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Physiological changes in the coastal marine cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 exposed to low ferric ion levels
Authors:Charles G Trick  Steven W Wilhelm
Abstract:Cyanobacteria are ubiquitous in marine waters. These prokaryotic cells are of particular interest in areas of the ocean where the availability of iron may be limiting for cell growth since these organisms commonly excrete iron-specific organic ligands (siderophores) in response to low levels of iron. It is generally considered that the production of siderophores provides a competitive advantage over the competing microorganisms that do not produce these ligands.In order to ascertain the influence of iron availability on the physiology of picoplanktonic cyanobacteria we performed a series of experiments on the coastal coccoid cyanobacterium, Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002. Physiological responses were examined in cells grown in a continuous cuture system with influx media containing a range of iron concentrations (from 4.2 × 10−5 to 5.1 × 10−9 M FeCl3). Steady-state growth rates, combined with growth data from batch cultures demonstrated a non-linear response between iron availability and cell proliferation: cell yields were considerably higher in the lowest-iron chemostats than predicted based on the yields in the higher-iron chemostats. The higher yields during low-iron growth corresponded with the production of the extracellular siderophores and the induction of the specific iron-siderophore membrane transport proteins. A comparison of iron transport and carbon acquisition rates between the low-iron grown cells and the high-iron grown cells indicates that under low-iron growth conditions, iron and carbon acquisition meets the growth demands of the cells, whereas growth at higher iron levels enabled excessive (luxury) carbon acquisition and storage. We conclude that cyanobacteria are efficiently adapted to grow in low-iron environments (providing sufficient light for photosynthesis is available) and the luxury-uptake of carbon may serve as the source material for the extracellular ligands released by these cells. Since the release of siderophores was at iron levels in excess of the levels that induce the siderophore-mediated transport of iron, cyanobacteria growing in an environment with varying levels of iron may contribute substantial amounts of their stored carbon reserves into the DOC as iron-specific ligands.
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