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1.
2.
The cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC6803 was chosen as a target organism for construction of a suitable photosynthetic host to enable selection of variant plant-like ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) enzymes. The DNA region containing the operon encoding Rubisco (rbc) was cloned, sequenced and used for the construction of a transformation vector bearing flanking sequences to the rbc genes. This vector was utilized for the construction of a cyanobacterial rbc null mutant in which the entire sequence comprising both rbc genes, was replaced by the Rhodospirillum rubrum rbcL gene linked to a chloramphenicol resistance gene. Chloramphenicol-resistant colonies, Syn6803rbc, were detected within 8 days when grown under 5% CO2 in air. These transformants were unable to grow in air (0.03% CO2). Analysis of their genome and Rubisco protein confirmed the site of the mutation at the rbc locus, and indicated that the mutation had segregated throughout all of the chromosome copies, consequently producing only the bacterial type of the enzyme. In addition, no carboxysome structures could be detected in the new mutant. Successful restoration of the wild-type rbc locus, using vectors bearing the rbc operon flanked by additional sequences at both termini, could only be achieved upon incubating the transformed cells under 5% CO2 in air prior to their transferring to air. The yield of restored transformants was proportionally related to the length of those sequences flanking the rbc operon which participate in the homologous recombination. The Syn6803rbc mutant is amenable for the introduction of in vitro mutagenized rbc genes into the rbc locus, aiming at the genetic modification of the hexadecameric type Rubisco.Abbreviations Cmr chloramphenicol resistance - Kmr kanamycin resistance - HCR high CO2 requirer - Rubisco ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - SSC sodium chloride and sodium citrate - wt wild-type  相似文献   

3.
The photosynthetic light reaction in cyanobacteria constitutes a highly attractive tool for productive biocatalysis, as it can provide redox reactions with high-energy reduction equivalents using sunlight and water as sources of energy and electrons, respectively. Here, we describe the first artificial light-driven redox cascade in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 to convert cyclohexanone to the polymer building block 6-hydroxyhexanoic acid (6-HA). Co-expression of a Baeyer-Villiger monooxygenase (BVMO) and a lactonase, both from Acidovorax sp. CHX100, enabled this two-step conversion with an activity of up to 63.1 ± 1.0 U/gCDW without accumulating inhibitory ε-caprolactone. Thereby, one of the key limitations of biocatalytic reactions, that is, reactant inhibition or toxicity, was overcome. In 2 L stirred-tank-photobioreactors, the process could be stabilized for 48 h, forming 23.50 ± 0.84 mm (3.11 ± 0.12 g/L) 6-HA. The high specificity enabling a product yield (YP/S) of 0.96 ± 0.01 mol/mol and the remarkable biocatalyst-related yield of 3.71 ± 0.21 g6-HA/gCDW illustrate the potential of producing this non-toxic product in a synthetic cascade. The fine-tuning of the energy burden on the catalyst was found to be crucial, which indicates a limitation by the metabolic capacity of the cells possibly being compromised by biocatalysis-related reductant withdrawal. Intriguingly, energy balancing revealed that the biotransformation could tap surplus electrons derived from the photosynthetic light reaction and thereby relieve photosynthetic sink limitation. This study shows the feasibility of light-driven biocatalytic cascade operation in cyanobacteria and highlights respective metabolic limitations and engineering targets to unleash the full potential of photosynthesis.  相似文献   

4.
DNA interstrand cross-links (ICL)-inducing agents such as cisplatin, mitomycin C (MMC) and nitrogen mustards are widely used as potent antitumor drugs. Although ICL repair mechanism is not yet well characterized in mammalian cells, this pathway is thought to involve a sequential action of nucleotide excision repair (NER) and homologous recombination (HR). The importance of unraveling ICL repair pathways is highlighted by the hypersensitivity to ICL-inducing agents in cells of patients with the genetic disease Fanconi anemia (FA) and in cells mutated in the Breast Cancer susceptibility genes BRCA1 and BRCA2. To better characterize the involvement of HR in the sensitivity to ICL-inducing agents, we examined spontaneous and ICL-induced HR in rodent FA-like V-H4 cells. In this report, we show that MMC-hypersensitive V-H4 cells exhibit an increased spontaneous homology-directed repair (HDR) activity compared to the resistant V79 parental cells. Elevated HDR activity results mainly in increased conservative Rad51-dependent recombination, without affecting non-conservative single-strand annealing process (SSA). We also show that HDR activity is enhanced following MMC treatment in parental cells, but not in rodent FA-like V-H4 cells. Moreover, our data indicate that Rad51 foci formation is significantly delayed in these FA-like cells in response to crosslinking agent. These findings provide evidence for an impairment of HR control in V-H4 cells and emphasize the involvement of the FA pathway in HR-mediated repair.  相似文献   

