Abstract

To understand how carbon and nitrogen metabolism are regulated in diazotrophically and non-diazotrophically grown cultures of the cyanobacterium Nostoc muscorum, we investigated the role of bicarbonate (HCO3−) in regulating diazotrophy and autotrophy. Results showed that HCO3− concentration up to 12molm−3 enhanced growth, specific growth rate, photosynthetic pigments, photosynthetic O2 evolution and nitrogenase activity under diazotrophic growth conditions. The co-existence of different nitrogen sources in the growth medium further accelerate the examined parameters in the order of NO3−<NO2−<NH4+<proline. Further, we examined the Ca++-dependent ATPase activity and cytochrome c oxidase activity in the presence of graded concentration of HCO3− under diazotrophically grown and non-diazotrophically grown cultures. The activity of these enzymes was higher in the cells grown under elevated HCO3− concentration. The Ca++-dependent ATPase activity was higher than that of cytochrome c oxidase, when NAPH was supplied as the electron donor. This finding suggested that photosynthetic generation of ATP utilized NADPH as an electron donor and cytochrome c oxidase activity is independent of NADPH.

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