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1.
Azotobacter vinelandii growing in oxygen controlled chemostat culture was subjected to sudden increases of ambient oxygen concentrations (oxygen stress) after adaptation to different oxygen concentrations adjustable with air (100% air saturation corresponds to 225±14 M O2). Inactivations of cellular nitrogenase during stress (switch off) as well as after release of stress (switch on) were evaluated in vivo as depending on stress duration and stress height (pO2). Switch off was at its final extent within 1 min of stress. The extent of switch off, however, increased with stress height and was complete at pO2 between 8–10% air saturation irrespective of different oxygen concentrations the organisms were adapted to before stress, indicating that switch off is adaptable. Inactivation of nitrogenase measurable after switch on represents irreversible loss of activity. Irreversible inactivation was at its characteristic level within less than 3 min of stess and at a pO2 of less than 1% air saturation. The level of irreversible inactivation increased linearly with the oxygen concentration the organisms were adapted to before stress. Thus adaptation of cells to increased oxygen concentrations did not prevent increased susceptibility of nitrogenase to irreversible inhibition during oxygen stress. The fast response of irreversible inactivation at low stress heights suggests that it takes place already during stress. Thus switch off comprised both a reversible and an irreversible phase. The data showed that reversible inactivation of nitrogenase was less susceptible to oxygen stress than irreversible inactivation. A basic pre-requisite of the hypothesis of respiratory protection of nitrogenase, i.e. the proposed relationship between respiratory activities and the protection of nitrogenase from irreversible inhibition by oxygen, was not supported by the results of this report.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Using a root nodule cuvette and a continuous flow gas exchange system, we simultaneously measured the rates of carbon dioxide evolution, oxygen uptake and acetylene reduction by nodules ofAlnus rubra. This system allowed us to measure the respiration rates of single nodules and to determine the effects of oxygen concentration and temperature on the energy cost of nitrogen fixation. Energy cost was virtually unchanged (2.8–3.5 moles of carbon dioxide or oxygen per mole of ethylene) from 16 to 26°C (pO2=20 kPa) while respiration and nitrogenase activity were highly temperature dependent. At temperatures below 16°C, nitrogenase activity decreased more than did respiration and as a result, energy cost rose sharply. Acetylene reduction ceased below 8°C. Inhibition of nitrogenase activity at low temperatures was rapidly reversed upon return to higher temperatures. At high temperatures (above 30°C) nitrogenase activity declined irreversibly, while respiration and energy cost increased.Energy cost was nearly unchanged at oxygen partial pressures of 5 to 20 kPa (temperature of 20°C). Respiration and nitrogenase activity were strongly correlated with oxygen tension. Below 5 kPa, acetylene reduction and oxygen uptake decreased sharply while production of carbon dioxide increased, indicating fermentation. Fermentation alone was unable to support nitrogenase activity. Acetylene reduction was independent of oxygen concentration from 15 to 30 kPa. Nitrogenase activity decreased and energy cost rose above 30 kPa until nearly complete inactivation of nitrogenase at 70–80 kPa. Activity declined gradually, such that acetylene reduction at a constant oxygen concentration was stable, but showed further inactivation when oxygen concentration was once again increased. Alder nodules appear to consist of a large number of compartments that differ in the degree to which nitrogenase is protected from excess oxygen.Supported by United States Department of Agriculture Grant 78-59-2252-0-1-005-1  相似文献   

3.
Azospirillum brasilense and Arthrobacter giacomelloi were grown together in batch culture under different oxygen pressures. The response to oxygen of growth, nitrogenase activity and respiration rate was determined. The two microorganisms were found to be able to coexist all over the range of partial oxygen pressures examined, that is from 0.004–0.20 bar. Nitrogenase activity by mixed culture of A. brasilense and A. giacomelloi always appeared higher than that of A. brasilense pure culture. Low respiratory activity at partial oxygen pressures higher than 0.02 bar by both pure and mixed cultures seemed not to account for the high nitrogenase activity and improved oxygen tolerance of the mixed culture.Abbreviations pO2 partial oxygen pressure  相似文献   

