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1.
Earth's atmospheric composition has changed significantly over geologic time. Many redox active atmospheric constituents have left evidence of their presence, while inert constituents such as dinitrogen gas (N2) are more elusive. In this study, we examine two potential biological indicators of atmospheric N2: the morphological and isotopic signatures of heterocystous cyanobacteria. Biological nitrogen fixation constitutes the primary source of fixed nitrogen to the global biosphere and is catalyzed by the oxygen‐sensitive enzyme nitrogenase. To protect this enzyme, some filamentous cyanobacteria restrict nitrogen fixation to microoxic cells (heterocysts) while carrying out oxygenic photosynthesis in vegetative cells. Heterocysts terminally differentiate in a pattern that is maintained as the filaments grow, and nitrogen fixation imparts a measurable isotope effect, creating two biosignatures that have previously been interrogated under modern N2 partial pressure (pN2) conditions. Here, we examine the effect of variable pN2 on these biosignatures for two species of the filamentous cyanobacterium Anabaena. We provide the first in vivo estimate of the intrinsic isotope fractionation factor of Mo‐nitrogenase (εfix = ?2.71 ± 0.09‰) and show that, with decreasing pN2, the net nitrogen isotope fractionation decreases for both species, while the heterocyst spacing decreases for Anabaena cylindrica and remains unchanged for Anabaena variabilis. These results are consistent with the nitrogen fixation mechanisms available in the two species. Application of these quantifiable effects to the geologic record may lead to new paleobarometric measurements for pN2, ultimately contributing to a better understanding of Earth's atmospheric evolution.  相似文献   

2.
All colonial diazotrophic cyanobacteria are capable of simultaneously evolving O2 through oxygenic photosynthesis and fixing nitrogen via nitrogenase. Since nitrogenase is irreversibly inactivated by O2, accommodation of the two metabolic pathways has led to biochemical and/or structural adaptations that protect the enzyme from O2. In some species, differentiated cells (heterocysts) are produced within the filaments. PSII is absent in the heterocysts, while PSI activity is maintained. In other, nonheterocystous species, however, a “division of labor” occurs whereby individual cells within a colony appear to ephemerally fix nitrogen while others evolve oxygen. Using membrane inlet mass spectrometry (MIMS) in conjunction with tracer 18O2 and inhibitors of photosynthetic and respiratory electron transport, we examined the light dependence of O2 consumption in Trichodesmium sp. IMS 101, a nonheterocystous, colonial cyanobacterium, and Anabaena flos‐aquae (Lyngb.) Bréb. ex Bornet et Flahault, a heterocystous species. Our results indicate that in both species, intracellular O2 concentrations are maintained at low levels by the light‐dependent reduction of oxygen via the Mehler reaction. In N2‐fixing Trichodesmium colonies, Mehler activity can consume ~75% of gross O2 production, while in Trichodesmium utilizing nitrate, Mehler activity declines and consumes ~10% of gross O2 production. Moreover, evidence for the coupling between N2 fixation and Mehler activity was observed in purified heterocysts of Anabaena, where light accelerated O2 consumption by 3‐fold. Our results suggest that a major role for PSI in N2‐fixing cyanobacteria is to effectively act as a photon‐catalyzed oxidase, consuming O2 through pseudocyclic electron transport while simultaneously supplying ATP in both heterocystous and nonheterocystous taxa.  相似文献   

