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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Archives of microbiology 153 (1990), S. 574-579 
    ISSN: 1432-072X
    Keywords: Gloeothece ; N2-fixation ; Cyanobacteria ; Intracellular and extracellular amino acids ; Glutamine ; Glutamate
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Changes in extracellular and intracellular free amino acids were followed during cyclic phases of N2-fixation (acetylene reduction) by cultures of the axenic, non-heterocystous cyanobacterium Gloeothece incubated under alternating light and darkness or continuous illumination. Changes in intracellular amino acids were minor, with only arginine (increasing during N2-fixation) and glutamate (decreasing during fixation) showing significant changes in cells incubated under 12 h light: 12 h dark. The intracellular concentration of glutamine in cultures was always very low and the value of the ratio glutamine: glutamate (GLN:GLU), used as an index of C−N status in eukaryote microbes, was consistently less than 0.05 suggesting that the cells were nitrogen-stressed. On addition of ammonium, there was a transient accumulation of intracellular glutamine, and the ratio GLN:GLU increased rapidly to a value greater than 0.5, typical of unstressed eukaryotes. In contrast to intracellular amino acids, there were significant changes in extracellular amino acids in cultures incubated under alternating light and darkness. Glycine, serine and alanine were released during the dark phase and were taken up again in the light, paralleling the diurnal pattern of nitrogenase activity (high in darkness). It is postulated that this release is usually retained in the mucilage surrounding the cells (but disturbed during even gentle filtration) and that this mucilage may constitute an “extracellular vacuole”.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2016-07-04
    Description: The blooms of cyanobacteria that develop each summer in the Baltic Sea are composed of two functional groups, namely the small-sized picocyanobacteria (Synechococcus sp.) and the larger, colony-forming, filamentous N2-fixing cyanobacteria. The former encompassed both red (phycoerythrin-rich) and blue-green (phycocyanin-rich) species. The majority of the picocyanobacteria measured less than 1 μm and this size fraction comprised as much as 80% of the total cyanobacterial biomass and contributed as much as 50% of the total primary production of a cyanobacterial bloom. The picocyanobacteria are incapable of fixing N2, do not possess gas vesicles and are not toxic. However, a small filamentous Pseudanabaena sp. that could potentially fix N2 was isolated from the picocyanobacteria fraction. The larger cyanobacteria may form surface scums because they possess gas vesicles that make them buoyant. Although their biomass was less than the picocyanobacteria, they therefore form the more conspicuous and nuisance-forming part of the bloom. The larger cyanobacteria were composed mainly of three different species: Nodularia spumigena, Aphanizomenon flos-aquae and Anabaena sp. These all belong to the heterocystous, N2-fixing cyanobacteria. N. spumigena and A. flos-aquae were the dominant species; only N. spumigena was toxic. Although individual Nodularia filaments showed a range of different phenotypes, they all belong to one species as judged from 16S rDNA sequencing. Through determination of the genotypes of many individual Nodularia filaments, it was shown that this population was not clonal and that horizontal exchange of genetic information occurs. N. spumigena and A. flos-aquae were different with respect to their photosynthetic and N2-fixing potentials. Depending on prevailing environmental conditions, these differences would promote the proliferation of one species over the other and hence would determine overall the toxicity of a bloom. Daily integrals of photon irradiance rather than temperature determined the onset of bloom formation. During a bloom, the diazotrophic cyanobacteria fixed N2 at a rate that was 10–20% in excess of their own demand for N. Picocyanobacteria assimilated most of this excess N as shown by 15N incorporation. During bloom conditions, the diazotrophic cyanobacteria met about 50% of the N demand of the total cyanobacterial community. The picocyanobacteria were predominantly N-limited while the diazotrophic cyanobacteria were probably iron limited. These findings allow us to understand the formation of toxic cyanobacterial blooms and also to develop tools to predict bloom formation.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2018-06-25
    Description: Although N2-fixing cyanobacteria contribute significantly to oceanic sequestration of atmospheric CO2, little is known about how N2 fixation and carbon fixation (primary production) interact in natural populations of marine cyanobacteria. In a developing cyanobacterial bloom in the Baltic Sea, rates of N2 fixation (acetylene reduction) showed both diurnal and longer-term fluctuations. The latter reflected fluctuations in the nitrogen status of the cyanobacterial population and could be correlated with variations in the ratio of acetylene reduced to 15N2 assimilated. The value of this ratio may provide useful information about the release of newly fixed nitrogen by a cyanobacterial population. However, although the diurnal fluctuations in N2 fixation broadly paralleled diurnal fluctuations in carbon fixation, the longer-term fluctuations in these two processes were out of phase.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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