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1.
The complete genome of the unicellular motile cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 harbors seven putative genes for a subfamily Pkn2 of the eukaryotic-type (or "Hanks-type") protein kinase. Previously, SpkA and SpkB were shown to have protein kinase activity and to be required for cell motility. Here, the other five genes were examined. These genes, except for spkG (slr0152), were successfully expressed in Escherichia coli. Eukaryotic-type protein kinase activity of the expressed SpkC (Slr0599), SpkD (S110776) and SpkF (Slr1225) was demonstrated as autophosphorylation and phosphorylation of the general substrate proteins. SpkE (Slr1443) did not show any activity, a finding consistent with its lack of several key amino acid residues in its kinase motif. Gene-disrupted mutants showed no discernible defect in phenotype except that spkD was apparently essential for survival. 相似文献
2.
Signal transduction protein PII phosphatase PphA is required for light-dependent control of nitrate utilization in synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 下载免费PDF全文
Signal transduction protein P(II) is dephosphorylated in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 by protein phosphatase PphA. To determine the impact of PphA-mediated P(II) dephosphorylation on physiology, the phenotype of a PphA-deficient mutant was analyzed. Mutants lacking either PphA or P(II) were impaired in efficient utilization of nitrate as the nitrogen source. Under conditions of limiting photosystem I (PSI)-reduced ferredoxin, excess reduction of nitrate along with impaired reduction of nitrite occurred in P(II) signaling mutants, resulting in excretion of nitrite to the medium. This effect could be reversed by increasing the level of PSI-reduced ferredoxin. We present evidence that nonphosphorylated P(II) controls the utilization of nitrate in response to low light intensity by tuning down nitrate uptake to meet the actual reduction capacity. This control mechanism can be bypassed by exposing cells to excess levels of nitrate. Uncontrolled nitrate uptake leads to light-dependent nitrite excretion even in wild-type cells, confirming that nitrate uptake controls nitrate utilization in response to limiting photon flux densities. 相似文献
3.
Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 is a unicellular motile cyanobacterium that shows positive and negative phototaxis on agar plates under lateral illumination. Recent studies on the molecular mechanisms of the phototactic motility of Synechocystis have revealed that a number of genes are responsible for its pilus-dependent motility and phototaxis. Here we describe what is known about these genes. We also discuss the novel spectral properties of the phytochrome-like photoreceptor PixJ1 in Synechocystis, that is essential for positive phototaxis and which has revealed the existence of a new group of chromophore-binding proteins in cyanobacteria. 相似文献
4.
The katG gene coding for the only catalase-peroxidase in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 was deleted in this organism. Although the rate of H2O2 decomposition was about 30 times lower in the DeltakatG mutant than in the wild type, the strain had a normal phenotype and its doubling time as well as its resistance to H2O2 and methyl viologen were indistinguishable from those of the wild type. The residual H2O2-scavenging capacity was more than sufficient to deal with the rate of H2O2 production by the cell, estimated to be less than 1% of the maximum rate of photosynthetic electron transport in vivo. We propose that catalase-peroxidase has a protective role against environmental H2O2 generated by algae or bacteria in the ecosystem (for example, in mats). This protective role is most apparent at a high cell density of the cyanobacterium. The residual H2O2-scavenging activity in the DeltakatG mutant was a light-dependent peroxidase activity. However, neither glutathione peroxidase nor ascorbate peroxidase accounted for a significant part of this H2O2-scavenging activity. When a small thiol such as dithiothreitol was added to the medium, the rate of H2O2 decomposition in the DeltakatG mutant increased more than 10-fold, indicating that a thiol-specific peroxidase, for which thioredoxin may be the physiological electron donor, is present. Oxidized thioredoxin is likely to be reduced again by photosynthetic electron transport. Therefore, under laboratory conditions, there are only two enzymatic mechanisms for H2O2 decomposition present in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803. One is catalyzed by a catalase-peroxidase, and the other is catalyzed by thiol-specific peroxidase. 相似文献
5.
