in the absence of CO 2 -uptake systems, and that both CupA and CupB are required for efficient CO 2 uptake (Fig. 1C).
In conclusion, using reverse genetics and biochemical methods, we investigated the function of NDH-1MS′ and NDH-1MS in CO 2 uptake. Based on our results, we propose that the transthylakoid membrane proton gradient coupled by the electron transport mediated by NDH-1M might create an alkaline region, suitable for CupA or CupB to convert CO 2 into HCO 3 in the cytosol (Fig. 5). However, further experimental data to support this hypothesis are still needed.