Abstract

Photoautotrophically growing cultures of the fresh water cyanobacteriumAnacystis nidulans adapted to the presence of 0.4–0.5 M NaCl (about sea water level) with a lag phase of two days after which time the growth rate reassumed 80–90% of the control. Plasma and thylakoid membranes were separated from cell-free extracts of French pressure cell treatedAnacystis nidulans by discontinuous sucrose density gradient centrifugation and purified by repeated recentrifugation on fresh gradients. Identity of the plasma and thylakoid membrane fractions was confirmed by labeling of intact cells with impermeant protein markers prior to breakage and membrane isolation. Electron microscopy revealed that each type of membrane was obtained in the form of closed and perfectly spherical vesicles. Major changes in structure and function of the plasma membranes (and, to a much lesser extent, of the thylakoid membranes) were found to accompany the adaptation process. On the average, diameters of plasma membrane vesicles from salt adapted cells were only one-third of the diameters of corresponding vesicles from control cells. By contrast, the diameters of thylakoid membrane vesicles were the same in both cases.

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