Serine/threonine protein kinase SpkA in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 is a regulator of expression of three putative pilA operons, formation of thick pili, and cell motility 下载免费PDF全文
Panichkin VB Arakawa-Kobayashi S Kanaseki T Suzuki I Los DA Shestakov SV Murata N 《Journal of bacteriology》2006,188(21):7696-7699
Previous studies showed that a Ser/Thr protein kinase, SpkA, in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 is involved in cell motility. The present study, in which DNA microarray analysis and electron microscopy were used, demonstrated that SpkA regulates the expression of putative pilA9-pilA10-pilA11-slr2018, pilA5-pilA6, and pilA1-pilA2 operons and is essential for the formation of thick pili. 相似文献
6.
Scott M McCollum C Vasil'ev S Crozier C Espie GS Krol M Huner NP Bruce D 《Biochemistry》2006,45(29):8952-8958
Exposure to blue light has previously been shown to induce the reversible quenching of fluorescence in cyanobacteria, indicative of a photoprotective mechanism responsible for the down regulation of photosynthesis. We have investigated the molecular mechanism behind fluorescence quenching by characterizing changes in excitation energy transfer through the phycobilin pigments of the phycobilisome to chlorophyll with steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence excitation and emission spectroscopy. Quenching was investigated in both a photosystem II-less mutant, and DCMU-poisoned wild-type Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. The action spectra for blue-light-induced quenching was identical in both cell types and was dominated by a band in the blue region, peaking at 480 nm. Fluorescence quenching and its dark recovery was inhibited by the protein cross-linking agent glutaraldehyde, which could maintain cells in either the quenched or the unquenched state. We found that high phosphate concentrations that inhibit phycobilisome mobility and the regulation of energy transfer by the light-state transition did not affect blue-light-induced fluorescence quenching. Both room temperature and 77 K fluorescence emission spectra revealed that fluorescence quenching was associated with phycobilin emission. Quenching was characterized by a decrease in the emission of allophycocyanin and long wavelength phycobilisome terminal emitters relative to that of phycocyanin. A global analysis of the room-temperature fluorescence decay kinetics revealed that phycocyanin and photosystem I decay components were unaffected by quenching, whereas the decay components originating from allophycocyanin and phycobilisome terminal emitters were altered. Our data support a regulatory mechanism involving a protein conformational change and/or change in protein-protein interaction which quenches excitation energy at the core of the phycobilisome. 相似文献
7.
On the basis of the genome sequence, the unicellular motile cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 harbors seven putative genes for eukaryotic-type protein kinase belonging to Pkn2 subfamily ( spkA approximately spkG). Previously, SpkA was shown to have protein kinase activity and to be required for cell motility. Here, the role of the spkB was examined. The spkB gene was expressed in Escherichia coli as a fusion protein with His-tag, and the protein was purified by Ni(2+) affinity chromatography. The eukaryotic-type protein kinase activity of the expressed SpkB was demonstrated as autophosphorylation to itself and phosphorylation of the general substrate proteins. SpkB showed autophosphorylation activity in the presence of both Mg(2+) and Mn(2+), but not in Ca(2+). Phenotype analysis of spkB disruptant of Synechocystis revealed that spkB is required for cell motility, but not for phototaxis. These results suggest that SpkB is the eukaryotic-type protein kinase, which regulates cellular motility via protein phosphorylation like SpkA. 相似文献
8.
9.