4.
Nutritional factors controlling derepression of nitrogenase activity in Parasponia-Rhizobium strain ANU 289 were studied in stationary and agitated liquid cultures. Altering type and/or concentrations of the constituents of the derepression medium in respect of carbon and nitrogen sources influenced both derepression kinetics as well as the maximal level of activity. Hexose sugars and disaccharides stimulated nitrogenase activity three to six-fold compared to pentose sugars. Activity was also modulated by combining sugars with some organic acids such as succinate, fumarate and pyruvate but not with others (e.g. -ketoglutarate, malate, malonate). Of the range of nitrogen sources tested, either casamino acids (at 0.05%, but not at 0.1%), glutamate, proline or to a lesser extent histidine (each at 5 mM N) supported significant derepression of nitrogenase activity. Notably glutamine, urea, alanine, ammonium sulfate, nitrate, nitrite (each at 5 mM N) and yeast extract (0.05%) failed to derepress or support nitrogenase activity. Ammonium (5 mM) abolished established nitrogenase activity of rapidly agitated cultures within 15 h after addition. This inhibitory effect was alleviated by the addition of methionine sulfoximime (10 mM). Thus, in view of strong glutamine effects, ammonium repression appears to be mediated by glutamine and not by ammonium itself.Abbreviations HEPES [4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazine-ethane; sulfonic acid] - MOPS [3-(N-morpholino) propane sulphonic acid] - MSX Methionine sulfoximine  相似文献   

5.
Specific nitrogenase activity inAzospirillum brasilense ATCC 29145 in surface cultures under air is enhanced from about 50 nmol C2H4·mg protein-1·h-1 to 400 nmol C2H4 by the addition of 1 mM phenol. 0.5 and 2 mM phenol added increase the rate 5-fold and 4-fold. This enhancement effect is observed only between 2 and 3 days after inoculation, with only a small reduction of the growth of the cells by the phenol added. In surface cultures under 1% O2, nitrogenase activity is slightly reduced by the addition of 1–0.01 mM phenol. Utilization of succinate is enhanced during the period of maximum enhancement of nitrogenase activity by 60% by addition of 1 mM phenol. The cells did not produce14CO2 from [U-14C] phenol, neither in surface cultures nor in liquid cultures and less than 0.1% of the phenol was incorporated into the cells. A smaller but significant enhancement of nitrogenase activity by about 100% in surface cultures under air was found withKlebsiella pneumoniae K 11 after addition of 1 mM phenol. However, inRhizobium japonicum 61-A-101 all phenol concentrations above 0.01 mM reduced nitrogenase activity. With 1 mM phenol added activity was reduced to less than 10% with no effect on the growth in the same cultivation system. With thisRhizobium japonicum strain significant quantities of phenol (25 mol in 24 h by 2·1012 cells) were metabolized to14CO2, with phenol as sole carbon source. WithAzospirillum brasilense in liquid culture under 1% and 2% O2 in the gas phase, no enhancement of nitrogenase activity by phenol was noticed.  相似文献   

6.
Superoxide dismutase and catalase activities were studied in Azotobacter vinelandii grown diazotrophically at different ambient oxygen concentrations in continuous culture. Activities were expressed either as specific activity or activity per cell. Specific superoxide dismutase activity increased by a factor of 1.6 with increasing oxygen concentration from about 1% to 90% air saturation of the growth medium whereas specific catalase activity increased only slightly, if at all. Since cell volumes increased in parallel to increases in the oxygen concentration cellular superoxide dismutase activities increased by a factor of 4.3 while cellular catalase activities increased by a factor of 3.3. Under all conditions only the Fe-containing form of superoxide dismutase was detected. The possible function of these enzymes in the protection nitrogenase from oxygen damage is discussed.Abbreviation SOD superoxide dismutase  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Birgitta Bergman 《Planta》1981,152(4):302-306
Raising the pO2 reduced nitrogenase activity (C2H2 reduction) of Anabaena cylindrica for both glyoxylate-treated (5 mM) and untreated cells. The stimulation caused by glyoxylate, however, increased with increases of pO2 from 2 to 99 kPa. As the pO2 increased the net CO2 fixation was lowered (Warburg effect) while the CO2 compensation point increased. Glyoxylate partly relieved this sensitivity of net photosynthesis to oxygen and reduced the compensation point considerably. The cells used were preincubated in the dark to exhaust photosynthetic pools. A more pronounced reduction in sensitivity of nitrogenase to oxygen for glyoxylate-treated cells was evident when a preincubation in air with reduced pCO2 (13 l l-1) was used. This was, however, not evident until after a 10-h incubation in air. Before this point 2 kPa O2 sustained the highest nitrogenase activity. Addition of 0.5 and 5 mM of HCO 3 - to Anabaena cultures preincubated at low CO2 levels (29 l l-1) abolished the stimulatory effect of glyoxylate on the nitrogenase. Thus, the results sustain the suggestion that glyoxylate may act as an inhibitor of photorespiratory activities in cyanobacteria and can be used as a means of increasing their nitrogen and CO2 fixation capacities.Abbreviation RuBP ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate  相似文献   

