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Volume 140,
Issue 8,
1994
Volume 140, Issue 8, 1994
- Physiology And Growth
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Diazotrophic synchronous growth of a marine unicellular cyanobacterium, Synechococcus sp. strain Miami BG 043511, under aerobic and microaerobic/anaerobic conditions
More LessThe growth attributes of an aerobic nitrogen-fixing Synechococcus strain, Miami BG 043511, under aerobic and microaerobic/anaerobic conditions were examined using conventional batch and synchronous culture methods. Generation times of this strain, estimated from the increase in cell density under aerobic and anaerobic batch culture conditions, were 19-23 h and 15-19 h at 30 °C, respectively. It seems, therefore, that atmospheric oxygen did not seriously affect diazotrophic growth in this strain. Under a periodic light-dark regime, cells grew synchronously even under microaerobic/anaerobic conditions. When the aerobic culture entered the light period, a peak of photosynthetic activity was followed by a peak of nitrogenase activity. In contrast, a peak of nitrogenase activity preceded a peak of photosynthetic activity under microaerobic/anaerobic conditions. In both cases, however, cell division was observed at or just after the peak of photosynthetic activity. The difference in the timing of the appearance of nitrogenase activity in microaerobic/anaerobic cultures was ascribed to the inability of cells to generate sufficient ATP under anaerobic dark conditions. Periodic changes in cellular carbohydrate content, associated with the periodic appearances of photosynthetic and nitrogen-fixing activities, were observed under both aerobic and microaerobic/anaerobic conditions. Cellular carbohydrate content increased from 10% to 60% of cell dry weight during the phase of photosynthesis under aerobic conditions, while it reached only 40% under microaerobic/anaerobic conditions. The amount of reserve polysaccharides required to support nitrogen fixation was larger in aerobic cultures than in microaerobic/anaerobic cultures.
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Osmoresistance of spores from Bacillus subtilis and the effect of ssp mutations
More LessSpores of Bacillus subtilis show similar plating efficiency on media with or without 1.5 M NaCl. In contrast, vegetative cells are osmosensitive unless the stationary phase has been reached. In the present work, loss of heat and osmotic resisitance during germination was studied. Their kinetics and sensitivity to protein synthesis inhibition were different: heat resistance was lost first and even in the presence of chloramphenicol, whereas loss of osmotolerance occurred later and was inhibited in the presence of this antibiotic. The influence of spore-associated small acid-soluble proteins (SASPs) on spore osmotolerance was investigated using ssp mutants: all produced spores which germinated poorly and were sensitivei to osmotic strength. SASP-E deficiency was particularly significant. Spore osmotolerance was largely restored in complementation assays performed with cloned ssp genes. It is possible that germination-associated degradation of SASP proteins provides osmotically significant levels of amino acids (especially glutamate).
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- Systematics
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Evolutionary affiliation of the marine nitrogen-fixing cyanobacterium Trichodesmium sp. strain NIBB 1067, derived by 16S ribosomal RNA sequence analysis
More LessThe 16S rRNA sequence of Trichodesmium sp. strain NIBB 1067 was determined and used for the construction of a distance tree and bootstrap analysis. The tree shows that, among the available cyanobacterial 16S rRNA sequences, Trichodesmium NIBB 1067 has Oscillatoria PCC 7515 as its closest relative, presenting 94.9% of sequence similarity with the latter strain. This is in contrast to a difference of 9 mol% G + C in mean genomic DNA base composition between the two organisms. Nevertheless, the genotypic heterogeneity presented by a number of strains assigned to the genus Oscillatoria hinders a taxonomic decision on the separate existence of the genera Trichodesmium and Oscillatoria. The sequence of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) between the 16S and 23S rRNA genes was also determined, as a possible marker to study inter- and intraspecific variability. The ITS contains the genes coding for tRNAlle and tRNAAla and its total length is 547 nucleotides. In six out of eight sequenced clones, there is a duplication of 29 nucleotides, surrounding the 5′ end of the tRNAlle.
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Phylogenetic diversity in the genus Bacillus and comparative ribosomal protein AT-L30 analyses of the genus Thermoactinomyces and relatives
More LessThe ribosomal L30 proteins from strains of 27 species belonging to the genera Bacillus, Escherichia, Staphylococcus, Lactobacillus, Leuconostoc and Thermoactinomyces were analysed, together with AT-L30 proteins from selected actinomycetes. The results of partial amino acid sequencing of L30 preparations revealed that the members of the genera Escherichia, Staphylococcus and Thermoactinomyces were homogeneous within each genus. In contrast, phylogenetic diversity existed in the genus Bacillus, which contained at least four clusters. One cluster that contained Bacillus subtilis and Bacillus stearothermophilus was more closely related to the genus Staphylococcus than to members of the other three Bacillus clusters. Members of the genus Thermoactinomyces were most closely related to the ‘Bacillus subtilis cluster’, but less related to the other three Bacillus clusters. A distant phylogenetic relationship was detected between the genus Thermoactinomyces and its morphological relative, Thermomonospora.
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