Genetics, Vol. 153, 721-729, October 1999, Copyright © 1999

Eyespot-Assembly Mutants in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii

Mary Rose Lamba, Susan K. Dutcherb, Cathy K. Worleyc, and Carol L. Dieckmannc
a Department of Biology, University of Puget Sound, Tacoma, Washington 98416-0320,
b Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309
c Department of Biochemistry, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721

Corresponding author: Carol L. Dieckmann, Department of Biochemistry, University of Arizona, P.O. Box 210106, Tucson, AZ 85721-0106., dieckman{at}u.arizona.edu (E-mail)

Communicating editor: M. D. ROSE


*  ABSTRACT
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is a single-celled green alga that phototaxes toward light by means of a light-sensitive organelle, the eyespot. The eyespot is composed of photoreceptor and Ca++-channel signal transduction components in the plasma membrane of the cell and reflective carotenoid pigment layers in an underlying region of the large chloroplast. To identify components important for the positioning and assembly of a functional eyespot, a large collection of nonphototactic mutants was screened for those with aberrant pigment spots. Four loci were identified. eye2 and eye3 mutants have no pigmented eyespots. min1 mutants have smaller than wild-type eyespots. mlt1(ptx4) mutants have multiple eyespots. The MIN1, MLT1(PTX4), and EYE2 loci are closely linked to each other; EYE3 is unlinked to the other three loci. The eye2 and eye3 mutants are epistatic to min1 and mlt1 mutations; all double mutants are eyeless. min1 mlt1 double mutants have a synthetic phenotype; they are eyeless or have very small, misplaced eyespots. Ultrastructural studies revealed that the min1 mutants are defective in the physical connection between the plasma membrane and the chloroplast envelope membranes in the region of the pigment granules. Characterization of these four loci will provide a beginning for the understanding of eyespot assembly and localization in the cell.


CHLAMYDOMONAS reinhardtii is a phototactic, single-celled green alga. The light-sensing eyespot is a complex sandwich composed of plasma membrane, outer and inner chloroplast membranes, and multiple layers of granules in the stroma of the chloroplast interleaved with thylakoid membranes (see Fig 1A). The portion of the eyespot visible as a round orange patch by light microscopy is located in the stroma of the chloroplast. It is formed by a hexagonal array of carotenoid-filled pigment granules (NAKAMURA et al. 1973 Down). In wild-type Chlamydomonas cells, two to four layers of carotenoid lipid granules are observed, each layer subtended by a thylakoid membrane. In the region of the eyespot, both of the chloroplast membranes and the plasma membrane are closely apposed. The photoreceptor, Chlamydomonas rhodopsin-like "chlamyopsin," localizes to the plasma membrane in this region (DEININGER et al. 1995 Down). As shown by suction pipette recording, the light-triggered calcium channel is also in the plasma membrane overlying the region of the pigmented eyespot (HARZ and HEGEMANN 1991 Down). Accordingly, an increased density of membrane proteins in the plasma membrane in the region of the pigmented eyespot has been observed by freeze-fracture electron microscopy (MELKONIAN and ROBENEK 1980 Down).



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Figure 1. Chlamydomonas eyespot. (A) Diagram of the eyespot as seen by electron microscopy. The plasma membrane (PM) and two chloroplast envelope membranes (OM, outer membrane; IM, inner membrane) are tightly apposed in the region of the eyespot. Carotenoid granules subtended by thylakoid membranes (TM) are arranged in stacked rows. The signal transduction machinery including chlamyopsin and a light-gated calcium channel lie in the plasma membrane. The carotenoid granule and thylakoid layers act as a quarter-wave plate (mirror) to reflect light (h{upsilon}) back onto the plasma membrane. (B) The eyespot (E) is positioned at the equator of the cell if the basal bodies are positioned at the flagellar pole (F, flagella; C, chloroplast). (C) Looking down on the flagellar pole, the eyespot (E) is positioned just clockwise of the daughter four-membered microtubule rootlet (4, four-membered microtubule rootlets; 2, two-membered microtubule rootlets; F, flagella; HOLMES and DUTCHER 1989 Down). The flagellum and rootlets in the left half of the cell (trans with respect to the eyespot) were retained from the mother cell. The right half structures (cis with respect to the eyespot) were assembled during the division that produced this daughter cell. The flagella are offset relative to each other by approximately half a flagellar diameter (HOOPS and WITMAN 1983 Down).

