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Query: UMLS:C1832526 (PCC)
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Part of the chlL gene encoding a component involved in light-independent protochlorophyllide reduction was deleted in wild type and in a photosystem I-less strain of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. In resulting mutants, chlorophyll biosynthesis was fully light-dependent. When these mutants were propagated under light-activated heterotrophic growth conditions (in darkness except for 15 min of weak light a day) for several weeks, essentially no chlorophyll was detectable but protochlorophyllide accumulated. Upon return of the chlL- mutant cultures to continuous light, within the first 6 h chlorophyll was synthesized at the expense of protochlorophyllide at a rate independent of the presence of photosystem I. Chlorophyll biosynthesized during this time gave rise to a 685 nm fluorescence emission peak at 77 K in intact cells. This peak most likely originates from a component different from those known to be directly associated with photosystems II and I. Development of 695 and 725 nm peaks (indicative of intact photosystem II and photosystem I, respectively) required longer exposures to light. After 6 h of greening, the rate of chlorophyll synthesis slowed as protochlorophyllide was depleted. In the chlL- strain, greening occurred at the same rate at two different light intensities (5 and 50 microE m-2 s-1), indicating that also at low light intensity the amount of light is not rate-limiting for protochlorophyllide reduction. Thus, in this system the rate of chlorophyll biosynthesis is limited neither by biosynthesis of photosystems nor by the light-dependent protochlorophyllide reduction. We suggest the presence of a chlorophyll-binding 'chelator' protein (with 77 K fluorescence emission at 685 nm) that binds newly synthesized chlorophyll and that provides chlorophyll for newly synthesized photosynthetic reaction centers and antennae.
Plant Mol Biol 1995 Dec
PMID:Light-dependent chlorophyll a biosynthesis upon chlL deletion in wild-type and photosystem I-less strains of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. 855 57

Over-expression of the psbAIII gene encoding for the D1 protein (form II; D1:2) of the photosystem II reaction centre in the Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942 was studied using a tac promoter and the lacIQ system. Over-expression was induced with 40 microgram/ml IPTG in the growth medium for either 6 or 12 h at growth irradiance (50 mumol photons m-2 s-1). This treatment doubled the amount of psbAII/III mRNA and the D1:2 protein in membranes but decreased the amount of psbAI messages and the D1:1 protein. The total amount of both heterodimeric reaction centre proteins, D1 and D2, remained constant under growth light conditions, indicating that the number of PSII centres in the membranes was not affected, only the form of the D1 protein was changed from D1:1 to D1:2 in most centres. When the cells were photoinhibited either at 500 or 1000 mumol photons m-2 s-1, in the presence or absence of the protein synthesis inhibitor lincomycin, the D1:2 protein remained at a higher level in cells in which over-expression had been induced by IPTG. These cells were also less prone to photoinhibition of PSII. It is suggested that the tolerance of cells to photoinhibition increases when most PSII reaction centres contain the D1:2 protein at the beginning of high irradiance. This tolerance is further strengthened by maintaining psbAIII gene over-expression during the photoinhibitory treatment.
Plant Mol Biol 1996 Feb
PMID:Over-production of the D1:2 protein makes Synechococcus cells more tolerant to photoinhibition of photosystem II. 860 99

We have sequenced and analysed the transaldolase (tal) genes from two cyanobacteria, Anabaena variabilis (ATCC 29413) and Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, which are filamentous heterocyst-forming and unicellular organisms, respectively. The deduced amino acid sequences of the two cyanobacterial tal genes are 78% identical and are highly homologous to both eubacterial and eukaryotic transaldolases (Escherichia coli, two yeasts, and man) with values ranging from 54 to 60% amino acid identity. In contrast, the transaldolase homologous sequences from the cyanobacterium Nostoc sp. ATCC 29133, from Mycobacterium leprae, and the partial sequence from the higher plant Arabidopsis thaliana have a much lower degree of homology with each other and relative to the sequences mentioned above. These data indicate three different types of transaldolases.
Plant Mol Biol 1996 Jan
PMID:Transaldolase genes from the cyanobacteria Anabaena variabilis and Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803: comparison with other eubacterial and eukaryotic homologues. 861 40

A previous study has demonstrated that the carboxyl-terminal (C-terminal) processing protease in spinach for the D1 precursor protein (pDl) of the photosystem II reaction center is a monomeric protein of about 45 kDa. Based on the amino acid sequence data of the purified protease, a cDNA clone encoding the enzyme has been identified and sequenced, from a spinach green leaf cDNA library. In order to determine the 5' end of the transcript, the rapid amplification of cDNA end (5'-RACE) technique was applied. By these analyses, the full-length transcript was established to consist of 1906 nucleotides and a poly(A) tail, containing an open reading frame (ORF) corresponding to a protein with 539 amino acid residues. By comparing the amino acid sequence of the purified protease with that deduced from nucleotide sequence of the cDNA clones, the enzyme was shown to be furnished with an extra amino-terminal extension characteristic of both a transit peptide and a signal sequence. This suggests that the protease is synthesized in the cytosol and translocated into the lumenal space of thylakoids. The mature part of the enzyme consists of 389 amino acid residues and exhibits a significant sequence homology with two groups of proteins as demonstrated by a computer homology search, i.e. (1) the deduced sequence of a protein proposed to be the C-terminal processing protease for pD1 in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, based on genetic experiments and (2) proteases for C-terminal cleavage identified in Escherichia coli and Bartonella bacilliformis.
Plant Mol Biol 1996 Jan
PMID:Carboxyl-terminal processing protease for the D1 precursor protein: cloning and sequencing of the spinach cDNA. 861 42