9.
The marine purple nonsulfur bacterium, Rhodopseudomonas sulfidophila, strain W4, was capable of photosynthetic growth on dinitrogen and malate. Higher growth rates were observed when either glutamate or ammonia replaced dinitrogen as nitrogen source and when bicarbonate was omitted from the culture medium. Although ammonia was released from cells growing on malate and N2, no nitrogenase activity could be detected unless -ketoglutarate was added to the culture medium. No nitrogenase activity was found in cultures grown in the presence of NH 4 + . In cultures grown on glutamate as nitrogen source, nitrogenase and hydrogenase activities were found to be 5.4 nmol C2H2 reduced · min-1 · mg-1 dry weight and 50 nmol methylene blue reduced · min-1 · mg-1 dry weight respectively. Such activities are significantly lower than those observed for other members of the Rhodospirillaceae e.g. Rhodopseudomonas capsulata. However, the hydrogenase activity would be sufficient to recycle all H2 produced by nitrogenase. It was indeed observed that growing cells did not evolve molecular hydrogen during photoheterotrophic growth and that H2 stimulated nitrogenase activity in resting cells of R. sulfidophila. The nitrogenase from this bacterium proved to be extremely sensitive to low concentrations of oxygen, half-inhibition occurring at between 1–1.5% O2 in the gas phase, depending on the bacterial concentration. Light was essential for nitrogenase activity. No activity was found during growth in the dark under extremely low oxygen concentrations (1–2% O2), which are still sufficient to support good growth. Resting cell suspensions prepared from such cultures were unable to reduce acetylene upon illumination. Optimum nitrogenase activities were broadly defined over the temperature range, 30–38°C, and between pH 6.9 and 8.0. The results are discussed in comparison with the non-marine purple nonsulfur bacterium, R. capsulata, which somewhat resembles R. sulfidophila.  相似文献   

10.
Acetobacter diazotrophicus is a nitrogen-fixing bacterium that grows inside sugar cane plant tissue where the sucrose concentration is approximately 10%. The influence of high sugar content on nitrogenase was measured in the presence of oxygen and of nitrogen added in the form of ammonium and amino acids. In all parameters analyzed, 10% sucrose protected nitrogenase against inhibition by oxygen, ammonium, some amino acids, and also to some extent by salt stress. The oxygen concentration at which inhibition occurred increased from 2 kPa in 1% glucose or gluconic acid, to 4 kPa (0.4 atm) in 10% sucrose. Nitrogenase activity was partially inhibited by increased ammonium levels (2.0, 5.0, and 10.0 mM) in the presence of 1% sucrose, but the cells maintained their nitrogenase activity at 10% sucrose. This could be explained by the slow ammonium assimilation by the cells in the presence of high sucrose concentrations, i.e., independent of its concentration between 2 and 10 mM, the assimilation of ammonium was reduced to one-third in cells grown with 10% sucrose. Some amino acids were also tested in the presence of 1 and 10% sucrose. Cells grown in 1% sucrose had their nitrogenase activity reduced by 50–98% in the presence of glutamic acid, glutamine, alanine, asparagine, or threonine, whereas with 10% sucrose, nitrogenase activity was increased by glutamic acid and was reduced by only 61–73% by the other amino acids. The effect of NaCl concentrations (0.0, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, or 1.0%) was also studied at the two concentrations of sucrose. Nitrogenase activity and growth of A. diazotrophicus, which was visualized by the pellicle formation in semi-solid medium, showed sensitivity even to low NaCl concentrations, which was somewhat relieved at the higher sucrose level. These observations indicate different osmotolerance mechanisms for sucrose and salt. Received: 23 June 1998 / Accepted: 6 October 1998  相似文献   

11.
A 7.1 kb EcoRI fragment from Azospirillum brasilense, that hybridized with a probe carrying the ntrBC genes from Bradyrhizobium japonicum, was cloned. The nucleotide sequence of a 3.8 kb subfragment was established. This led to the identification of two open reading frames, encoding polypeptides of 401 and 481 amino acids, that were similar to NtrB and NtrC, respectively. A broad host range plasmid containing the putative Azospirillum ntrC gene was shown to restore nitrogen fixation under free-living conditions to a ntrC-Tn5 mutant of Azorhizobium caulinodans. Several Tn5 insertion mutants were isolated in the ntrBC coding region in A. brasilense. These mutants were prototrophic and Nif+. However, their nitrogenase activity was slightly lower than in the wild type and they were unable to grow on nitrate as sole nitrogen source. Under microaerobiosis and in the absence of ammonia, a nifA-lacZ fusion was expressed in the mutants at about 60% of the level in the wild type. In the presence of ammonia, the fusion was similarly expressed (60% of the maximum) both in the wild type and mutants. Addition of ammonia to a nitrogen-fixing culture of ntrBC mutants did not abolish nitrogenase activity, in contrast with the wild type. It thus appears that in Azospirillum the ntrBC genes are not essential for nitrogen fixation, although NtrC controls nifA expression to some extent. They are, however, required for the switch-off of nitrogenase activity.  相似文献   