5.
Salt-sensitive mutants of Synechocystis were obtained by random cartridge mutagenesis, and one mutant (mutant 4) was characterized in detail. The salt tolerance of mutant 4 was reduced to about 20% of that of the wild-type. This was caused by a defect in the biosynthetic pathway of the osmoprotective compound glucosylglycerol (GG). Salt-treated cells of mutant 4 accumulated the intermediate glucosylglycerol-phosphate (GG-P). Only low levels of phosphate-free GG were detected. The phosphorylated form of GG was not osmoprotective and seemed to be toxic. In vitro enzyme assays revealed that GG-P-phosphatase activity was completely absent in mutant 4, while GG-P-synthase remained unchanged. The integration site of the aphII cartridge in mutant 4 and the corresponding wild-type region was cloned and sequenced. Mutant 4 was complemented to salt resistance after transformation by the cloned wild-type region. The integration of the cartridge led to a deletion of about 1.1 kb of the chromosomal DNA. This affected two of the identified putative protein coding regions, orfII and stpA. The ORFII protein shows a high degree of similarity to the receiver domain of response regulator proteins. Related sequences were not found for StpA. We assume that in mutant 4, regulatory genes necessary for the process of salt adaptation in Synechocystis are impaired. Received: 12 January 1996 / Accepted: 28 May 1996  相似文献   

6.
Hydrolysis of plant biomass generates a mixture of simple sugars that is particularly rich in glucose and xylose. Fermentation of the released sugars emits CO2 as byproduct due to metabolic inefficiencies. Therefore, the ability of a microbe to simultaneously convert biomass sugars and photosynthetically fix CO2 into target products is very desirable. In this work, the cyanobacterium, Synechocystis 6803, was engineered to grow on xylose in addition to glucose. Both the xylA (xylose isomerase) and xylB (xylulokinase) genes from Escherichia coli were required to confer xylose utilization, but a xylose-specific transporter was not required. Introduction of xylAB into an ethylene-producing strain increased the rate of ethylene production in the presence of xylose. Additionally, introduction of xylAB into a glycogen-synthesis mutant enhanced production of keto acids. Isotopic tracer studies found that nearly half of the carbon in the excreted keto acids was derived from the engineered xylose metabolism, while the remainder was derived from CO2 fixation.  相似文献   

7.
In the complete annotated genome sequences of cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, one can find many putative genes for two-component response regulators that include a helix-turn-helix DNA-binding domain. The mRNA level of one of the putative genes, sll1330, was increased by glucose, especially in the presence of light. We successfully disrupted the sll1330 gene by targeted mutagenesis with a spectinomycin resistance cassette. Deltasll1330 could not grow well under light-activated heterotrophic growth conditions. Analyses of the expression of glycolytic genes revealed that the mRNA levels of five glycolytic genes, that is, glk (sll0593), pfkA (sll1196), fbaA (sll0018), gpmB (slr1124), and pk (sll0587), were decreased, and were regulated by Sll1330 under light and glucose-supplemented conditions. The Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 genome each encodes two isozymes for these five glycolytic genes, suggesting that each of the two isozymes is regulated by Sll1330 at the mRNA level.  相似文献   

8.
As a means to improve carbon uptake in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. strain PCC6803, we engineered strains to contain additional inducible copies of the endogenous bicarbonate transporter BicA, an essential component of the CO2-concentrating mechanism in cyanobacteria. When cultured under atmospheric CO2 pressure, the strain expressing extra BicA transporters (BicA+ strain) grew almost twice as fast and accumulated almost twice as much biomass as the control strain. When enriched with 0.5% or 5% CO2, the BicA+ strain grew slower than the control but still showed a superior biomass production. Introducing a point mutation in the large C-terminal cytosolic domain of the inserted BicA, at a site implicated in allosteric regulation of transport activity, resulted in a strain (BicA+(T485G) strain) that exhibited pronounced cell aggregation and failed to grow at 5% CO2. However, the bicarbonate uptake capacity of the induced BicA+(T485G) was twice higher than for the wild-type strain. Metabolic analyses, including phenotyping by synchrotron-radiation Fourier transform Infrared spectromicroscopy, scanning electron microscopy, and lectin staining, suggest that the excess assimilated carbon in BicA+ and BicA+(T485G) cells was directed into production of saccharide-rich exopolymeric substances. We propose that the increased capacity for CO2 uptake in the BicA+ strain can be capitalized on by re-directing carbon flux from exopolymeric substances to other end products such as fuels or high-value chemicals.  相似文献   