In addition to the complex organization of the eyespot components across the membranes of the cell and chloroplast, the eyespot has a precise location in the cell relative to the cytoskeleton. The eyespot is equatorial with respect to the polar location of the basal bodies and flagella (see Fig 1B). A cruciate microtubule "rootlet" structure is oriented at a 45° angle to the plane of the flagella. One four-membered microtubule rootlet and one two-membered rootlet are associated with each of the basal bodies (mother and daughter) and extend from the basal body region to the equator of the cell. The eyespot is found just clockwise of the daughter four-membered microtubule rootlet (see Fig 1C; HOLMES and DUTCHER 1989 Down).

The eyespot is oriented to detect light striking the cell surface orthogonal to the eyespot. Chlamydomonas cells rotate twice per second as they breaststroke forward, scanning the environment perpendicular to the swimming path much as a radar antenna scans the sky. The carotenoid granule layers were hypothesized to have two functions: they reflect photons that pass unabsorbed through the plasma membrane back onto the photoreceptors in the plasma membrane, and they block light coming through the cell body from other directions. The spacing and periodicity of the carotenoid granule and thylakoid membrane layers were hypothesized to act thus as a "one-way mirror" or what in the physics of light is called a quarter-wave plate (FOSTER and SMYTH 1980 Down). Confocal microscopy studies have confirmed that the pigmented layers act as a reflector of light (KREIMER and MELKONIAN 1990 Down; SCHALLER and UHL 1997 Down). Analysis of a mutant strain with defective eyespots supports the idea that the eyespot also enhances the shielding properties of the chloroplast to block light coming through the cell body (KREIMER et al. 1992 Down; reviewed in KREIMER 1999 Down). Together, the reflective property of the carotenoid pigment layer and the absorptive property of the eyespot and cell body give up to an eightfold enhancement of the light striking the plasma membrane over the eyespot relative to the light coming through the cell from the other side (HARZ et al. 1992 Down).

Light absorption by the rhodopsin-like photoreceptor leads to the transient opening of calcium channels in the plasma membrane over the eyespot. The influx of calcium triggers the transient opening of voltage-gated calcium channels in the flagella (HARZ and HEGEMANN 1991 Down). The subsequent change in intracellular calcium concentration is thought to affect the activity of the two flagella differentially, as has been demonstrated in vitro (KAMIYA and WITMAN 1984 Down). The cis (near the eyespot) flagellum beats weakly and the trans (away from the eyespot) beats strongly to cause the cell to turn toward the light as it swims forward. If the light intensity is too strong, the response of the two flagella is reversed and the cell turns away from the light (RUFFER and NULTSCH 1997 Down). In-depth coverage of eyespot structure, localization, and function in green algae can be found in two excellent recent reviews (HEGEMANN and HARZ 1998 Down; KREIMER 1999 Down).

Our interest in the Chlamydomonas eyespot is in how the signal transduction components in the plasma membrane are assembled with the chloroplast envelope, reflective carotenoid pigment granule layers, and thylakoid membranes to form a functional light-sensing organelle. To identify genes important in the assembly pathway, we have identified nonphototactic mutant strains of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and screened for those with aberrant carotenoid pigment patterns. Here we report the identification of four genes governing the assembly of the pigment layer. Mutations in two genes result in the absence of the reflective pigment layer, mutations in the third gene result in small pigment patches, and mutations in a fourth gene result in multiple, pigmented eyespots.