12.
Growth and nitrogenase activity (acetylene reduction) of Azotobacter vinelandii in chemically defined N-free media were studied in the presence of p-hydroxybenzoic, vanillic, p-coumaric, and ferulic acids at concentrations from 0.01 to 1% (w/v). Growth and nitrogenase activity were only detected when the microorganism was cultured on p-hydroxybenzoic acid either as sole carbon source or mixed with other phenolic acids, suggesting that p-hydroxybenzoic acid could be utilized as a carbon source by A. vinelandii for growing under certain environmental conditions.  相似文献   

13.
The kinetics of asymbiotic nitrogenase activity in three strains of the actinomycete Frankia were studied. Decay rates for enzyme activity were determined by adding chloramphenicol to active acetylene-reducing cells and measuring the time required for all activity to cease. Synthesis rates were measured by bubbling oxygen through actively-reducing cells (which totally destroyed all activity) and then measuring the time required for activity to return to normal. Decay rates (t 1/2) for these three strains were approximately 30 to 40 min. Synthesis rates were slower and initial nitrogenase activities were recorded about 110 min (DDB 011610) or 210 min (DDB 020210 and WgCc1.17) after return to air-equilibrated cultures. Frankia strain WgCc1.17 showed a greater sensitivity to oxygen and nitrogenase activity was totally lost when cells were bubbled only with atmospheric concentrations of oxygen. The results presented here indicate that nitrogenase activity turnover time is relatively rapid, on the order of minutes rather than hours or days. However, regulation of nitrogenase activity will differ from one strain to another and asmmbiotic characterization will be useful for understanding nitrogenase regulation in the bacterial-plant symbiosis.Contribution no. 879 from the Battelle-Kettering Laboratory  相似文献   

14.
Azotobacter vinelandii was grown at constant growth rate in a chemostat with different molar ratios of sucrose to ammonium (C/N) in the influent media. Both compounds were consumed at essentially the same ratios as were present in the influent media. At low (C/N)-ratios, the cultures were ammonium-limited. At increased (C/N)-ratio ammonium-assimilating cultures additionally began to fix dinitrogen. The (C/N)-ratio at which nitrogenase activity became measurable, increased when the ambient oxygen concentration was increased. Immunoblotting revealed the appearance of nitrogenase proteins when the activity became detectable. Nitrogenase activity as determined either by acetylene reduction or by total nitrogen fixation gave constant relative activities of 1:3.8 (mol of N2 fixed per mol of acetylene reduced) under all sets of conditions used in this investigation. In spite of the oxygen dependent variation of the (C/N)-ratio, nitrogenase became active when the ammonium supply was less than about 14 nmol of ammonium per g of protein. This suggests that oxygen was not directly involved in the onset of dinitrogen fixation.  相似文献   

15.
Incubation of Azotobacter chroococcum in the presence of micromolar concentrations of MnCl2, but not MgCl2, prevented nitrogenase activity from NH 4 + inhibition. Mg(II), at a 100-fold concentration with respect to Mn(II), counteracted the protective effect of Mn(II) on nitrogenase activity. When Mn(II) was added to cells that had been given NH4Cl, stopping of NH 4 + uptake and recovery of nitrogenase activity took place, and a raise of NH 4 + concentration in medium developed. Furthermore, incubation of A. chroococcum cells with 20 M Mn(II) under air, but not under an argon: oxygen (79%:21%) gas mixture, resulted in NH 4 + excretion to the external medium. The Mn(II)-mediated uncoupling of nitrogen fixation from ammonium assimilation leads us to conclude that Mn(II) may act as a physiological inhibitor of glutamine synthetase.Abbreviations Hepes N-2-Hydroxyethylpiperazine-N-ethanesulfonic acid - Mops 3-(N-Morpholino)propanesulfonic acid  相似文献   

