Role of ammona in regulation of nitrogenase synthesis and activity in Anabaena cylindrica |
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Authors: | Marcia A. Murry Deborah B. Jensen John R. Benemann |
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Affiliation: | Sanitary Engineering Research Laboratory, University of California Berkeley, CA 94720, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | The regulation of nitrogenase biosynthesis and activity by ammonia was studied in the heterocystous cyanobacterium Anabaena cylindrica. Nitrogenase synthesis was measured by in vivo acetylene reduction assays and in vitro by an activity-independent, immunoelectrophoretic measurement of the Fe-Mo protein (Component I). When ammonia was added to differentiating cultures after a point when heterocyst differentiation became irreversible, FeMo protein synthesis was also insensitive to ammonia. Treating log-phase batch cultures with 100% O2 for 30 min resulted in a loss of 90% of nitrogenase activity and a 50% loss of the FeMo protein. Recovery was inhibited by chloramphenicol but not by ammonia or urea. The addition of ammonia to log-phase cultures resulted in a decrease in specific levels of nitrogenase activity and FeMo protein that occurred at the same rate as algal growth and was independent of O2 tension of the culture media. However, in light-limited linear-phase cultures, ammonia effected a dramatic inhibition of nitrogenase activity. These results indicate that nitrogenase biosynthesis becomes insensitive to repression by ammonia as heterocysts mature and that ammonia or its metabolites act to regulate nitrogen fixation by inhibiting heterocyst differentiation and by inhibiting nitrogenase activity through competition with nitrogenase for reductant and/or ATP, but not by directly regulating nitrogenase biosynthesis in heterocysts. |
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Keywords: | Nitrogenase Ammonia Enzyme regulation (A. cylindrica) |
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