Myxoxanthophyll is required for normal cell wall structure and thylakoid organization in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 下载免费PDF全文
Myxoxanthophyll is a carotenoid glycoside in cyanobacteria that is of unknown biological significance. The sugar moiety of myxoxanthophyll in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 was identified as dimethyl fucose. The open reading frame sll1213 encoding a fucose synthetase orthologue was deleted to probe the role of fucose and to determine the biological significance of myxoxanthophyll in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803. Upon deletion of sll1213, a pleiotropic phenotype was obtained: when propagated at 0.5 micromol photons m(-2) s(-1), photomixotrophic growth of cells lacking sll1213 was poor. When grown at 40 micromol photons m(-2) s(-1), growth was comparable to that of the wild type, but cells showed a severe reduction in or loss of the glycocalyx (S-layer). As a consequence, cells aggregated in liquid as well as on plates. At both light intensities, new carotenoid glycosides accumulated, but myxoxanthophyll was absent. New carotenoid glycosides may be a consequence of less-specific glycosylation reactions that gained prominence upon the disappearance of the native sugar moiety (fucose) of myxoxanthophyll. In the mutant, the N-storage compound cyanophycin accumulated, and the organization of thylakoid membranes was altered. Altered cell wall structure and thylakoid membrane organization and increased cyanophycin accumulation were also observed for deltaslr0940K, a strain lacking zeta-carotene desaturase and thereby all carotenoids but retaining fucose. Therefore, lack of myxoxanthophyll and not simply of fucose results in most of the phenotypic effects described here. It is concluded that myxoxanthophyll contributes significantly to the vigor of cyanobacteria, as it stabilizes thylakoid membranes and is critical for S-layer formation. 相似文献
10.
通过遮黑培养缺失frxC基因的蓝藻Synechocystis sp.PCC 6803突变工程株,获得了叶绿素缺失的藻细胞,吸收光谱测定及数学计算表明,藻细胞中叶绿素缺失后藻胆蛋白含量增加,藻蓝蛋白和别藻蓝蛋白含量分别为相同条件下野生株对照组的4倍和6倍。野生株遮黑培养时,细胞进行异养生长, 藻胆蛋白含量下降,藻蓝蛋白和别藻蓝蛋白含量分别为光照培养条件下自养生长的野生株细胞的34.5%和25.3%。另外,缺失apcE基因的突变工程株细胞的藻胆蛋白含量也少于对照野生株,表明apcE基础因的编码蛋白Lcm与藻胆蛋白的含量相关。 相似文献
11.
Disruption of the sycrp1 gene encoding a cyanobacterial cAMP receptor protein makes cells of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 non-motile. Electron microscopy showed that the sycrp1-deficient strain had a reduced number of thick pili on the cell surface compared with the wild-type strain. It is suggested that cAMP-SYCRP1 complex controls the biogenesis of pili. 相似文献
12.
Novel motility mutants of synechocystis strain PCC 6803 generated by in vitro transposon mutagenesis
We screened for transposon-generated mutants of Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 that exhibited aberrant phototactic movement. Of the 300 mutants generated, about 50 have been partially characterized; several contained transposons in genes encoding chemotaxis-related proteins, while others mapped to novel genes. These novel genes and their possible roles in motility are discussed. 相似文献
13.
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
14.
Tuominen I Pollari M von Wobeser EA Tyystjärvi E Ibelings BW Matthijs HC Tyystjärvi T 《FEBS letters》2008,582(2):346-350
The role of the primary-like sigma factor SigC was studied in Synechocystis. Under high temperature stress (48 degrees C) the DeltasigC inactivation strain showed a lower survival rate than the control strain. The DeltasigC strain grew poorly at 43 degrees C in liquid cultures under normal air. However, change to 3% CO(2) enhanced growth of DeltasigC at 43 degrees C. Differences in expression of many genes related to the carbon concentrating mechanisms between the control and the DeltasigC strain were recorded with a genome-wide DNA microarray. We suggest that low solubility of CO2 at high temperature is one of the factors contributing to the poor thermotolerance of the DeltasigC strain. 相似文献
15.
16.
《The International journal of biochemistry》1994,26(3):433-435
- 1.1. Effect of controlled up- and down-shifts of growth temperature on the antioxidant enzymes activities and lipid peroxidation were investigated in intact cells of Cyanobacterium synechocystis PCC 6803 acclimated at different growth temperature.
- 2.2. Algal cells grown at 36°C were treated at 20 and 43°C as down- and upward-shifts of growth temperature for 24 hr, respectively. At the down-shift of growth temperature the superoxide dismutase, catalase and glutathione peroxidase were significantly increased with concomitant decrease in protein content.