9.
To advance our knowledge of the model cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 we investigated the three-dimensional organization of the cytoplasm using standard transmission electron microscopy and electron tomography. Electron tomography allows a resolution of ~5 nm in all three dimensions, superior to the resolution of most traditional electron microscopy, which is often limited in part by the thickness of the section (70 nm). The thylakoid membrane pairs formed layered sheets that followed the periphery of the cell and converged at various sites near the cytoplasmic membrane. At some of these sites, the margins of thylakoid membranes associated closely along the external surface of rod-like structures termed thylakoid centers, which sometimes traversed nearly the entire periphery of the cell. The thylakoid membranes surrounded the central cytoplasm that contained inclusions such as ribosomes and carboxysomes. Lipid bodies were dispersed throughout the peripheral cytoplasm and often juxtaposed with cytoplasmic and thylakoid membranes suggesting involvement in thylakoid maintenance or biogenesis. Ribosomes were numerous and mainly located throughout the central cytoplasm with some associated with thylakoid and cytoplasmic membranes. Some ribosomes were attached along internal unit-membrane-like sheets located in the central cytoplasm and appeared to be continuous with existing thylakoid membranes. These results present a detailed analysis of the structure of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 using high-resolution bioimaging techniques and will allow future evaluation and comparison with gene-deletion mutants.Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available for this article at and is accessible for authorized users.  相似文献   

10.
The agp gene encoding the ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase is involved in cyanobacterial glycogen synthesis and glucosylglycerol formation. By in vitro DNA recombination technology, a mutant with partial deletion of agp gene in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 was constructed. This mutant could not synthesize glycogen or the osmoprotective substance glucosylglycerol. In the mutant cells grown in the medium containing 0.9 M NaCl for 96 h, no glucosylglycerol was detected and the total amount of sucrose was 29 times of that of in wild-type cells. Furthermore, the agp deletion mutant could tolerate up to 0.9 M salt concentration. Our results suggest that sucrose might act as a similar potent osmoprotectant as glucosylglycerol in cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803.  相似文献   

11.
In the present economy, difficulties to access energy sources are real drawbacks to maintain our current lifestyle. In fact, increasing interests have been gathered around efficient strategies to use energy sources that do not generate high CO2 titers. Thus, science-funding agencies have invested more resources into research on hydrogen among other biofuels as interesting energy vectors. This article reviews present energy challenges and frames it into the present fuel usage landscape. Different strategies for hydrogen production are explained and evaluated. Focus is on biological hydrogen production; fermentation and photon-fuelled hydrogen production are compared. Mathematical models in biology can be used to assess, explore and design production strategies for industrially relevant metabolites, such as biofuels. We assess the diverse construction and uses of genome-scale metabolic models of cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 to efficiently obtain biofuels. This organism has been studied as a potential photon-fuelled production platform for its ability to grow from carbon dioxide, water and photons, on simple culture media. Finally, we review studies that propose production strategies to weigh this organism’s viability as a biofuel production platform. Overall, the work presented in this review unveils the industrial capabilities of cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 to evolve interesting metabolites as a clean biofuel production platform.  相似文献   

12.
A bacteriochlorophyll a biosynthesis mutant of the purple photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus was functionally complemented with a cosmid genomic library from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. The complemented R. capsulatus strain contains a defined mutation in the bchM gene that codes for Mg-protoporphyrin IX methyltransferase, the enzyme which converts Mg-protoporphyrin IX to Mg-protoporphyrin IX methylester using S-adenosyl-l-methionine as a cofactor. Since chlorophyll biosynthesis also requires the same methylation reaction, the Synechocystis genome should similarly code for a Mg-protoporphyrin IX methyltransferase. Sequence analysis of the complementing Synechocystis cosmid indicates that it contains an open reading frame exhibiting 29% sequence identity to BchM. In addition, expression of the Synechocystis gene in the R. capsulatus bchM mutant via the strong R. capsulatus puc promoter was shown to support nearly wild-type levels of bacteriochlorophyll a synthesis. To our knowledge, the Synechocystis sequence thus represents the first chlorophyll biosynthesis gene homolog of bchM. The complementing Synechocystis cosmid was also shown to code for a gene product that is a member of a highly conserved family of RNA binding proteins, the function of which in cyanobacteria remains undetermined.  相似文献   

