Abstract

Changes in extracellular and intracellular free amino acids were followed during cyclic phases of N2-fixation (acetylene reduction) by cultures of the axenic, non-heterocystous cyanobacterium Gloeothece incubated under alternating light and darkness or continuous illumination. Changes in intracellular amino acids were minor, with only arginine (increasing during N2-fixation) and glutamate (decreasing during fixation) showing significant changes in cells incubated under 12 h light: 12 h dark. The intracellular concentration of glutamine in cultures was always very low and the value of the ratio glutamine: glutamate (GLN:GLU), used as an index of C−N status in eukaryote microbes, was consistently less than 0.05 suggesting that the cells were nitrogen-stressed. On addition of ammonium, there was a transient accumulation of intracellular glutamine, and the ratio GLN:GLU increased rapidly to a value greater than 0.5, typical of unstressed eukaryotes. In contrast to intracellular amino acids, there were significant changes in extracellular amino acids in cultures incubated under alternating light and darkness. Glycine, serine and alanine were released during the dark phase and were taken up again in the light, paralleling the diurnal pattern of nitrogenase activity (high in darkness). It is postulated that this release is usually retained in the mucilage surrounding the cells (but disturbed during even gentle filtration) and that this mucilage may constitute an “extracellular vacuole”.

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