*  MATERIALS AND METHODS
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

Media, culture conditions, and strains:
M medium is Sager and Granick medium I with Hutner's trace elements (HARRIS 1989 Down). R medium is M medium with 0.1% sodium acetate added. In RNA and DNA medium the NH4Cl concentration is reduced 10-fold and 200 µg/ml of arginine is added. Solid media contain 1.5% agar (R, RNA), 2% agar (D, DNA), or 4% agar (Z).

Both liquid cultures and plates were incubated at 25° in continuous white fluorescent light. All of the mutant strains described in this article were isolated in strain 137c mt+ except strain 6-9, which was isolated in mt-. Strains bearing intragenic complementing arg7 alleles were used to recover diploids for complementation analyses of eyespot-assembly mutations (MATAGNE 1978 Down; HARRIS 1989 Down).

Mutagenesis, enrichment, and screening for phototaxis-negative mutants:
Mutagenesis: Strain 137c was grown on R plates for two days. The cells were scraped from the surface and resuspended in liquid M medium. Between 2 and 7 x 107 cells in 1 ml were pipetted into 3-cm-diameter petri dishes and exposed to UV radiation at a distance of ~10 cm for 45 sec. A kill curve showed ~80% survival for this exposure time. The cultures were kept in the dark for 8 hr and then transferred to 30 ml of liquid M medium in large test tubes (25 x 150 mm) and grown at 25° in light.

Enrichment: At 2-day intervals the tubes were masked with black paper except for the bottom 1 cm of the tube and placed 40 cm from a fluorescent bar lamp for 20 min. Most of the cells phototaxed to the lighted bottom portion of the tube. One milliliter of culture was removed from the top surface and transferred to 30 ml of fresh M medium (see STAVIS and HIRSCHBERG 1973 Down). In all cases, cultures were tested at an approximate density of 1 x 106 cells/ml.

Screening: After four or five enrichments, individual cultures were diluted and spread on R plates. Ten single colonies from each original mutagenized culture were transferred into 2.5 ml of M medium in 13 x 100-mm tubes and grown for 2 days at 25° in 80 µE/m2/sec light. On the second day, the tubes were placed in a box with a 0.5-cm-wide slit that illuminated the tubes at the bottom. After 20 min of illumination at 40 cm from a fluorescent bar lamp, the tubes were removed from the box and examined. Cultures of cells that did not form a band at the bottom were scored as phototaxis negative. Only one mutant strain was kept from each original mutagenized culture.

Screening for mutants with an aberrant eyespot morphology:
Each of the original mutant strains was grown on liquid medium, fixed with 0.1% glutaraldehyde in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), and observed at x1000 magnification by oil immersion light microscopy. The strains with no eyespot, multiple eyespots, or smaller than normal eyespot were characterized genetically.

Linkage and complementation analyses:
Each of the mutants with aberrant eyespot morphology was crossed to each of two strains bearing complementing arg7 alleles, arg7-8 and arg7-2 (MATAGNE 1978 Down; HARRIS 1989 Down). Haploid phototaxis-negative Arg- progeny of opposite mating types were mated and diploids were recovered on medium lacking arginine. Ten diploid colonies from each cross were tested for phototaxis as described in the screening section above. If the diploid was able to phototax, the two mutants were placed in different complementation groups; if the diploid was unable to phototax, the mutants were placed in the same group. To test linkage, haploid, phototaxis-negative strains of opposite mating type were crossed and allowed to go through meiosis. C. reinhardtii produces haploid progeny in tetrads, which can be dissected and analyzed. Approximately 20 tetrads were analyzed for recombination between two different phototaxis-negative mutations. Methods for mating, recovery of diploids, and tetrad dissection were as described (HARRIS 1989 Down).

