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Drapier et al, Supplemental Data expression of a truncated subunit . We generated a chloroplast mutant expressing a truncated subunit , by introducing a stop codon within the atpA coding sequence at position 300, associated with the recycling aadA cassette for selection of transformants (fig. S1A). In pulse-labelling experiments, the resulting Tr strain (table I), showed no neosynthesised subunit , but a new translation product (truncated subunit ) with an apparent molecular mass of ~30 kDa (fig. S1B). This truncated polypeptide is stable and accumulates to significant amount (fig. S1C). In absence of an assembly- competent subunit , this truncated polypeptide behaves as full-length subunit it shows a much reduced synthesis and does not accumulate (fig. S1B). We note also that the synthesis of subunit remains high in the absence of subunit when subunit is expressed in a truncated form, indicating that heteromers can not form in this latter strain. atpA rbcL St psbI A) Tr filled-in SexA1 B cemA K WT { Tr, Tr} C) Tr Tr WT B) { Tr, Tr} Recycling cassette Tr Tr * OEE2 fig. S1: expression of a truncated subunit A) Strategy used to introduce a mutation (St) in the atpA gene, associated with the recycling spectinomycin resistance cassette, schematically depicted by >> K >> (not to scale). B, BseRI. Arrow indicates transcription start site. Coding sequences are depicted in grey. Because the mutation leads to a premature stop codon (St), about one third of atpA coding sequence is not translated in the mutant (white rectangle). Synthesis (B) and accumulation (C) of subunits and in the wild type and in strains Tr and {Tr, Tr}. 1 Drapier et al, Supplemental Data Subunit translated from an unrelated 5’UTR can be overexpressed in the absence of subunit . The chimeric gene 5’psaA-atpA contains the atpA coding region translated under the control of the psaA 5’UTR (psaA encodes one of the major subunit of PSI, the expression of which is independent of ATP synthase biogenesis). We replaced the atpA gene from the wild-type strain by this 5’psaA-atpA chimera (fig. S2A), associated with the aadA cassette. Spectinomycin-resistant transformants aA because they express a 5’psaA driven-subunit - were able of phototrophic growth. Chimeric subunit is translated and accumulated to levels similar to the regular subunit in the wild type (fig. S2B). This construct was also transformed in strain Tr. In transformed strains {Tr, aA}, translation of chimeric subunit is similar to that observed in strain aA (fig. S2B), in contrast to the endogenous subunit, which is poorly synthesised in the presence of a truncated subunit (fig. 3). Subunit is fairly well accumulated in strain {Tr, aA} (about 60% of the level found in strain aA), indicating that it is quite stable, even in absence of subunit (fig. S2B). As we expected, translation of subunit is no longer regulated by protein assembly when not B A N* 5’psaA aA rbcL cemA cemA atpA S bAK psbI rbcL psbI atpA WT aA B) WT A) { Tr, aA} expressed from the atpA 5’UTR; 500 bp Tr Fig. S2: The atpA 5’UTR is required for the -dependent control of subunit expression. A) Map of the atpA gene in wild-type and aA strains. Relevant restriction sites are indicated: B, BseRI; N*, an NcoI site engineered around the atpA initiation codon for cloning purposes; A, AvrII. Arrows indicate transcription start sites. bAK stands for the 5’psbA-aadA spectinomycin resistance cassette (Minai et al, 2006), in opposite orientation with respect to atpA. B) Translation (upper panel) and accumulation (lower panel) of the and subunits in the wild type and in strains aA and { Tr, aA}. OEE2 provides a loading control. OEE2 2 Drapier et al, Supplemental Data Cycloheximide pre-treatments modify the translation pattern of chloroplast genes. For specific visualisation of chloroplast translation products, cycloheximide, an inhibitor of cytosolic translation is added to cell suspensions prior of pulse-labelling experiments. However, chloroplast gene expression is heavily dependent on nuclear gene products, which suggests that a cycloheximide treatment could affect the rate of synthesis of chloroplast-encoded polypeptides. Therefore we pulse-labelled wild-type cells, pre-treated with cycloheximide for increasing times prior to the addition of 14 C-acetate. The general incorporation of 14 C within chloroplasts drops with increasing time of cycloheximide pre-incubations, reflecting the decreased cellular metabolism when cytosolic translation is impaired (Table SI). After correction for changes in 14 C incorporation, most polypeptides showed unaltered rates of synthesis (see fig. S3 for polypeptides in the 30-60 kDa range and Table SI). Subunit from ATP synthase showed a