Abstract

Cyanobacteria perform photosynthesis and respiration in the thylakoid membrane, suggesting that the two processes are interlinked. However, the role of the respiratory electron transfer chain under natural environmental conditions has not been established. Through targeted gene disruption, mutants of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 were generated that lacked combinations of the three terminal oxidases: the thylakoid membrane-localized cytochrome c oxidase (COX) and quinol oxidase (Cyd) and the cytoplasmic membrane-localized alternative respiratory terminal oxidase. All strains demonstrated similar growth under continuous moderate or high light or 12-h moderate-light/dark square-wave cycles. However, under 12-h high-light/dark square-wave cycles, the COX/Cyd mutant displayed impaired growth and was completely photobleached after approximately 2 d. In contrast, use of sinusoidal light/dark cycles to simulate natural diurnal conditions resulted in little photobleaching, although growth was slower. Under high-light/dark square-wave cycles, the COX/Cyd mutant suffered a significant loss of photosynthetic efficiency during dark periods, a greater level of oxidative stress, and reduced glycogen degradation compared with the wild type. The mutant was susceptible to photoinhibition under pulsing but not constant light. These findings confirm a role for thylakoid-localized terminal oxidases in efficient dark respiration, reduction of oxidative stress, and accommodation of sudden light changes, demonstrating the strong selective pressure to maintain linked photosynthetic and respiratory electron chains within the thylakoid membrane. To our knowledge, this study is the first to report a phenotypic difference in growth between terminal oxidase mutants and wild-type cells and highlights the need to examine mutant phenotypes under a range of conditions.

Highlights

  • Cyanobacteria perform photosynthesis and respiration in the thylakoid membrane, suggesting that the two processes are interlinked

  • As a first step to understand the role of terminal oxidases in cyanobacteria, the sixty sequenced cyanobacterial genomes in the National Center for Biotechnology Information database were examined for the presence of genes encoding terminal oxidases (Table I; Supplemental Table S1)

  • The remaining strains contained genes for c oxidase (COX) and at least one copy of alternative respiratory terminal oxidase (ARTO) (16), Cyd, or plastid terminal oxidase (PTOX). These data suggest that the presence of COX and at least one plastoquinolreduced terminal oxidase is of physiological importance in cyanobacteria

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Cyanobacteria perform photosynthesis and respiration in the thylakoid membrane, suggesting that the two processes are interlinked. Proteomic studies have detected cyt b6 f subunits in purified thylakoid membrane fractions (Srivastava et al, 2005; Agarwal et al, 2010) but not in cytoplasmic membranes from Synechocystis cultured under normal (Huang et al, 2002) and salt-stressed (Huang et al, 2006) conditions This suggests the presence of a simpler respiratory chain in the cytoplasmic membrane, in which electrons donated to plastoquinone by dehydrogenase complexes are transferred directly to plastoquinolreduced terminal oxidases. Synechocystis has multiple type 1 NAD(P)H dehydrogenase complexes with distinct roles in respiration, preferentially utilizing NADPH as a substrate, cyclic electron flow via the oxidation of reduced ferredoxin, or CO2 fixation (Mi et al, 1995; Ohkawa et al, 2000)

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call