Electron microscopy:
Cultures of each strain were grown for 8 days in M medium or for 3 days in R medium. Cells were harvested at 5000 rpm and mixed 1:1 with 2% formaldehyde (100% paraformaldehyde stock diluted in heat-treated water and neutralized with sodium hydroxide), 0.25% glutaraldehyde (50% stock) in 50 mM cacodylate, and microwaved three times for 30 sec to accelerate fixation (GIBERSON et al. 1997 Down). Paraformaldehyde and glutaraldehyde were purchased from Electron Microscopy Sciences (Fort Washington, PA). Cells were rinsed three times with HMEEK buffer (30 mM Hepes, pH 7.4, 5 mM MgSO4, 1 mM EGTA, 0.1 mM EDTA, 25 mM KCl, 1 mM DTT). Cells were incubated with microwaving in 0.5% OsO4 0.8% K3Fe(CN)6 in HMEEK (25 sec, 15°, three times), rinsed with HMEEK three times, and incubated in 0.5% tannic acid in HMEEK for 1 min at room temperature (RT). Cells were rinsed with HMEEK three times and deionized water four times, and then incubated in 2% uranyl acetate (2 hr, RT, in the dark). Dehydration was carried out in acetone, and cells were embedded in Epon-Araldite resin using microwave treatment to accelerate the process. Sections were cut by D. Bentley (Imaging Facility, University of Arizona), mounted on copper grids, and stained with a saturated solution of uranyl acetate (10 min, RT) and Reynold's lead citrate (1.5 min, RT). In Fig 4A and Fig 5A the tannic acid incubation was omitted and cells were imbedded in LR White instead of Epon-Araldite. In Fig 4D (provided by K. E. Huey), microwaving was omitted. Imaging was performed on a Phillips 420 transmission electron microscope at 80 kV.



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Figure 2. Light microscopy of mutant strains. (A) Wild type; (B) min1; (C and D) two configurations of mlt1; (E) min1 mlt1; (F) eye1; (G) eye2; (H) eye3. Arrows indicate positions of eyespots. Bar, 5 µm.



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Figure 3. Light microscopy of min1 cells grown on minimal (M) and minimal plus acetate (R) medium. (A) min1 grown in M medium. (B) min1 grown in R medium. (C) Wild type grown in M medium. (D) Wild type grown in R medium. Arrows indicate positions of eyespots. Bar, 5 µm.



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Figure 4. Electron microscopy of eyespots in mutant strains. (A) Wild type; (B) min1; (C) mlt1; (D) min1 mlt1; (E) eye1; (F) eye2; (G) eye3. Arrowheads indicate positions of representative carotenoid particles. Bars, 100 nm. Image in C is one-half the magnification of the rest to show both eyespots.



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Figure 5. Electron microscopy of min1 eyespots in cells grown on minimal and acetate medium. (A) min1 grown in M medium. (B) min1 grown in R medium. (C) Wild type grown in M medium. (D) Wild type grown in R medium. Arrowheads indicate positions of representative carotenoid particles. Bars, 100 nm.

Light microscopy:
Cultures of each strain were grown for 6 days in M medium or for 2 days in R medium. Glutaraldehyde (1 µl) was added to 1 ml of each culture, and cells were harvested at 5000 rpm. A yellow-green filter (Zeiss 467806) was used at the light source to enhance the contrast of the eyespots. Photographs were taken with Kodak Technical Pan film.


*  RESULTS
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

Efficient method yields 168 independent nonphototactic strains:
C. reinhardtii wild-type strain 137c was mutagenized with ultraviolet light and enriched for non-phototactic cells as described in MATERIALS AND METHODS (STAVIS and HIRSCHBERG 1973 Down). From 200 separate mutagenized cultures, 168 independent mutant strains were collected. Since the strains were grown on minimal medium without an added carbon source throughout the mutagenesis and enrichment procedure, all of the mutants retain photosynthetic capability. Because carotenoid biosynthetic pathway mutants are defective in photosynthesis (SAGER and ZALOKAR 1958 Down; SPREITZER and METS 1981 Down), the collection should not include strains defective in steps leading up to carotene biosynthesis. Since the enrichment and screening procedures required that the cells be able to swim, mutant strains with gross defects in swimming should not be included in the collection. We expect that this collection should include mutations that affect the signal transduction pathway, those that affect the response of the flagella to the light-activated calcium influx, and those governing the assembly and localization of the eyespot.

