In the unicellular green alga Chlorella sorokiniana (211/8 k), the protein
O-acetylserine(thiol)lyase (OASTL), representing the key-enzyme in the biosynthetic cysteine
pathway, was isolated and purified to apparent homogeneity. The purification was carried
out in cells grown in the presence of all nutrients or in sulphate (S) deprived cells.
After 24 h of S-starvation, a 17-fold increase in the specific activity of OASTL was
measured. In order to enable the identification of OASTL proteins from non-model
organisms such as C. sorokiniana, the recombinant his-tagged SAT5 protein from
Arabidopsis thaliana was immobilized by metal chelate chromatography. OASTL proteins
from C. sorokiniana were affinity purified in one step and activities were enhanced 29- and
41-fold, from S-sufficient and S-starved (24 h) cells, respectively. The successful application of
SAT/OASTL interaction for purification confirms for the first time the existence of the
cysteine synthase complexes in microalgae. The purified proteins have apparent molecular
masses between 32–34 kDa and are thus slightly larger compared to those found in other
vascular plants. The enhanced OASTL activity in S-starved cells can be attributed to increased
amounts of plastidic and the emergence of cytosolic OASTL isoforms. The results provide
proof-of-concept for the biochemical analysis of the cysteine synthase complex in diverse
microalgal species