3.
The nonheterocystous filamentous cyanobacterial genus Lyngbya is a widespread and frequently dominant component of marine microbial mats. It is suspected of contributing to relatively high rates of N2 fixation associated with mats. The ability to contemporaneously conduct O2-sensitive N2 fixation and oxygenic photosynthesis was investigated in Lyngbya aestuarii isolates from a North Carolina intertidal mat. Short-term (<4-h) additions of the photosystem II (O2 evolution) inhibitor 3(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea stimulated light-mediated N2 fixation (nitrogenase activity), indicating potential inhibition of N2 fixation by O2 production. However, some degree of light-mediated N2 fixation in the absence of 3(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea was observed. Electron microscopic immunocytochemical localization of nitrogenase, coupled to microautoradiographic studies of 14CO2 fixation and cellular deposition of the tetrazolium salt 2,4,5-triphenyltetrazolium chloride, revealed that (i) nitrogenase was widely distributed throughout individual filaments during illuminated and dark periods, (ii) 14CO2 fixation was most active in intercalary regions, and (iii) daylight 2,4,5-triphenyltetrazolium chloride reduction (formazan deposition) was most intense in terminal regions. Results suggest lateral partitioning of photosynthesis and N2 fixation during illumination, with N2 fixation being confined to terminal regions. During darkness, a larger share of the filament appears capable of N2 fixation.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of temperature and oxygen on nitrogenase activity in two heterocystous cyanobacteria, Anabaena variabilis Kütz. ATCC29413 and Nostoc sp. PCC7120, was investigated. The cyanobacteria were grown under a 12:12 light:dark (L:D) cycle at 27°C and were subsequently exposed to different temperatures (27, 36, 39, and 42°C) at different steady‐state O2 concentrations (20, 10, 5, 0%). Light response curves of nitrogenase activity were recorded under each of these conditions using an online acetylene reduction assay combined with a sensitive laser photoacoustic ethylene detection method. The light response curves were fitted with the rectangular hyperbola model from which the model parameters Nm, Nd, and α were derived. In both strains, nitrogenase activity (Ntot = Nm + Nd) was the highest at 39°C–42°C and at 0% O2. The ratio Ntot/Nd was 4.1 and 3.1 for Anabaena and Nostoc, respectively, indicating that respectively 25% and 33% of nitrogenase activity was supported by respiration (Nd). Ntot/Nd increased with decreasing O2 concentration and with increasing temperature. Hence, each of these factors caused a relative increase in the light‐driven nitrogenase activity (Nm). These results demonstrate that photosynthesis and respiration both contribute to nitrogenase activity in Anabaena and Nostoc and that their individual contributions depend on both O2 concentration and temperature as the latter may dynamically alter the flux of O2 into the heterocyst.  相似文献   

5.
Cyanothece sp. strain ATCC 51142 is an aerobic, unicellular, diazotrophic cyanobacterium that temporally separates O2-sensitive N2 fixation from oxygenic photosynthesis. The energy and reducing power needed for N2 fixation appears to be generated by an active respiratory apparatus that utilizes the contents of large interthylakoidal carbohydrate granules. We report here on the carbohydrate and protein composition of the granules of Cyanothece sp. strain ATCC 51142. The carbohydrate component is a glucose homopolymer with branches every nine residues and is chemically identical to glycogen. Granule-associated protein fractions showed temporal changes in the number of proteins and their abundance during the metabolic oscillations observed under diazotrophic conditions. There also were temporal changes in the protein pattern of the granule-depleted supernatant fractions from diazotrophic cultures. None of the granule-associated proteins crossreacted with antisera directed against several glycogen-metabolizing enzymes or nitrogenase, although these proteins were tentatively identified in supernatant fractions. It is suggested that the granule-associated proteins are structural proteins required to maintain a complex granule architecture. Received: 30 August 1996 / Accepted: 24 October 1996  相似文献   

6.
Strains of filamentous, non-heterocystous cyanobacteria from the Pasteur Culture Collection (PCC), able to synthesize nitrogenase under anaerobic test conditions, were tested for growth with N2 as sole nitrogen source at low O2 partial pressure (less than 0.05%). Plectonema boryanum (PCC 73110) exhibited exponential growth under these conditions. This capacity was restricted to light intensities not exceeding 500 lux. Growth rates were 0.014/h at 200 and 0.023 at 500 lux and similar to those of anaerobic and aerobic control cultures with nitrate as N-source. For N2-fixing cultures incubated at 200 and 500 lux, acetylene reduction rates were 4–8 and 5–14 nmol C2H4 per mg protein per min, respectively. The ratio of phycocyanine to chlorophyll was higher (200 lux) or slightly reduced (500 lux) in N2-fixing cultures as compared to control cultures with nitrate as N-source. On the basis of epifluorescence microscopy and microfluorimetry, no differences in pigment contents were found between individual cells or filaments of N2-fixing cultures. Also no noteworthy differences were observed between the pycobiliprotein composition of individual cells in N2 fixing cultures as compared to nitrate-grown controls. Thus the observed exponential growth of P. boryanum at low light intensities implies simultaneous nitrogen fixation and oxygenic photosynthesis. Additional continuous culture experiments showed that N2-fixing exponential growth was dependent on O2 partial pressures lower than 0.2–0.4%.The other strains tested (PCC 6412, 6602, 7403, 7104) did not grow under such conditions.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - PBP phycobiliproteins - PC phycocyanin - PCC Pasteur Culture Collection - OD optical density  相似文献   