16.
Oxygen is an important regulatory factor of nitrogenase induced in a unicellular cyanobacterium, Synechocystis BO 8402, during nitrogen starvation. Synthesis of the enzyme is limited by the efficiency of the cells to remove oxygen by respiration, supported by hydrogenases and, in the light, by inhibition of photosynthesis. With a polyclonal antibody against dinitrogenase reductase (the Fe protein of nitrogenase) a single polypeptide is detected, indicative of an active dimeric enzyme in dense cell suspensions. Inhibition of nitrogenase by addition of oxygen is accompanied by the appearance of a second polypeptide of the Fe protein having a 1.5 kDa higher molecular weight. This disappears upon removal of oxygen from the gas phase while nitrogenase activity is restored. No protein synthesis is required indicating that a fraction of the existing polypeptides is reversibly modified in response to oxygen. After induction of nitrogenase activity in dilute culture suspensions, both forms of the Fe-protein are found in variable amounts possibly due to oxygen contamination during the experiment.Abbreviations CAM chloramphenicol - Chl chlorophyll a - CHO carbohydrates - DCMU 3,4-dichlorophenyl-1,1-dimethylurea (diuron) - kDa kilodalton - SDS sodium dodecylsulphate  相似文献   

17.
Nitrogenase activity in Rhodopseudomonas palustris is subject to a rapid switch-off in response to exogenous ammonia. When cells were grown on limiting nitrogen and eventually became nitrogen deficient, nitrogenase synthesis was fully derepressed but the enzyme was insensitive to ammonia. The transformation of ammonia-sensitive to ammonia-insensitive cells was a slow, but fully reversible process. The switch-off effect in ammonia-sensitive cells paralleled changes in the adenylylation state of glutamine synthetase. Ammonia-insensitive cells, however, showed similar changes in glutamine synthetase activity although nitrogenase activity was unaffected. We conclude that nitrogenase regulation and adenylylation of glutamine synthetase are independent processes, at least under conditions of nitrogen deficiency.  相似文献   

18.
Nitrogenase (=acetylene-reducing activity) was followed during photoautotrophic growth of Anabaena variabilis (ATCC 29413). When cell density increased during growth, (1) inhibition of light-dependent activity by DCMU, an inhibitor of photosynthesis, increased, and (2) nitrogenase activity in the dark decreased. Addition of fructose stabilized dark activity and alleviated the DCMU effect in cultures of high cell density.The resistance of nitrogenase towards oxygen inactivation decreased after transfer of autotrophically grown cells into the dark at subsequent stages of increasing culture density. The inactivation was prevented by addition of fructose. Recovery of acetylene-reducing activity in the light, and in the dark with fructose present, was suppressed by ammonia or chloramphenicol. In the light, also DCMU abolished recovery.To prove whether the observed effects were related to a lack of photosynthetic storage products, glycogen of filaments was extracted and assayed enzymatically. The glycogen content of cells was highest 10 h after inoculation, while light-dependent nitrogenase activity was at its maximum about 24 h after inoculation. Glycogen decreased markedly as growth proceeded and dropped sharply when the cells were transferred to darkness. Thus, when C-supply (by photosynthesis or added fructose) was not effective, the glycogen content of filaments determined the activity of nitrogenase and its stability against oxygen. In cells lacking glycogen, nitrogenase activity recovered only when carbohydrates were supplied by exogenously added fructose or by photosynthesis.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll a - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea  相似文献   

19.
Acetylene reduction, deuterium uptake and hydrogen evolution were followed in in-vivo cultures of Azospirillum brasilense, strain Sp 7, by a direct mass-spectrometric kinetic method. Although oxygen was needed for nitrogenase functioning, the enzyme was inactivated by a fairly low oxygen concentration in the culture and an equilibrium had to be found between the rate of oxygen diffusion and bacterial respiration. A nitrogenase-mediated hydrogen evolution was observed only in the presence of carbon monoxide inhibiting the uptake hydrogenase activity which normally recycles all the hydrogen produced. However, under anaerobic conditions and in the presence of deuterium, a bidirectional hydrogenase activity was observed, consisting in D2 uptake and in H2 and HD evolution. In contrast to the nitrogenase-mediated H2 production, this anaerobic H2 and HD evolution was insensitive to the presence of acetylene and was partly inhibited by carbon monoxide. It was moreover relatively unaffected by the deuterium partial pressure. These results suggest that the anaerobic H2 and HD evolution can be ascribed to a reverse hydrogenase activity under conditions where D2 is saturating the uptake process and scavenging the electron acceptors. Although the activities of both nitrogenase and hydrogenase were thus clearly differentiated, a close relationship was found between their respective functioning conditions.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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