Mutants with aberrant eyespot morphology:
The 168 mutant strains were screened visually with an oil immersion objective (x1000 magnification) for eyespot pigment patches that were other than wild type in size and/or location. In this screen, three aberrant phenotypes were identified: (1) the "eyeless" phenotype, or cells with no pigment patches observable by light microscopy; (2) the "miniature" phenotype, or cells with a smaller than normal eyespot; (3) the "multiple" phenotype, or cells with multiple eyespots. In all, 27 mutant strains had one of these three different phenotypes. Seventeen are eyeless, 6 have multiple eyespots, and 4 have miniature eyespots.

Eyespot morphology mutants define four loci:
Both linkage and complementation analyses were used to characterize the 27 morphologically defective mutant strains. All of the mutations were shown to be recessive in diploids obtained by crossing the mutant strains to wild-type 137c. As shown in Table 1, the 27 strains fall into four complementation/linkage groups. Fifteen eyeless mutants comprise one group. One additional eyeless mutant strain is in a complementation group by itself. Five multiple eyespot mutants are all in the same group and the fourth group is composed of the four miniature eyespot mutants. It should be noted that mutant 10-13 was not identified originally as a multiple eye mutant. The addition of this mutant to the group occurred during analysis of a linkage matrix of ten mutants in the large nonphototactic collection chosen at random. In logarithmically growing cultures, 10-13 cells had mostly single eyespots. Stationary phase cultures contained cells with multiple eyespots. Therefore, it may be possible that additional members of the multiple eye group and/or the other three groups have not been identified in the collection as a whole.


 
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Table 1. Complementation/recombination groups of mutants with aberrant eyespots

Eyeless mutations define two new loci, EYE2 and EYE3:
As described by HARTSHORNE 1953 Down, one of the first mutant strains of Chlamydomonas to be characterized was an eyeless strain. Named ey-1, this mutant strain is still available from the stock center, as are strains named ey-550 and ey-627 (MOREL-LAURENS and BIRD 1984 Down; KREIMER et al. 1992 Down). All three of these strains are eyeless and nonphototactic in logarithmic culture, but acquire phototactic ability and eyespots in stationary phase cultures. By complementation testing, we determined that the ey-1 strain, ey-550, and ey-627 harbor noncomplementing mutations and thus contain ey-1 alleles on linkage group X (SMYTH et al. 1975 Down). We propose that this locus be renamed EYE1 to reflect the recommendation for three-letter Chlamydomonas gene names. The alleles thus should be renamed eye1-1 (ey-1), eye1-2 (ey-550), and eye1-3 (ey-627). Our two eyeless loci are unlinked to, and the mutations complement, eye1 alleles (see Table 1). Therefore, we have named the new loci EYE2 and EYE3. EYE2 is defined by the mutation in the 10-18 strain and an insertion mutation, H9-8, obtained in a later transformation/mutagenesis scheme (D. G. W. ROBERTS and C. L. DIECKMANN, unpublished data). eye2 mutants never acquire eyespots or the ability to phototax during extended culturing. eye3 mutant strains do acquire phototactic ability after extended time in stationary phase; however, we have never observed them to acquire pigmented eyespots.

Multi-eyed, mlt1, and mini-eyed, min1, mutants:
Actively growing cultures of the multi-eyed mutant cells, named mlt1, show some phenotypic variability within the population. Scoring over 600 cells, 72% of a logarithmic culture of the mlt1-3 multi-eyed mutant had two eyespots. Of these two-eyespot cells, the majority (63% of the total cell number) had one eyespot in an equatorial position and an additional eyespot in a region of the chloroplast near the base of the flagella. The additional eyespot was located either on the same side and in line with the equatorial eyespot (36%) or 180° from the equatorial eyespot (27%). In addition to the two-eyespot cells, 14% had one eyespot, and 13% had more than two eyespots. Cells in stationary phase cultures acquire additional eyespots with time in culture. The miniature eye mutants, named min1, have small eyespots located most often in the equatorial position.

