Responses of a Thermophilic Synechococcus Isolate from the Microbial Mat of Octopus Spring to Light
Oliver Kilian, Anne-Soisig Steunou, Fariba Fazeli, Shaun Bailey, Devaki Bhaya, and Arthur R. Grossman
Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 2007
Abstract
Thermophilic cyanobacteria of the genus Synechococcus are major contributors to photosynthetic carbon
fixation in the photic zone of microbial mats in Octopus Spring, Yellowstone National Park. Synechococcus
OS-B' was characterized with regard to the ability to acclimate to a range of different light irradiances; it grows
well at 25 to 200 μmol photons m-2 s-1 but dies when the irradiance is increased to 400 μmol photons m-2 s-1. At 200 μmol photons m-2 s-1 (high light [HL]), we noted several responses that had previously been
associated with HL acclimation of cyanobacteria, including cell bleaching, reduced levels of phycobilisomes
and chlorophyll, and elevated levels of a specific carotenoid. Synechococcus OS-B' synthesizes the carotenoids
zeaxanthin and β,β-carotene and a novel myxol-anhydrohexoside. Interestingly, 77-K fluorescence emission
spectra suggest that Synechococcus OS-B' accumulates very small amounts of photosystem II relative to that
of photosystem I. This ratio further decreased at higher growth irradiances, which may reflect potential
photodamage following exposure to HL. We also noted that HL caused reduced levels of transcripts encoding
phycobilisome components, particularly that for CpcH, a 20.5-kDa rod linker polypeptide. There was enhanced
transcript abundance of genes encoding terminal oxidases, superoxide dismutase, tocopherol cyclase, and
phytoene desaturase. Genes encoding the photosystem II D1:1 and D1:2 isoforms (psbAI and psbAII/psbAIII,
respectively) were also regulated according to the light regimen. The results are discussed in the context of how
Synechococcus OS-B' may cope with high light irradiances in the high-temperature environment of the microbial
mat.
NOTE: the article text supplied here is for educational purposes only.
*Don't have Adobe Reader?
Get the latest version.
NOTE: Some versions of Adobe Reader have problems with Google Chrome. Either resize the browser to view the paper or enable
the Chrome internal PDF viewer by entering chrome://plugins in your address bar and clicking enable for the Chrome PDF Viewer plugin.