7.
An on‐line, laser photo‐acoustic, trace gas detection system in combination with a stepper motor‐controlled monochromator was used to record semicontinuous light action spectra of nitrogenase activity in heterocystous cyanobacteria. Action spectra were made of cultures of Nodularia spumigena Mertens ex Bornet & Flahault, Aphanizomenon flos‐aquae Ralfs ex Bornet & Flahault, and Anabaena sp. and from field samples of a cyanobacterial bloom in the Baltic Sea. Nitrogenase activity was stimulated by monochromatic light coinciding the red and blue peaks of chl a, the phycobiliproteins phycocyanin (allophycocyanin) and phycoerythrin, and several carotenoids. Because nitrogenase is confined to the heterocyst, it was concluded that all photopigments must have been present in these cells, were involved in light harvesting and photosynthesis, and supplied the energy for N2 fixation. The species investigated showed marked differences in their nitrogenase action spectra, which might be related to their specific niches and to their success in cyanobacterial blooms. Moreover, light action spectra of nitrogenase activity shifted during the day, probably as the result of changes in the phycobiliprotein content of the heterocyst relative to chl a. Action spectra of nitrogenase and changes in pigment composition are essential for the understanding of the competitive abilities of species and for the estimation of N2 fixation by a bloom of heterocystous cyanobacteria.  相似文献   

8.
Oscillatoria sp. strain 23 is a filamentous, non-heterocystous cyanobacterium that fixes nitrogen aerobically. Although, in this organism nitrogenase is inactivated by oxygen a high tolerance is observed. Up to a pO2 of 0.15 atm, oxygen does not have any measurable effects on acetylene reduction. Higher concentrations of oxygen inhibited the activity to a relatively high degree. Evidence for two mechanisms of oxygen protection of nitrogenase in this cyanobacterium was obtained. A high rate of synthesis of nitrogenase may allow the organism to maintain a certain amount of active enzyme under aerobic conditions. Secondly, a switch off/on mechanism may reversibly convert the active enzyme into a non-active form which is insensitive to oxygen inactivation after a sudden and short-term exposure to high oxygen concentrations. It is conceived that these mechanisms in addition to a temporal separation of nitrogen fixation from oxygenic photosynthesis sufficiently explain the regulation process of aerobic nitrogen fixation in this organism.Abbreviations DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - CAP chloramphenicol  相似文献   

9.
Unicellular, diazotrophic cyanobacteria temporally separate dinitrogen (N2) fixation and photosynthesis to prevent inactivation of the nitrogenase by oxygen. This temporal segregation is regulated by a circadian clock with oscillating activities of N2 fixation in the dark and photosynthesis in the light. On the population level, this separation is not always complete, since the two processes can overlap during transitions from dark to light. How do single cells avoid inactivation of nitrogenase during these periods? One possibility is that phenotypic heterogeneity in populations leads to segregation of the two processes. Here, we measured N2 fixation and photosynthesis of individual cells using nanometer-scale secondary ion mass spectrometry (nanoSIMS) to assess both processes in a culture of the unicellular, diazotrophic cyanobacterium Crocosphaera watsonii during a dark-light and a continuous light phase. We compared single-cell rates with bulk rates and gene expression profiles. During the regular dark and light phases, C. watsonii exhibited the temporal segregation of N2 fixation and photosynthesis commonly observed. However, N2 fixation and photosynthesis were concurrently measurable at the population level during the subjective dark phase in which cells were kept in the light rather than returned to the expected dark phase. At the single-cell level, though, cells discriminated against either one of the two processes. Cells that showed high levels of photosynthesis had low nitrogen fixing activities, and vice versa. These results suggest that, under ambiguous environmental signals, single cells discriminate against either photosynthesis or nitrogen fixation, and thereby might reduce costs associated with running incompatible processes in the same cell.  相似文献   