To identify amino acid residues of the D2 protein that are critical fo r functional photosystem II (PS II), sodium bisulfite was utilized for in vitro random mutagenesis of the psbDI gene from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. Sodium bisulfite reacts specifically with cytosine in single-stranded regions of DNA and does not attack double-stranded DNA. Using a hybrid plasmid that was single-stranded in the region to be mutagenized and that was double-stranded elsewhere, mutations were targeted to a specific psbDI region coding for the lumenal A-B loop of the D2 protein. Several mutants were isolated with a total of 15 different amino acid changes in the loop. The majority of these mutations did not result in a loss of photoautotrophic growth or in significantly altered PS II function. However, mutation of Glu-69 to Lys, Ser-79 to Phe, and Ser-88 to Phe were found to influence photosystem II activity; the importance of the latter two residues for proper PS II function was unexpected. Cells carrying the double mutation S79F/S88F in D2 did not grow photoautotrophically and had no functionally active PS II centers. The single mutant S79F was also incapable of photoautotrophic growth, but displayed reasonably stable oxygen evolution, while PS II function in the single mutant S88F appeared to be close to normal. Because of the more pronounced phenotype of the S79F/S88F strain as compared to the single mutants, both Ser residues appear to affect stable assembly and function of the PS II complex. The mechanism by which the S79F mutant loses photoautotrophic growth remains to be established. However, these results show the potential of targeted random mutagenesis to identify functionally important residues in selected regions of proteins.
Plant Mol Biol 1996 Jan
PMID:Random chemical mutagenesis of a specific psbDI region coding for a lumenal loop of the D2 protein of photosystem II in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. 861 49

The narB gene from the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942 was cloned downstream from the LacI-regulated promoter Ptrc in the Escherichia coli vector pTrc99A, rendering plasmid pCSLM1. Addition of isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactoside to E. coli (pCSLM1) resulted in the parallel expression of a 76 kDa polypeptide and a nitrate reductase activity with properties identical to those known for nitrate reductase isolated from Synechococcus cells. As is the case for nitrate reductase from Synechococcus cells, either reduced methyl viologen or reduced ferredoxin could be used as an electron donor for the reduction of nitrate catalyzed by E. coli (pCSLM1) extracts. This data shows that narB is a cyanobacterial structural gene for nitrate reductase.
Plant Mol Biol 1996 Feb
PMID:A cyanobacterial narB gene encodes a ferredoxin-dependent nitrate reductase. 862 15

Zn2+ proteins pervade metabolism and are essential for gene expression. However, no proteins have been ascribed the central roles of Zn2+ donation to, or removal from, metalloproteins, or Zn2+ storage in vegetative plant tissue. In animals, such functions have been proposed for metallothioneins. Plants contain multiple metallothionein-like genes but their predicted products, which differ significantly from animal metallothioneins, remain to be isolated from vegetative tissue and their roles are uncertain. The type 2 metallothionein-like gene from Arabidopsis, MT2, was expressed under the control of Zn2+-responsive elements derived from the cyanobacterial metallothionein divergon, smt. Zn2+-dependent expression of MT2 transcripts in Synechococcus PCC 7942 was confirmed by northern analysis. The Arabidopsis MT2 gene partly complemented Zn2+ hypersensitivity in mutants of Synechococcus PCC 7942 which are functionally deficient in an endogenous Zn2+-metallothionein gene, smtA. MT2 was also expressed as a recombinant fusion protein in Escherichia coli, purified and shown to bind Zn2+ in vitro. The mean pH of half displacement of Zn2+ from MT2 was estimated to be 5.05. This suggests that MT2 has a greater affinity for Zn2+ than phytochelatins. The results presented here reveal that MT2 is capable of binding Zn2+ in vitro, conferring tolerance to elevated [Zn2+] in vivo within cyanobacteria and is likely to compete with other polypeptides for cellular Zn2+ in planta.
Plant Mol Biol 1996 Mar
PMID:Expression of the type 2 metallothionein-like gene MT2 from Arabidopsis thaliana in Zn(2+)-metallothionein-deficient Synechococcus PCC 7942: putative role for MT2 in Zn2+ metabolism. 870 27

