Publications by authors named "Makiko Aichi"

Free fatty acids (FFAs) are generated by the reaction of lipases with membrane lipids. Generated polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) containing more than two double bonds have toxic effects in photosynthetic organisms. In the present study, we examined the effect of exogenous FFAs in the growth medium on the activity of photosystem II (PSII) under strong light in the cyanobacterium sp.

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Cyanobacterial mutants defective in acyl-acyl carrier protein synthetase (Aas) produce free fatty acids (FFAs) because the FFAs generated by deacylation of membrane lipids cannot be recycled. An engineered Aas-deficient mutant of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 grew normally under low-light (LL) conditions (50 µmol photons m-2 s-1) but was unable to sustain growth under high-light (HL) conditions (400 µmol photons m-2 s-1), revealing a crucial role of Aas in survival under the HL conditions.

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Cyanobacterial mutants defective in acyl-acyl carrier protein synthetase (Aas) secrete free fatty acids (FFAs) into the external medium and hence have been used for the studies aimed at photosynthetic production of biofuels. While the wild-type strain of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 is highly sensitive to exogenously added linolenic acid, mutants defective in the aas gene are known to be resistant to the externally provided fatty acid.

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Background: Among the three model cyanobacterial species that have been used for engineering a system for photosynthetic production of free fatty acids (FFAs), Synechococcus elongatus PCC7942 has been the least successful; the FFA-excreting mutants constructed from this strain could attain lower rates of FFA excretion and lower final FFA concentrations than the mutants constructed from Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 and Synechococcus sp. PCC7002.

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An RND (resistance-nodulation-division)-type transporter having the capacity to export free fatty acids (FFAs) was identified in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus strain PCC 7942 during characterization of a mutant strain engineered to produce FFAs. The basic strategy for construction of the FFA-producing mutant was a commonly used one, involving inactivation of the endogenous acyl-acyl carrier protein synthetase gene (aas) and introduction of a foreign thioesterase gene ('tesA), but a nitrate transport mutant NA3 was used as the parental strain to achieve slow, nitrate-limited growth in batch cultures. Also, a nitrogen-regulated promoter PnirA was used to drive 'tesA to maximize thioesterase expression during the nitrate-limited growth.

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Most organisms capable of oxygenic photosynthesis have an aas gene encoding an acyl-acyl carrier protein synthetase (Aas), which activates free fatty acids (FFAs) via esterification to acyl carrier protein. Cyanobacterial aas mutants are often used for studies aimed at photosynthetic production of biofuels because the mutation leads to intracellular accumulation of FFAs and their secretion into the external medium, but the physiological significance of the production of FFAs and their recycling involving Aas has remained unclear. Using an aas-deficient mutant of Synechococcus elongatus strain PCC 7942, we show here that remodeling of membrane lipids is activated by high-intensity light and that the recycling of FFAs is essential for acclimation to high-light conditions.

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Among the known functions of the P(II) protein (the glnB gene product) in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus, negative regulation of the activity of PipX, a transcriptional co-activator of the NtcA regulon, has been thought to be essential for cell viability, because all the P(II)-less mutants thus far constructed carry spontaneous mutations in pipX. PipX is thus deduced to be a toxic protein, but its toxicity has not been clearly defined because of the lack of P(II)-deficient mutants carrying wild-type pipX. In this study, we developed a method to construct a targeted P(II)-less mutant of S.

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Nitrate assimilation by cyanobacteria is inhibited by the presence of ammonium in the growth medium. Both nitrate uptake and transcription of the nitrate assimilatory genes are regulated. The major intracellular signal for the regulation is, however, not ammonium or glutamine, but 2-oxoglutarate (2-OG), whose concentration changes according to the change in cellular C/N balance.

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The products of the NpR1527 and NpR1526 genes of the filamentous, diazotrophic, fresh-water cyanobacterium Nostoc punctiforme strain ATCC 29133 were identified as a nitrate transporter (NRT) and nitrate reductase (NR) respectively, by complementation of nitrate assimilation mutants of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus strain PCC 7942. While other fresh-water cyanobacteria, including S. elongatus, have an ATP-binding cassette (ABC)-type NRT, the NRT of N.

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NtcB of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus strain PCC 7942 is a LysR family protein that enhances expression of the nitrate assimilation operon (nirA operon) in response to the presence of nitrite, an intermediate of assimilatory nitrate reduction. Inactivation of ntcB in this cyanobacterium specifically abolishes the nitrite responsiveness of nirA operon expression, but under nitrate-replete conditions (wherein negative feedback by intracellularly generated ammonium prevails over the positive effect of nitrite) activity levels of the nitrate assimilation enzymes are marginally higher in the wild-type cells than in the mutant cells, raising the issue of whether the nitrite-promoted regulation has physiological importance. On the other hand, the strains carrying ntcB expressed much higher nitrate assimilation enzyme activities under nitrate-limited growth conditions than under nitrate-replete conditions whereas the ntcB-deficient strains showed levels of the enzyme activities lower than those seen under the nitrate-replete conditions.

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