Eyespot assembly gene cluster:
Surprisingly, the mlt1 and min1 mutations are linked to the eye2 mutations. To determine the map distances between these loci, two-point crosses of strains mutant at the three loci were analyzed (see Table 2). The three loci are tightly linked and most likely in the order min1-mlt1-eye2. We are uncertain of the order with respect to the centromere. Recently, a probe prepared from sequence adjacent to the EYE2 locus hybridized to two BAC clones that were also identified with a PTX4 probe (D. G. W. ROBERTS, G. J. PAZOUR, G. B. WITMAN and C. L. DIECKMANN, unpublished results). ptx4 mutations result in multiple eyespots and are allelic with mlt1 mutations (PAZOUR et al. 1995 Down; C. L. DIECKMANN, unpublished results). This physically places the MIN1-MLT1(PTX4)-EYE2 gene cluster on the left arm of linkage group XII/XIII (Pushpa Kathir, map position of PTX4 with a probe provided by G. Pazour, reported on gene maps provided on the Chlamydomonas Stock Center webpage http://genome.cornell.edu/cgi-bin/WebAce/webace?db=chlamydb).


 
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Table 2. Linkage data for the min1-mlt1-eye2 cluster

The eye2 and eye3 phenotype is epistatic to that of min1 and mlt1:
To investigate whether the four gene products function in the same or different eyespot assembly or positioning pathways, double-mutant strains were constructed and the eyespot phenotypes were examined. Both eye2 and eye3 were found to be epistatic to min1 and mlt1; i.e., any combination of an eyeless mutation and a mini- or multi-eye mutation resulted in the eyeless phenotype. min1 mlt1 double mutants have a synthetic phenotype different from either parent. In a logarithmically growing culture, ~43% of the population of min1 mlt1 cells had no eyespot visible under oil immersion at x1500 magnification (100 cells analyzed). An equivalent fraction had very tiny pigment spots that were displaced in the cell toward the region of the chloroplast closest to the base of the flagella. In a min1 mlt1 culture that remained at stationary phase for 2 days, the percentage of cells with eyespots decreased to 26% (100 cells analyzed). As might be expected, eye2 eye3 double mutants are eyeless and do not acquire the ability to phototax in stationary phase, which is similar to eye2 single mutants. Light micrographs of the single-mutant strains and the min1 mlt1 double-mutant strain are shown in Fig 2.

Eyeless mutants have pigment granules:
To examine the ultrastructure of the eyespots in the eyespot-assembly mutant strains, late-log or early stationary phase cells were fixed and prepared for electron microscopy. As shown in Fig 4A, wild-type eyespots show a close apposition of the plasma membrane with the chloroplast envelope membranes. In cross-section, the carotenoid-filled lipid granules (arrowheads) are in a closely packed, linear array directly beneath the inner envelope membrane. As shown here, multiple pigment granule layers are separated by thylakoid membranes. Surprisingly we found that both eye2 and eye3 mutants appear to have carotenoid pigment granules (Fig 4F and Fig G). However, they are most often found singly and unorganized in the chloroplast compartment. Since eyespots are observed by light microscopy in eye1 mutants that have reached stationary phase, it was not surprising to observe organized eyespots by electron microscopy (Fig 4E). The eyeless phenotype is suggestive of a defect in organizing the granules into regular arrays, rather than in formation of the granules.

Multi-eyed mutant has normal eyespot ultrastructure:
The mlt1 mutant examined, 12-10, has eyespots with an ultrastructure similar to that of wild-type cells. The three apposed membranes (inner and outer chloroplast envelope and plasma membranes) show no distortion and the eyespots often show the regular, multilayer phenotype of wild-type eyespots (see Fig 4C).

