Damien Godaux
University of Liège
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Publication
Featured researches published by Damien Godaux.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Bart Ghysels; Damien Godaux; René-Fernand Matagne; Pierre Cardol; Fabrice Franck
Like a majority of photosynthetic microorganisms, the green unicellular alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii may encounter O2 deprived conditions on a regular basis. In response to anaerobiosis or in a respiration defective context, the photosynthetic electron transport chain of Chlamydomonas is remodeled by a state transition process to a conformation that favours the photoproduction of ATP at the expense of reductant synthesis. In some unicellular green algae including Chlamydomonas, anoxia also triggers the induction of a chloroplast-located, oxygen sensitive hydrogenase, which accepts electrons from reduced ferredoxin to convert protons into molecular hydrogen. Although microalgal hydrogen evolution has received much interest for its biotechnological potential, its physiological role remains unclear. By using specific Chlamydomonas mutants, we demonstrate that the state transition ability and the hydrogenase function are both critical for induction of photosynthesis in anoxia. These two processes are thus important for survival of the cells when they are transiently placed in an anaerobic environment.
Plant Physiology | 2015
Damien Godaux; Benjamin Bailleul; Nicolas Berne; Pierre Cardol
Photosynthesis and growth in anoxia depends on hydrogenase-dependent linear electron flow. The model green microalga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is frequently subject to periods of dark and anoxia in its natural environment. Here, by resorting to mutants defective in the maturation of the chloroplastic oxygen-sensitive hydrogenases or in Proton-Gradient Regulation-Like1 (PGRL1)-dependent cyclic electron flow around photosystem I (PSI-CEF), we demonstrate the sequential contribution of these alternative electron flows (AEFs) in the reactivation of photosynthetic carbon fixation during a shift from dark anoxia to light. At light onset, hydrogenase activity sustains a linear electron flow from photosystem II, which is followed by a transient PSI-CEF in the wild type. By promoting ATP synthesis without net generation of photosynthetic reductants, the two AEF are critical for restoration of the capacity for carbon dioxide fixation in the light. Our data also suggest that the decrease in hydrogen evolution with time of illumination might be due to competition for reduced ferredoxins between ferredoxin-NADP+ oxidoreductase and hydrogenases, rather than due to the sensitivity of hydrogenase activity to oxygen. Finally, the absence of the two alternative pathways in a double mutant pgrl1 hydrogenase maturation factor G-2 is detrimental for photosynthesis and growth and cannot be compensated by any other AEF or anoxic metabolic responses. This highlights the role of hydrogenase activity and PSI-CEF in the ecological success of microalgae in low-oxygen environments.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015
Sophie Clowez; Damien Godaux; Pierre Cardol; Francis-André Wollman; Fabrice Rappaport
Background: Shift to anoxia promotes the over-reduction of photosystem I electron acceptors. Results: This over-reduction can be relieved by the activation of several pathways. Conclusion: The two mains pathways are the ATP-dependent CO2 fixation pathway and the ATP-independent hydrogenase. Significance: We disentangle the role of the various NADPH-consuming pathways in setting the redox poise in the chloroplast of unicellular photosynthetic algae. Photosynthetic microalgae are exposed to changing environmental conditions. In particular, microbes found in ponds or soils often face hypoxia or even anoxia, and this severely impacts their physiology. Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is one among such photosynthetic microorganisms recognized for its unusual wealth of fermentative pathways and the extensive remodeling of its metabolism upon the switch to anaerobic conditions. As regards the photosynthetic electron transfer, this remodeling encompasses a strong limitation of the electron flow downstream of photosystem I. Here, we further characterize the origin of this limitation. We show that it stems from the strong reducing pressure that builds up upon the onset of anoxia, and this pressure can be relieved either by the light-induced synthesis of ATP, which promotes the consumption of reducing equivalents, or by the progressive activation of the hydrogenase pathway, which provides an electron transfer pathway alternative to the CO2 fixation cycle.
International Journal of Hydrogen Energy | 2013
Damien Godaux; Barbara Emonds-Alt; Nicolas Berne; Bart Ghysels; Jean Alric; Claire Remacle; Pierre Cardol
International Journal of Hydrogen Energy | 2011
Renaud Lecler; Damien Godaux; Hélène Vigeolas; Serge Hiligsmann; Philippe Thonart; Fabrice Franck; Pierre Cardol; Claire Remacle
Archive | 2017
Fabrice Franck; Bart Ghysels; Damien Godaux
Archive | 2017
Philippe Lorge; Claire Remacle; Stéphanie Gerin; Nathalie Job; Fabrice Franck; Giuseppe Caldarella; Bart Ghysels; Damien Godaux; Pierre Cardol
Archive | 2015
Sophie Clowez; Damien Godaux; Pierre Cardol; Fabrice Rappaport
Archive | 2014
Damien Godaux
Archive | 2014
Barbara Emonds-Alt; Damien Godaux; Pierre Cardol; Claire Remacle