limited decrease of its rate of translation upon long time of preincubation with cycloheximide. By contrast, synthesis of subunit drastically decreased upon cycloheximide treatment and became hardly detectable after a 30 min preincubation. Consequently, the relative synthesis of these two subunits, initially close to stoichiometric amounts, became rapidly unbalanced (table S1). From this experiment, we conclude that the unbalanced rate of synthesis of subunits and observed in previous studies (Lemaire and Wollman, 1989)(Drapier et al., 1992) is likely an artefact caused by the 10 min cycloheximide pretreatment. Thus, pulse labelling experiments performed in that work, were done by adding 14C Acetate and cycloheximide simultaneously. time of cycloheximide preincubation (min.) 0’ 10’ 30 ’ apoCP47 apoCP43 cyt. f Fig. S3: Pulse-labelling of exponentially growing wild-type cells, pretreated with cycloheximide (10 µgml-1) for the indicated time. Position of neo-synthesized subunits and of ATP synthase, cytochrome f and PSII core subunits are indicated. 3 Drapier et al, Supplemental Data Table SI: Effect of cycloheximide pre-treatment on 14C incorporation and on the relative rates of synthesis of ATP synthase subunits and . Cycloheximide preincubation (min) 14 0a 10 30 100 % 30 % 20 % apo-CP47c 1.0 1.3 1.4 c 1.0 1.4 1.3 c 1.0 0.7 0.25 c 1.0 1.2 0.86 d 1.1 0.6 0.38 C incorporationb apo-CP46 a : cycloheximide was added simultaneously with 14C Acetate (experimental conditions chosen for this study). b 14 : C incorporation (measured as the total amount of radioactivity over the whole length of the lane) in response to increasing time of cycloheximide pre-treatments; value for time 0 is taken as 100%. c : rate of synthesis corrected for variations in 14C incorporation. d : ratio between 14C incorporation into polypeptides and for each time point. 4 Drapier et al, Supplemental Data Materials and Methods DNA Constructs 1- Construction of atpA deletion. Plasmid patpA2 (Ketchner et al., 1995), encompassing the atpA gene was digested by BseRI and PacI and ligated with the 2.95 kbp SacI-KpnI fragment from plasmid pKS-aadA-483 (Fischer et al., 1996), both fragments being treated with T4 DNA polymerase to generate blunt ends. In the resulting plasmid patpA::Kr, the atpA gene was replaced by the recycling aadA cassette, in a direct orientation with respect to atpA. 2- Construction of chimeric genes. i) atpA To create a chimeric atpA gene, a 245 bps DNA fragment containing the psaA promoter and 5’untranslated regions was PCR-amplified GACGTCCCCGGGTTTTACGAATACACATATGGT with 3’) and primers PsaA (5’ PsaAPromB (5’ GCG- CGCGGATCCATGGTCA- TGGATTTCTCCTTA 3’) from template plasmid ps1A1 (Kuck et al., 1987). This amplicon was digested with AvrII and NcoI, two restriction sites (underlined) introduced in the sequence of primers, respectively upstream of the 5’UTR and downstream of the psaA initiation codon and cloned into the pFAAA plasmid (Drapier et al., 2002), digested with the same enzymes, to yield plasmid paA. The 1.7 kb 5’psbA-aadA spectinomycine resistance cassette was removed from plasmid pbAK (Minai et al., 2006) by digestion with SmaI and EcoRV and inserted into the unique SmaI site (a site introduced when designing primer PsaAPromB, written in bold) of plasmid paA, in direct orientation with respect to the atpA gene, to create plasmid pKaA. ii) atpB A DNA fragment containing the atpB promoter and 5’untranslated regions was removed from plasmid pKS-atpB ATG 123 (Rimbault et al., 2000) by digestion with ClaI and NcoI and ligated into vector pAFFF, digested with the same enzymes to yield plasmid pdBTf. The EcoRV-SmaI 1.9 kb aadA cassette (Goldschmidt-Clermont, 1991) was then inserted, in reverse orientation with respect to the petA gene, into this later plasmid digested with the unique cutter HincII to create plasmid pKdBTf. 3- Generation of truncated alleles i) atpB gene. Plasmid P-112, obtained from the Chlamydomonas Genetic Center (www.biology.duke.edu/chlamy/), contains a 5.3 kbp BamHI-EcoRI fragment from the chloroplast genome encompassing the atpB gene (Woessner et al., 1986), subcloned into pUC8 vector. Selection of transformed cells expressing a truncated version of the subunit required the insertion of a 5 Drapier et al, Supplemental Data spectinomycin resistance cassette downstream of the atpB gene, in a region that belongs to the inverted repeat. Gene conversion between the two copies of the inverted repeat could thus lead to the duplication of the resistance cassette. The new copy of the cassette, not linked to the truncated atpB allele, could hamper the selection of mutants. Thus, to prevent gene conversion and expedite the process of homoplasmisation, the inverted repeat sequences downstream of the atpB