A bacteriochlorophyll a biosynthesis mutant of the purple photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus was functionally complemented with a cosmid genomic library from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. The complemented R. capsulatus strain contains a defined mutation in the bchM gene that codes for Mg-protoporphyrin IX methyltransferase, the enzyme which converts Mg-protoporphyrin IX to Mg-protoporphyrin IX methylester using S-adenosyl-L-methionine as a cofactor. Since chlorophyll biosynthesis also requires the same methylation reaction, the Synechocystis genome should similarly code for a Mg-protoporphyrin IX methyltransferase. Sequence analysis of the complementing Synechocystis cosmid indicates that it contains an open reading frame exhibiting 29% sequence identity to BchM. In addition, expression of the Synechocystis gene in the R. capsulatus bchM mutant via the strong R. capsulatus puc promoter was shown to support nearly wild-type levels of bacteriochlorophyll a synthesis. To our knowledge, the Synechocystis sequence thus represents the first chlorophyll biosynthesis gene homolog of bchM. The complementing Synechocystis cosmid was also shown to code for a gene product that is a member of a highly conserved family of RNA binding proteins, the function of which in cyanobacteria remains undetermined.
Plant Mol Biol 1996 Mar
PMID:Cloning and characterization of the chlorophyll biosynthesis gene chlM from Synechocystis PCC 6803 by complementation of a bacteriochlorophyll biosynthesis mutant of Rhodobacter capsulatus. 870 38

Two different fdxH genes (fdxH1, fdxH2) have been isolated from the nitrogen-fixing, heterocyst-forming cyanobacterium Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413. They are part of two different nif gene clusters, nif1 and nif2. fdxH1 encodes the [2Fe-2S] ferredoxin that is known as the direct electron donor to nitrogenase in heterocysts, and is very similar to FdxH from Anabaena sp. PCC 7120. FdxH2 has more residues in common and shares its oxygen sensitivity with the single FdxH from the non-heterocystous, filamentous cyanobacterium Plectonema boryanum PCC 73110. The latter expresses nitrogenase early (< or = 3-4h) after nitrogen depletion in vegetative cells and exclusively under anaerobic conditions. fdxH2 and the nif2 genes of Anabaena 29413 are also transcribed < or = 4 h after onset of nitrogen-stepdown, exclusively under anaerobic growth conditions and long before functional heterocysts appear. At this time, no fdxH1 and nif1 gene transcription was observed. It occurred later and was associated with nitrogen fixation under aerobic conditions, i.e. within heterocysts. fdxH2 and nifHDK2 were not transcribed during aerobic, nitrogen-fixing growth. In addition, neither was an fdxH2-type gene found nor an anaerobically and early inducible Nif2 system detectable in Anabaena 7120. These data reveal that in filamentous cyanobacteria two different Nif systems have evolved based on molybdenum nitrogenases. It is concluded that a Nif2-type system operates in vegetative cells of non-heterocystous and some, but not all, heterocyst-forming filamentous cyanobacteria. It is environmentally regulated by the levels of both oxygen and combined nitrogen in the habitat. To simultaneously allow for oxygen-evolving photosynthesis and oxygen-sensitive nitrogen fixation, the Nif1-type system probably branched from an ancestral Nif2-type system and has evolved for an exclusive operation within heterocysts. Accordingly, its expression has become an obligate late event in the developmental programme of heterocyst differentiation, irrespective of aerobic or anaerobic growth conditions.
Mol Microbiol 1995 Oct
PMID:Distinct and differently regulated Mo-dependent nitrogen-fixing systems evolved for heterocysts and vegetative cells of Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413: characterization of the fdxH1/2 gene regions as part of the nif1/2 gene clusters. 870 54

The Clp family consists of large, ubiquitous proteins that function as molecular chaperones and/or regulators of ATP-dependent proteolysis. A single copy gene coding for one of these proteins, ClpC, was cloned from the unicellular cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942. The predicted polypeptide is most similar (ca. 88%) to the chloroplast-localized ClpC protein from higher plants. Using degenerate PCR primers specific for the two distinct ATP-binding domains characteristic of all ClpA-C proteins, partial sequences homologous to clpC from Synechococcus were also identified in five other cyanobacterial strains. The Synechococcus clpC gene is transcribed under standard growth conditions as a monocistronic message of around 2.7 kb. The level of this message, however, decreases slightly after a shift from 37 to 47.5 degrees C for 2 h, similar to expression previously observed for clpC mRNA from heat-shocked higher plants. At the protein level, the amount of ClpC remains relatively unchanged during the high temperature shift, while that of the known heat shock protein GroEL rises considerably. In contrast, the constitutive level of ClpC in Synechococcus increases considerably under conditions of rapid growth, both with increasing light intensities or CO2 concentrations. This, and the fact that attempts to inactivate clpC expression fail to produce a viable phenotype, suggest that ClpC activity is essential for growth in this obligate photoautotrophic cyanobacterium.
Plant Mol Biol 1996 Jul
PMID:The cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942 possesses a close homologue to the chloroplast ClpC protein of higher plants. 880 3


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