The plasma membrane and chloroplast envelope are not apposed in min1 mutants grown on medium lacking acetate:
All of the strains in this study can grow photosynthetically on a standard laboratory culture medium lacking a carbon source (M medium; see MATERIALS AND METHODS). Often strains are grown on the same medium containing acetate (R medium), because they grow more quickly. Interestingly, we found that the ultrastructural phenotype of min1 mutants depends on whether the medium is supplemented with acetate. In the min1 mutant 12-12, the eyespots are smaller than those of wild type whether the cells are grown on M or R as shown by light microscopy (Fig 3). The number of pigment granules is significantly less than that of wild type as shown by electron microscopy (Fig 4B and Fig 5A and Fig B). Eyespots in cells grown on acetate medium have nearly wild-type morphology with apposed membranes (Fig 5B). However, eyespots of cells grown in acetate-free medium have an aberrant morphology in which cytoplasm is often apparent between the plasma membrane and the underlying chloroplast envelope (Fig 4B), and thylakoid membranes and stroma are seen between the chloroplast envelope and the pigment granules, which are often jumbled rather than in neat layers (Fig 4B and Fig 5A). The loss of contact between the plasma membrane and the chloroplast envelope membrane is suggestive of a defect in the organization of the eyespot components across the three usually apposed membranes.

The min1 phenotype is exacerbated when the mutation is in combination with a mlt1 allele. As shown in Fig 4D, the pigment granule arrays in the double mutant 12-12,12-10 are small, disordered, and not associated with the chloroplast envelope, similar to the min1 single mutant (Fig 4B). In general, the doublemutant eyespots are smaller and more disordered than those of min1 single mutants. The pigment granule patches often appear to be randomly located within the stroma of the chloroplast.


*  DISCUSSION
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

One of the obstacles on the road from endosymbiont to becoming an organelle is to ensure segregation into new cells at mitosis and meiosis. The mechanism for the segregation of mitochondria and chloroplasts and other organelles during division is still a mystery. Organelles such as flagella and light-sensing eyespots must also be correctly positioned in the new cells for proper function. In C. reinhardtii, the eyespot is located at the equator of the cell if the flagella are centered at one pole (see Fig 1B). The positioning of this structure is complex, in both a spatial and a temporal sense. The eyespot is positioned just clockwise of the daughter four-membered microtubule rootlet as viewed from the flagellar pole (see Fig 1C). During mitosis, the cleavage furrow forms along the four-membered microtubule plane and the eyespot is resorbed. In the two daughter cells, the new eyespots appear again just clockwise of the new daughter four-membered rootlet. While the daughter cells are still attached to one another, these new eyespots are 180° from each other and 90° from the cleavage plane and the location of the old eyespot (HOLMES and DUTCHER 1989 Down). The eyespot is organized across the plasma membrane and both chloroplast envelope membranes to include pigment granules in the stroma. These pigment granules are organized in hexagonal arrays and are subtended by thylakoid membranes (NAKAMURA et al. 1973 Down).

Our interest is in understanding both the structural basis of the organization of the eyespot across the cell/organelle boundary and the timing and localization of the organelle in the cell during growth and cell division. To this end, we have isolated and characterized several mutant strains with aberrant eyespot assembly. From 168 nonphototactic mutants, 27 eyespot mutants were found. Three different phenotypes were observed: no eyespots, multiple eyespots, or smaller than wild-type eyespots. These mutations could eliminate a component of the eyespot structure or disrupt a regulatory pathway necessary for proper assembly of the structure.