13.
Protein lysine methylation is a prevalent post-translational modification (PTM) and plays critical roles in all domains of life. However, its extent and function in photosynthetic organisms are still largely unknown. Cyanobacteria are a large group of prokaryotes that carry out oxygenic photosynthesis and are applied extensively in studies of photosynthetic mechanisms and environmental adaptation. Here we integrated propionylation of monomethylated proteins, enrichment of the modified peptides, and mass spectrometry (MS) analysis to identify monomethylated proteins in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 (Synechocystis). Overall, we identified 376 monomethylation sites in 270 proteins, with numerous monomethylated proteins participating in photosynthesis and carbon metabolism. We subsequently demonstrated that CpcM, a previously identified asparagine methyltransferase in Synechocystis, could catalyze lysine monomethylation of the potential aspartate aminotransferase Sll0480 both in vivo and in vitro and regulate the enzyme activity of Sll0480. The loss of CpcM led to decreases in the maximum quantum yield in primary photosystem II (PSII) and the efficiency of energy transfer during the photosynthetic reaction in Synechocystis. We report the first lysine monomethylome in a photosynthetic organism and present a critical database for functional analyses of monomethylation in cyanobacteria. The large number of monomethylated proteins and the identification of CpcM as the lysine methyltransferase in cyanobacteria suggest that reversible methylation may influence the metabolic process and photosynthesis in both cyanobacteria and plants.  相似文献   

14.
The phycobilisome (PBS) is a giant highly-structured pigment-protein antenna of cyanobacteria and red algae. PBS is composed of the phycobiliproteins and several linker polypeptides. The large core-membrane linker protein (LCM or ApcE) influences many features and functions of PBS and consists of several domains including the chromophorylated PB-domain. Being homologous to the phycobiliprotein α-subunits this domain includes a so-called PB-loop insertion whose functions are still unknown. We have created the photoautotrophic mutant strain of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 with lacking PB-loop. Using various spectral techniques we have demonstrated that this mutation does not destroy the PBS integrity and the internal PBS excitation energy transfer pathways. At the same time, the deletion of the PB-loop leads to the decrease of connectivity between the PBS and thylakoid membrane and to the compensatory increase of the relative photosystem II content. Mutation provokes the violation of the thylakoid membranes arrangement, the inability to perform state transitions, and diminishing of the OCP-dependent non-photochemical PBS quenching. In essence, even such a minute mutation of the PBS polypeptide component, like the PB-loop deletion, becomes important for the concerted function of the photosynthetic apparatus.  相似文献   

15.
The plasma membrane of a cyanobacterial cell is crucial as barrier against the outer medium. It is also an energy-transducing membrane as well as essential for biogenesis of cyanobacterial photosystems and the endo-membrane system. Previously we have identified 57 different proteins in the plasma membrane of control cells from Synechocystis sp. strain PCC6803. In the present work, proteomic screening of salt-stress proteins in the plasma membrane resulted in identification of 109 proteins corresponding to 66 different gene products. Differential and quantitative analyses of 2-DE profiles of plasma membranes isolated from both control and salt-acclimated cells revealed that twenty proteins were enhanced/induced and five reduced during salt stress. More than half of the enhanced/induced proteins were periplasmic binding proteins of ABC-transporters or hypothetical proteins. Proteins that exhibited the highest enhancement during salt stress include FutA1 (Slr1295) and Vipp1 (Sll0617), which have been suggested to be involved in protection of photosystem II under iron deficiency and in thylakoid membrane formation, respectively. Other salt-stress proteins were regulatory proteins such as PII protein, LrtA, and a protein that belongs to CheY subfamily. The physiological significance of the identified salt-stress proteins in the plasma membrane is discussed integrating our current knowledge on cyanobacterial stress physiology.  相似文献   

16.
Summary. Among prokaryotes, cyanobacteria are unique in having highly differentiated internal membrane systems. Like other Gram-negative bacteria, cyanobacteria such as Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 have a cell envelope consisting of a plasma membrane, peptidoglycan layer, and outer membrane. In addition, these organisms have an internal system of thylakoid membranes where the electron transfer reactions of photosynthesis and respiration occur. A long-standing controversy concerning the cellular ultrastructures of these organisms has been whether the thylakoid membranes exist inside the cell as separate compartments, or if they have physical continuity with the plasma membrane. Advances in cellular preservation protocols as well as in image acquisition and manipulation techniques have facilitated a new examination of this topic. We have used a combination of electron microscopy techniques, including freeze-etched as well as freeze-substituted preparations, in conjunction with computer-aided image processing to generate highly detailed images of the membrane systems in Synechocystis cells. We show that the thylakoid membranes are in fact physically discontinuous from the plasma membrane in this cyanobacterium. Thylakoid membranes in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 thus represent bona fide intracellular organelles, the first example of such compartments in prokaryotic cells. Supplementary material to this paper is available in electronic form at Correspondence and reprints: Department of Biology, CB1137, Washington University, St. Louis, MO 63130, U.S.A.  相似文献   

