Abstract

A proteinaceous hemolysin produced by a wild-type strain of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 was purified from cell-free culture supernatants by successive column chromatography on DEAE-Sepharose Fast Flow and Sephacryl S-300 High Resolution. The molecular mass of the hemolysin, determined by SDS-PAGE, was approximately 81 kDa. The hemolysin was heat labile and showed potent hemolytic activity against rabbit and sheep erythrocytes. The hemolysin started to be secreted during the exponential growth phase and accumulated maximally at the stationary phase. The production of hemolysin varied with the amount of calcium present in modified BG-11 culture medium. Hemolysin production decreased in calcium-free medium, whereas it increased in medium containing 0.48 mM calcium. In contrast, the potency of hemolysin, as shown by hemolysis assay, was enhanced by deprivation of calcium (EDTA treatment) but decreased in the presence of calcium. Our results show that calcium stimulated production and secretion of hemolysin, but inhibited hemolytic potency.

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