- 3.3. These parameters showed similar temperature dependencies in the up-shift of growth temperature, they were decreased significantly.
- 4.4. The increased hydroxyl (HO) radical and malonyldialdehyde (MDA) formation, when algal cells exposed to down-shift of growth temperature, supposedly due to stimulated production of superoxide radicals (O2−) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) at lower temperature.
17.
Systematic characterization of the ADP-ribose pyrophosphatase family in the Cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 下载免费PDF全文
We have characterized four putative ADP-ribose pyrophosphatases Sll1054, Slr0920, Slr1134, and Slr1690 in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803. Each of the recombinant proteins was overexpressed in Escherichia coli and purified. Sll1054 and Slr0920 hydrolyzed ADP-ribose specifically, while Slr1134 hydrolyzed not only ADP-ribose but also NADH and flavin adenine dinucleotide. By contrast, Slr1690 showed very low activity for ADP-ribose and had four substitutions of amino acids in the Nudix motif, indicating that Slr1690 is not an active ADP-ribose pyrophosphatase. However, the quadruple mutation of Slr1690, T73G/I88E/K92E/A94G, which replaced the mutated amino acids with those conserved in the Nudix motif, resulted in a significant (6.1 x 10(2)-fold) increase in the k(cat) value. These results suggest that Slr1690 might have evolved from an active ADP-ribose pyrophosphatase. Functional and clustering analyses suggested that Sll1054 is a bacterial type, while the other three and Slr0787, which was characterized previously (Raffaelli et al., FEBS Lett. 444:222-226, 1999), are phylogenetically diverse types that originated from an archaeal Nudix protein via molecular evolutionary mechanisms, such as domain fusion and amino acid substitution. 相似文献
18.
A TolC-like protein is required for heterocyst development in Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120 下载免费PDF全文
Moslavac S Nicolaisen K Mirus O Al Dehni F Pernil R Flores E Maldener I Schleiff E 《Journal of bacteriology》2007,189(21):7887-7895
The filamentous cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120 forms heterocysts in a semiregular pattern when it is grown on N2 as the sole nitrogen source. The transition from vegetative cells to heterocysts requires marked metabolic and morphological changes. We show that a trimeric pore-forming outer membrane beta-barrel protein belonging to the TolC family, Alr2887, is up-regulated in developing heterocysts and is essential for diazotrophic growth. Mutants defective in Alr2887 did not form the specific glycolipid layer of the heterocyst cell wall, which is necessary to protect nitrogenase from external oxygen. Comparison of the glycolipid contents of wild-type and mutant cells indicated that the protein is not involved in the synthesis of glycolipids but might instead serve as an exporter for the glycolipid moieties or enzymes involved in glycolipid attachment. We propose that Alr2887, together with an ABC transporter like DevBCA, is part of a protein export system essential for assembly of the heterocyst glycolipid layer. We designate the alr2887 gene hgdD (heterocyst glycolipid deposition protein). 相似文献
19.
The unicellular cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 can grow heterotrophically in complete darkness, given that a brief period of illumination is supplemented every day (light-activated heterotrophic growth, LAHG), or under very weak (<0.5 micromol m(-2) s(-1)) but continuous light. By random insertion of the genome with an antibiotic resistance cassette, mutants defective in LAHG were generated. In two identical mutants, sll0886, a tetratricopeptide repeat (TPR)-family membrane protein gene, was disrupted. Targeted insertion of sll0886 and three downstream genes showed that the phenotype was not due to a polar effect. The sll0886 mutant shows normal photoheterotrophic growth when the light intensity is at 2.5 micromol m(-2) s(-1) or above, but no growth at 0.5 micromol m(-2) s(-1). Homologs to sll0886 are also present in cyanobacteria that are not known of LAHG. sll0886 and homologs may be involved in controlling different physiological processes that respond to light of low fluence. 相似文献
20.