10.
Nitrogenase (EC 1.7.99.2) activity (acetylene reduction) and nitrogen fixation (15N2 fixation) were measured in cyanobacteria freshly isolated from the coralloid roots of Macrozamia riedlei (Fisch. ex Gaud.) Gardn. Light and gas phase oxygen concentration had marked interactive effects on activity, with higher (up to 100-fold) rates of acetylene reduction and 15N2 fixation in light. The relationship between ethylene formation and N2-fixation varied in the freshly isolated cyanobacteria from 4 to 7 nanomoles of C2H4 per nanomole 15N2. Intact coralloid roots, incubated in darkness and ambient air, showed a value of 4.3. Maximum rates of nitrogenase activity occurred at about 0.6% O2 in light, while in darkness there was a broad optimum around 5 to 8% O2. Inhibition of nitrogenase, in light, by pO2 above 0.6% was irreversible. Measurements of light-dependent O2 evolution and 14CO2 fixation indicated negligible photosynthetic electron transport involving photosystem II and, on the basis of inhibitor studies, the stimulatory effect of light was attributed to cyclic photophos-phorylation. Nitrogenase activity of free-living culture of an isolate from Macrozamia (Nostoc PCC 73102) was only slightly inhibited by O2 levels above 6% O2 and the inhibition was reversible. These cells showed rates of light-dependent O2 evolution and 14CO2 fixation which were 100- to 200-fold higher than those by the freshly isolated symbiont. Furthermore, nitrogenase activity was dependent on both photosynthetic electron transport and photophosphorylation. These data indicate that cyanobacteria within cycad coralloid roots are differentiated specifically for symbiotic functioning in a microaerobic environment. Specializations include a high heterocyst frequency, enhanced permeability to O2, and a direct dependence on the cycad for substrates to support nitrogenase activity.  相似文献   

11.
Summary This paper presents an overview of aspects of N2-fixation in phototrophic N2-fixers. Nitrogenase is little different in phototrophs from other organisms. Evidence suggests that fixed carbon dissimilation rather than direct photoreduction from oxidised inorganic compounds or exogenous photosynthetic electron donors is the major route of reductant supply to nitrogenase in phototrophs; inRhodospirillum rubrum pyruvate is a possible electron donor to nitrogenase; in cyanobacteria the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway is important, although some recent evidence implicates glycolysis and the tricarboxylic acid cycle in reductant supply in heterocystous cyanobacteria. In photosynthetic organisms light modulation of various enzymes occurs-some Calvin cycle enzymes are light activated, some oxidative pentose phosphate pathway and glycolytic enzymes are deactivated and some tricarboxylic acid cycle enzymes are activated. Reduced levels of thioredoxin in heterocysts may contribute to the sustained functioning of the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway in heterocysts in the light and dark. In photosynthetic bacteria such asRhodospirillum rubrum an activating enzyme which removes a modifying group from inactive Fe protein can activate nitrogenase. O2 and NH 4 + both inhibit N2-fixation and there is some evidence in cyanobacteria that O2 stability of whole cell nitrogenase can be achieved by prolonged incubation of cultures at high O2.  相似文献   

12.
Cyanobacteria capable of fixing dinitrogen exhibit various strategies to protect nitrogenase from inactivation by oxygen. The marine Crocosphaera watsonii WH8501 and the terrestrial Gloeothece sp. PCC6909 are unicellular diazotrophic cyanobacteria that are capable of aerobic nitrogen fixation. These cyanobacteria separate the incompatible processes of oxygenic photosynthesis and nitrogen fixation temporally, confining the latter to the dark. Although these cyanobacteria thrive in fully aerobic environments and can be cultivated diazotrophically under aerobic conditions, the effect of oxygen is not precisely known due to methodological limitations. Here we report the characteristics of nitrogenase activity with respect to well‐defined levels of oxygen to which the organisms are exposed, using an online and near real‐time acetylene reduction assay combined with sensitive laser‐based photoacoustic ethylene detection. The cultures were grown under an alternating 12–12 h light–dark cycle and acetylene reduction was recorded continuously. Acetylene reduction was assayed at 20%, 15%, 10%, 7.5%, 5% and 0% oxygen and at photon flux densities of 30 and 76 μmol m?2 s?1 provided at the same light–dark cycle as during cultivation. Nitrogenase activity was predominantly but not exclusively confined to the dark. At 0% oxygen nitrogenase activity in Gloeothece sp. was not detected during the dark and was shifted completely to the light period, while C. watsonii did not exhibit nitrogenase activity at all. Oxygen concentrations of 15% and higher did not support nitrogenase activity in either of the two cyanobacteria. The highest nitrogenase activities were at 5–7.5% oxygen. The highest nitrogenase activities in C. watsonii and Gloeothece sp. were observed at 29°C. At 31°C and above, nitrogenase activity was not detected in C. watsonii while the same was the case at 41°C and above in Gloeothece sp. The differences in the behaviour of nitrogenase activity in these cyanobacteria are discussed with respect to their presumed physiological strategies to protect nitrogenase from oxygen inactivation and to the environment in which they thrive.  相似文献   