17.
Protein synthesis of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis spec. PCC 6803 decreases after a 684 mM NaCl salt shock. Qualitative changes were observed during the shock and the subsequent adaptation process using one-dimensional polyacrylamide electrophoresis. Proteins of apparent molecular masses of 13.0, 14.2, 16.6, 20.0, 21.0, 23.0, 33.0, 47.0, 52.0, 65.0 and 72.0 kDa are synthesized at enhanced rates after salt stress. The proteins of 14.2, 21.1 and 52.0 kDa are transiently induced during the first hours of the adaptation phase, while the other proteins are also synthesized at enhanced rates in salt-adapted cells. The proteins of 14.2, 23.0, 33.0 and 65.0 kDa are also induced by heat shock (43°C). Heat shock proteins of about 88.0, 75.0, 58.0, 17.5 and 13.8 kDa, in contrast, are induced by heat shock but not by salt. Two-dimensional polyacrylamide electrophoresis showed that the induced salt and heat shock proteins in some cases consisted of isoforms of different isoelectric points.Abbreviations IP isoelectric point - PAGE polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - PMSF phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride  相似文献   

18.
Cyanobacterial thylakoid membranes are known to host photosynthetic and respiratory complexes. This hampers a straight forward interpretation of the highly dynamic fluorescence originating from photosynthetic units. The present study focuses on dark-to-light transitions in whole cells of a PSI-deficient mutant of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. The time-dependent cellular fluorescence spectrum has been measured, while having previously exposed the cells to different conditions that affect respiratory activity. The analysis method used allows the detected signal to be decomposed in a few components that are then assigned to functional emitting species. Additionally, we have worked out a minimal mathematical model consisting of sensible postulated species to interpret the recorded data. We conclude that the following two functional complexes play a major role: a phycobilisome antenna complex coupled to a PSII dimer with either two or no closed reaction centers. Crucially, we present evidence for an additional species capable of strongly quenching fluorescence, whose formation requires the presence of oxygen.  相似文献   

19.
目的采用基因敲除技术构建了卡介苗embC基因缺失株。方法从卡介苗基因组中扩增出embC基因,定向插入自杀质粒p2NIL中,切除embC基因中约1000bp片段使其失活,再定向插入标记片段,筛选鉴定阳性克隆,电穿孔转入卡介苗,筛选重组菌株。结果PCR和酶切鉴定证明构建成功用于基因打靶的置换型自杀质粒,并筛选成功获得重组卡介苗。结论获得了卡介苗embC基因敲除株,为进一步研究对卡介苗免疫活性的影响奠定了基础。  相似文献   

20.
We have isolated a light-sensitive mutant (BRLS) of the photosynthetic cyanobacterium Synechocystis 6803 (S. 6803) that does not survive exposure to bright light: 70% of BRLS cells die upon exposure to light of greater than 3,000 lux for 2 h. A complementing DNA fragment from wild-type cells and the corresponding DNA from the BRLS cells have been cloned and sequenced. An open reading frame is found to encode phosphoribulokinase, a key enzyme in the enzyme system for photosynthetic carbon reduction (ES-PCR). The deduced peptide sequence of this enzyme is highly homologous to eukaryotic phosphoribulokinases but is not similar to known prokaryotic phosphoribulokinases. The mutation responsible for the phenotype of BRLS is a single nucleotide change that results in substitution of phenylalanine for Ser-222 in the phosphoribulokinase. The catalytic activity and the apparent affinity for ATP of the mutated kinase are about one-tenth and one-seventh those of the wild-type kinase, respectively. Furthermore, the mutated kinase is selectively degraded in BRLS cells in bright light. Degradation of the mutated kinase and cell death in bright light can be suppressed by inhibiting photosynthetic electron flow (PS-EF) with 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. The data indicate that PS-EF is not impeded by an impaired ES-PCR although the ES-PCR activity is controlled by the rate of PS-EF. Continued PS-EF in the absence of the normal substrates for carbon reduction appears to result in damage to cellular components essential for life or in the generation of lethal components.  相似文献   

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