gene were removed. To do this, a 767 bp DNA fragment that contains the C-terminal part of the atpB coding sequence and downstream regions, but no inverted repeat sequences, was PCR-amplified from template P-112 with primers atpBcod (5’ AGGTCGTATGCCATCAGCTGTAGGTTACCAACCT 3’) and atpBRev (5’ CGCGGTACCATA-CACGTTTAACGGCGTCCT 3’: KpnI). It was was digested by ClaI (that cuts plasmid P-112 only once, within the amplified region) and KpnI (introduced when designing primer atpBRev) and ligated into the vector P-112, digested with the same enzymes to yield plasmid P-112IR. This later was then digested with ClaI, treated with Klenow enzyme and religated on itself to form plasmid patpB335St. This treatment created a new NruI restriction site and caused a +2 frameshift in the coding sequence of atpB, leading to a premature stop codon 335 residues after the initiation codon. The recycling aadA cassette was then introduced into the KpnI site of vector patpB335St, in the same orientation as atpB, to create plasmid patpB335StKr. ii) atpA gene. Plasmid patpA2 was digested with SexAI, filled-in with Klenow and relegated on itself to create plasmid patpA2300St. This generated a five bases frame-shift, causing the premature termination of translation 300 residues after the initiation codon. The recycling aadA cassette was then introduced into the BseRI site of vector patpA2300St, in the same orientation as atpA, to create plasmid pKratpA300St. Transformation experiments Proper insertion of transforming DNA and homoplasmy were checked by RFLP analysis of specific PCR amplification products, since all chimeric genes used in that study led, upon PCR amplification of the region surrounding the 5’UTR (i.e. with a forward primer upstream of the petA gene PetAprom2 –5’ GCGAATTCGCAGGCAGTGGCGGTACC 3’-and a reverse primer within the coding sequence petArevA -5’ ACAGCTTGTGGTACTTCGATTTC-AACTGCT 3’-), to amplicons of different size whether the template was the wild-type or the chimeric petA genes. For deletion or truncated strains, homoplasmy was first deduced from the absence of growth of the transformed strains on minimum medium, indicative of the loss of the wild-type version of the gene of interest and further confirmed by size and/or RFLP analysis of specific PCR products encompassing the modified region. 6 Drapier et al, Supplemental Data References Choquet Y., Stern D.B., Wostrikoff K., Kuras R., Girard-Bascou J. and Wollman F.A. (1998) Translation of cytochrome f is autoregulated through the 5' untranslated region of petA mRNA in Chlamydomonas chloroplasts. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 95, 4380-4385. Drapier D., Girard-Bascou J., Stern D.B. and Wollman F.A. (2002) A dominant nuclear mutation in Chlamydomonas identifies a factor controlling chloroplast mRNA stability by acting on the coding region of the atpA transcript. Plant J., 31, 687-697. Fischer N., Stampacchia O., Redding K. and Rochaix J.D. (1996) Selectable marker recycling in the chloroplast. Mol. Gen. Genet., 251, 373-380. Goldschmidt-Clermont M. (1991) Transgenic expression of aminoglycoside adenine transferase in the chloroplast: a selectable marker of site-directed transformation of Chlamydomonas. Nucleic. Acids .Res., 19, 4083-4089. Ketchner S.L., Drapier D., Olive J., Gaudriault S., Girard-Bascou J. and Wollman F.A. (1995) Chloroplasts can accommodate inclusion bodies. Evidence from a mutant of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii defective in the assembly of the chloroplast ATP synthase. J. Biol. Chem., 270, 15299-15306. Kuck U., Choquet Y., Schneider M., Dron M. and Bennoun P. (1987) Structural and transcription analysis of the two homologous genes for the P700 chlorophyll a-apoproteins in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii: ervidence for in vivo trans-splicing. EMBO J., 6, 2185-2195. Lemaire C. and Wollman F.A. (1989) The chloroplast ATP synthase in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. II. Biochemical studies on its biogenesis using mutants defective in photophosphorylation. J. Biol. Chem., 264, 10235-10242 Minai L., Wostrikoff K., Wollman F.A. and Choquet Y. (2006) Chloroplast biogenesis of photosystem II cores involves a series of assembly-controlled steps that regulate translation. Plant Cell, 18, 159-175. Rimbault B., Esposito D., Drapier D., Choquet Y., Stern D. and Wollman F.A. (2000) Identification of the initiation codon for the atpB gene in Chlamydomonas chloroplasts excludes translation of a precursor form of the subunit of the ATP synthase. Mol. Gen. Genet., 264, 486-491. Woessner J.P., Gillham N.W. and Boynton J.E. (1986) The sequence of the chloroplast atpB gene and its flanking regions in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Gene, 44, 17-28. 7