13.
N2 fixation, diazotrophic community composition, and organisms actively expressing genes for N2 fixation were examined over at 3−year period (1997–1999) for intertidal microbial mats on a sand flat located in the Rachel Carson National Estuarine Research Reserve (RCNERR) (Beaufort, NC, USA). Specifically, diel variations of N2 fixation in the mats from the RCNERR were examined. Three distinct diel patterns of nitrogenase activity (NA) were observed. NA responses to short-term inhibitions of photosynthesis corresponded to one of the three patterns. High rates of NA were observed during peak O2 production periods for diel experiments during summer months. Different types of NA diel variations correspond to different stages of mat development. Chloramphenicol treatments indicated that the mechanism of protein synthesis supporting NA changed throughout the day. Analysis of mat DNA and RNA gave further evidence suggesting that in addition to cyanobacteria, other functional groups were responsible for the NA observed in the RCNERR mats. The role of microbial diversity in the N2 fixation dynamics of these mats is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
When growing in laternating light-dark cycles, nitrogenase activity (acetylene reduction) in the filamentous, non-heterocystous cyanobacterium Oscillatoria sp. strain 23 (Oldenburg) is predominantly present during the dark period. Dark respiration followed the same pattern as nitrogenase. Maximum activities of nitrogenase and respiration appeared at the same time and were 3.6 mol C2H4 and 1.4 mg O2 mg Chl a -1·h-1, respectively. Cultures, adapted to light-dark cycles, but transferred to continuous light, retained their reciprocal rhythm of oxygenic photosynthesis and nitrogen fixation. Moreover, even in the light, oxygen uptake was observed at the same rate as in the dark. Oxygen uptake and nitrogenase activity coincided. However, nitrogenase activity in the light was 6 times as high (22 mol C2H4 mg Chl a -1·h-1) as compared to the dark activity. Although some overlap was observed in which both oxygen evolution and nitrogenase activity occurred simultaneously, it was concluded that in Oscillatoria nitrogen fixation and photosynthesis are separated temporary. If present, light covered the energy demand of nitrogenase and respiration very probably fulfilled a protective function.  相似文献   

15.
Sodium affects the metabolism of eukaryotes and prokaryotes in several ways. This review collates information on the effects of Na+ on the metabolism of cyanobacteria with emphasis on the N2,fixing filamentous species. Na+ is required for nitrogenase activity inAnabaena torulosa, Anabaena L-31 andPlectonema boryanum. The features of this requirement have been mainly studied inAnabaena torulosa. The need for Na+ is specific and cannot be replaced by K+, Li+, Ca 2 + or Mg2+. Processes crucial for expression of nitrogenase such as molybdenum uptake, protection of the enzyme from oxygen inactivation and conformational activation of the enzyme are not affected by Na+. Mo-Fe protein and Fe protein, the two components of nitrogenase are synthesized in the absence of Na+ but the enzyme complex is catalytically inactive. Photoevolution of O2 and CO2 fixation, which are severely inhibited in the absence of Na+, are quickly restored by glutamine or glutamate indicating that Na+ deprivation affects photosynthesis indirectly due to deficiency in the products of N2 fixation. Na+ deprivation decreases phosphate uptake, nucleoside phosphate pool and nitrogenase activity. These effects are reversed by the addition of Na+ suggesting that a limitation of available ATP caused by reduced phosphate uptake results in loss of nitrogenase activity during Na+ starvation. Na+ influx inAnabaena torulosa andAnabaena L-31 is unaffected by low K+ concentration, is carrier mediated, follows Michaelis-Menten kinetics and is modulated mainly by membrane potential. Treatments which cause membrane depolarisation and hyperpolarisation inhibit and enhance Na+ influx respectively. These cyanobacteria exhibit rapid active efflux of Na+, in a manner different from the Na+/H+ antiporter mechanism found inAnacystis nidulans. Na+ requirement in nitrogen metabolism including nitrate assimilation, synthesis of amino acids and proteins, in respiration and oxidative phosphorylation, in transport of sugars and amino acids, cellular distribution of absorbed sodium, physiological basis of salt tolerance and prospects of reclamation of saline soils by cyanobacteria are the other aspects discussed in this review.  相似文献   