The eye2 and eye3 mutants do not assemble a pigment granule apparatus observable by light microscopy. Quite different from the appearance of eyespots in stationary cultures of eye1 mutants, we have never observed pigment spots in the eye2 or eye3 strains in our collection. However, eye3 cells starved for nitrogen or kept in stationary phase for 2 days recover the ability to phototax. It is clear that the signal transduction machinery, at least in starved cells, is sufficient for phototaxis. In addition, we have found both eye2 and eye3 strains will photoshock at high levels of light (D. G. W. ROBERTS and C. L. DIECKMANN, unpublished data), also suggestive that signal transduction is intact in these mutants. Thus, the eye2 and eye3 mutants are primarily defective in pigment granule organization in the chloroplast. These EYE genes could code for essential structural components of the eyespot or positively regulate the pathway of assembly. We expected that we might identify several more loci of this type. Identifying only three loci may suggest the following: (1) that the structure is quite simple, (2) that other structural or regulatory elements of the system are essential gene products and would not have been identified in this analysis, or (3) that the genome has not been saturated for mutations that would result in the eyeless phenotype.

The min1 mutants have smaller than normal eyespots, which are highly disordered when the cells are grown in medium lacking acetate. The product of the MIN1 gene could be a structural component that is involved in the apposition of the plasma membrane with the chloroplast envelope. This hypothesis would explain why we observe cytoplasm between the plasma membrane and the chloroplast in min1 mutant strains. However, min1 cells grown on acetate assemble small but more normal-looking eyespots with the membranes apposed. Future investigations will focus on discovering the basis of the phenotypic variation.

The mlt1 mutants are defective in the regulation of eyespot number. Occasionally in a wild-type population of cells a cell with two eyespots is observed following cytokinesis (HOLMES and DUTCHER 1989 Down). The additional eyespot is the result of retention of the parental eyespot in the daughter cell along with the newly formed eyespot. In logarithmically growing cultures of the mlt1 strains, most cells have two eyespots, 36% with both in line on the same side of the cell, one in the normal equatorial location and the other closer to the flagella. We have observed that, like wild-type cells, mlt1 cells absorb the eyespots during division. Appearance of new eyespots seems delayed relative to wild-type cells. Therefore, supernumerary eyespots are not due to being retained from the parental cell. Future investigation of the mlt1 mutants during mitosis should clarify the timing of the appearance and placement of eyespot relative to the cleavage furrow and four-membered microtubule rootlets. That 62% of the cells examined have eyespots that are aligned or are 180° from each other and are all in the flagellar hemisphere is suggestive that some positional cues have been retained. Perhaps the signal that designates the position of the four-membered rootlets or the four-membered rootlets themselves are cues for eyespot localization. Recently we discovered that mlt1 mutations and ptx4 mutations are allelic (PAZOUR et al. 1995 Down; C. L. DIECKMANN, unpublished data), which places the MLT1/(PTX4) locus on the left arm of linkage group XII/XIII (P. Kathir, Chlamydomonas Stock Center webpage).

We find it intriguing that the MIN1, MLT1(PTX4), and EYE2 loci are closely linked to each other; this clustering may allow cell-cycle or other coordinated control of expression. Alternatively, this group could have a common genetic origin, perhaps from the genome of the endosymbiont/organelle.

This study is a beginning for the understanding of eyespot structure and function in C. reinhardtii and other related algae. The continued analysis of genes described here will increase our general knowledge of the cell-organelle interactions required for light reception, signal transduction, and eyespot assembly and positioning in the cell.


*  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Many people have contributed to this study, including K. E. Huey, L. Kenaga, D. L. Bentley, J. Ehle, M. Essary, J. J. Anderson, T. Little, F. Sibayan, K. Campbell, and S. J. King. We thank them for their help with genetics, phenotypic characterization, and microscopy. Thanks to Elizabeth Harris for sending strains from the Chlamydomonas Stock Center. Thanks to G. Pazour and G. Witman for the PTX4 probe and ptx4 mutant strains, to P. Kathir for mapping information, and to G. Pazour for critical reading of the manuscript. This work was funded by a Biomedical Research Small Grant to C.L.D., a National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant GM-34893 to C.L.D., and NIH grant GM-32843 to S.K.D.

Manuscript received April 28, 1999; Accepted for publication June 25, 1999.


*  LITERATURE CITED
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

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