AI Article Synopsis

  • The unicellular cyanobacterium Cyanothece sp. ATCC 51142 performs oxygenic photosynthesis during the day and microoxic nitrogen fixation at night, with these processes separated by a metabolic rhythm.
  • A temperature-dependent ultradian rhythm was identified, lasting 17 hours at 27 °C and decreasing to 10 hours at 39 °C, regulating these alternating processes under continuous high light and CO2 conditions.
  • This ultradian cycle influences various metabolic activities, including O2 production, CO2 uptake, and gene expression related to nitrogen fixation, adding complexity to the organism's circadian clock based on environmental factors.

Article Abstract

The unicellular cyanobacterium Cyanothece sp. American Type Culture Collection (ATCC) 51142 is capable of performing oxygenic photosynthesis during the day and microoxic nitrogen fixation at night. These mutually exclusive processes are possible only by temporal separation by circadian clock or another cellular program. We report identification of a temperature-dependent ultradian metabolic rhythm that controls the alternating oxygenic and microoxic processes of Cyanothece sp. ATCC 51142 under continuous high irradiance and in high CO2 concentration. During the oxygenic photosynthesis phase, nitrate deficiency limited protein synthesis and CO2 assimilation was directed toward glycogen synthesis. The carbohydrate accumulation reduced overexcitation of the photosynthetic reactions until a respiration burst initiated a transition to microoxic N2 fixation. In contrast to the circadian clock, this ultradian period is strongly temperature-dependent: 17 h at 27 °C, which continuously decreased to 10 h at 39 °C. The cycle was expressed by an oscillatory modulation of net O2 evolution, CO2 uptake, pH, fluorescence emission, glycogen content, cell division, and culture optical density. The corresponding ultradian modulation was also observed in the transcription of nitrogenase-related nifB and nifH genes and in nitrogenase activities. We propose that the control by the newly identified metabolic cycle adds another rhythmic component to the circadian clock that reflects the true metabolic state depending on the actual temperature, irradiance, and CO2 availability.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3740830PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1301171110DOI Listing

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