16.
The nitrogen-deficient coastal waters of North Carolina contain suspended bacteria potentially able to fix N2. Bioassays aimed at identifying environmental factors controlling the development and proliferation of N2 fixation showed that dissolved organic carbon (as simple sugars and sugar alcohols) and particulate organic carbon (derived from Spartina alterniflora) additions elicited and enhanced N2 fixation (nitrogenase activity) in these waters. Nitrogenase activity occurred in samples containing flocculent, mucilage-covered bacterial aggregates. Cyanobacterium-bacterium aggregates also revealed N2 fixation. In all cases bacterial N2 fixation occurred in association with surficial microenvironments or microzones. Since nitrogenase is oxygen labile, we hypothesized that the aggregates themselves protected their constituent microbes from O2. Microelectrode O2 profiles revealed that aggregates had lower internal O2 tensions than surrounding waters. Tetrazolium salt (2,3,5-triphenyl-3-tetrazolium chloride) reduction revealed that patchy zones existed both within microbes and extracellularly in the mucilage surrounding microbes where free O2 was excluded. Triphenyltetrazolium chloride reduction also strongly inhibited nitrogenase activity. These findings suggest that N2 fixation is mediated by the availability of the appropriate types of reduced microzones. Organic carbon enrichment appears to serve as an energy and structural source for aggregate formation, both of which were required for eliciting N2 fixation responses of these waters.  相似文献   

17.
The relationship between the requirement for boron and the form of N supplied in nutrient media to cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. PCC 7119 was investigated. When cells were grown in a medium which contained nitrate or ammonium-N, boron deficiency in the nutrient media did not inhibit growth or change cell composition. However, when cells were dependent on N2 fixation, the lack of boron inhibited growth (i.e. growth ceased after 96 hours under these conditions). Additionally, boron-deficient cells showed a significant decrease in their content of phycobiliproteins and chlorophyll and accumulated carbohydrates within 24 hours of removing boron from the nutrient media. Inhibition of photosynthetic O2 evolution accompanied the decrease in photosynthetic pigments. Boron deficiency symptoms were relieved when either boron or combined N was added to boron-deficient cultures. The degree of recovery depended upon the age of the cultures. Assays of nitrogenase activity showed that, after 2 hours of growth, nitrogenase activity of boron-deficient cells was inhibited by 40%. After 24 hours a total inactivation of nitrogenase activity was observed in boron-deficient cells. These results strongly suggest an involvement of boron in N2 fixation in cyanobacteria.  相似文献   

18.
Seasonal changes in light and physicochemical conditions have strong impacts on cyanobacteria, but how they affect community structure, metabolism, and biogeochemistry of cyanobacterial mats remains unclear. Light may be particularly influential for cyanobacterial mats exposed to sulphide by altering the balance of oxygenic photosynthesis and sulphide-driven anoxygenic photosynthesis. We studied temporal shifts in irradiance, water chemistry, and community structure and function of microbial mats in the Middle Island Sinkhole (MIS), where anoxic and sulphate-rich groundwater provides habitat for cyanobacteria that conduct both oxygenic and anoxygenic photosynthesis. Seasonal changes in light and groundwater chemistry were accompanied by shifts in bacterial community composition, with a succession of dominant cyanobacteria from Phormidium to Planktothrix, and an increase in diatoms, sulphur-oxidizing bacteria, and sulphate-reducing bacteria from summer to autumn. Differential abundance of cyanobacterial light-harvesting proteins likely reflects a physiological response of cyanobacteria to light level. Beggiatoa sulphur oxidation proteins were more abundant in autumn. Correlated abundances of taxa through time suggest interactions between sulphur oxidizers and sulphate reducers, sulphate reducers and heterotrophs, and cyanobacteria and heterotrophs. These results support the conclusion that seasonal change, including light availability, has a strong influence on community composition and biogeochemical cycling of sulphur and O2 in cyanobacterial mats.  相似文献   

19.
In light of recent proposals that iron (Fe) availability may play an important role in controlling oceanic primary production and nutrient flux, its regulatory impact on N2 fixation and production dynamics was investigated in the widespread and biogeochemically important diazotrophic, planktonic cyanobacteria Trichodesmium spp. Fe additions, as FeCl3 and EDTA-chelated FeCl3, enhanced N2 fixation (nitrogenase activity), photosynthesis (CO2 fixation), and growth (chlorophyll a production) in both naturally occurring and cultured (on unenriched oligotrophic seawater) Trichodesmium populations. Maximum enhancement of these processes occurred under FeEDTA-amended conditions. On occasions, EDTA alone led to enhancement. No evidence for previously proposed molybdenum or phosphorus limitation was found. Our findings geographically extend support for Fe limitation of N2 fixation and primary production to tropical and subtropical oligotrophic ocean waters often characterized by Trichodesmium blooms.  相似文献   

20.
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