Nitrogen fixation by unicellular blue-green algae |
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Authors: | Rosmarie Rippka Alasdair Neilson Riyo Kunisawa Germaine Cohen-Bazire |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Bacteriology and Immunology, University of California, 94720 Berkeley, California |
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Abstract: | ![]() Summary The ability of some unicellular blue-green algae to grow at the expense of N2 under aerobic conditions has been confirmed and the distribution of this property in the Chroococcaceae has been investigated. It appears to be confined to strains with spherical cells enclosed by the multilaminate sheaths characteristic of the genus Gloeocapsa. Only two unicellular blue-green algae of this type are now available in pure culture; and their properties are so similar that they may well be independent isolates of the same species.No differences in structure between cells grown with nitrate and N2 could be detected, either by light or by electron microscopy; under both conditions of growth, the population consists entirely of vegetative cells. These two Gloeocapsa strains can therefore maintain a functional nitrogenase system in vegetative cells that are freely exposed to air. |
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