Cyanophage infections reduce photosynthetic activity and expression of CO fixation genes in the freshwater bloom-forming cyanobacterium Aphanizomenon flos-aquae.

Harmful Algae

Laboratory of Metabolomics, Faculty of Biochemistry, Biophysics and Biotechnology, Jagiellonian University, Gronostajowa 7, 30387 Krakow, Poland. Electronic address:

Published: July 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cyanobacteria are crucial for ecosystem functioning due to their role in photosynthesis and carbon fixation, but the impact of cyanophages on these processes is not well understood.
  • The study focused on the freshwater cyanobacterium Aphanizomenon flos-aquae and revealed that infection by cyanophage vB_AphaS-CL131 decreased both photosynthetic activity and the expression of key genes involved in carbon metabolism.
  • Findings suggest that while cyanophage replication does not disrupt host transcription and metabolism, A. flos-aquae experiences a decline in efficiency related to carbon and energy cycles, potentially affecting other microorganisms in the community.

Article Abstract

Cyanobacteria play a significant role in ecosystem functioning as photosynthetic and CO fixing microorganisms. Whether and to what extent cyanophages alter these carbon and energy cycles in their cyanobacterial hosts is still poorly understood. In this study, we investigated changes in photosynthetic activity (PSII), expression of genes associated with the light phase of photosynthesis (psbA, petA, ndhK) and carbon metabolism (rbcL, zwf) as well as intracellular ATP and NADHP concentrations in freshwater bloom-forming filamentous cyanobacterium Aphanizomenon flos-aquae infected by cyanophage vB_AphaS-CL131. We found that PSII activity and expression level of rbcL genes, indicating potential for CO fixation, had decreased in response to cyanophage adsorption and DNA injection. During the period of viral DNA replication and assembly, PSII performance and gene expression remained at this decreased level and did not change significantly, indicating lack of transcriptional shutdown by the cyanophage. Combined, these observations suggest that although there is little to no interference between cyanophage DNA replication, host transcription and cellular metabolism, A. flos-aquae underwent a physiological state-shift toward lower efficiency of carbon and energy cycling. This further suggest potential cascading effect for co-occurring non-infected members of the microbial community.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.hal.2022.102215DOI Listing

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