Abstract
A marine unicellular aerobic nitrogen‐fixing cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. strain Miarni BG 043511 was pretreated with different light and dark regimes in order to induce higher growth synchrony. A pretreatment of two dark and light cycles of 16 h each yielded good synchrony for 3 cell division cycles. Longer dark treatments decreased the degree of synchrony and shorter dark treatments caused irregular cell division. Once synchronous culture was established, distinct phases of cellular carbohydrate accumulation and cellular carbohydrate degradation were observed even under continuous illumination. Changes in carbohydrate content were repeated in a cyclic manner with approximately 20 h intervals, the same as the cell division cycle. This change in carbohydrate metabolism provided a good index of growth synchrony under nitrogen‐fixing conditions.Photosynthetic oxygen evolution and nitrogen fixation capabilities and their activities in near, in situ, culture conditions were measured in well synchronized cultures of this strain under continuous illumination. Distinct oscillations of both photosynthetic oxygen evolution and nitrogen fixation capabilities with ca 20‐h intervals, similar to the interval of the cell division cycle, were observed for three cycles. However, the activities of photosynthetic oxygen evolution were inversely correlated with those of nitrogen fixation. During the nitrogen fixation period, net oxygen consumption was observed even in the light under conditions approximating in situ culture conditions. The phase of temporal appearance of nitrogenase activity during the cell division cycle coincided with the phase of carbohydrate net degradation. These data indicate that this unicellular cyanobacterium can grow diazotrophically under conditions of continuous illumination by the segregation of photosynthesis and nitrogen fixation within a cell division cycle.
Published Version
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