Nitrogen (N) limitation in cyanobacteria is well documented: a reduced growth rate is observed, accompanied by a cessation of phycobiliprotein synthesis and an ordered degradation of phycobilisomes (PBS). This leads to a dramatic bleaching phenomenon known as chlorosis. In Synechococcus strain PCC 7942, bleaching due to PBS degradation is also observed under sulfur (S) or phosphorus (P) limitation, and all three are under the control of the nblA gene product, a 59-amino-acid polypeptide which is overexpressed under N, S, and P starvation (J. L. Collier, and A. R. Grossman, EMBO J. 13:1039-1047, 1994). Cyanobase sequence data for Synechocystis strain PCC 6803 indicate the presence of two tandem open reading frames (sll0452 and sll0453) homologous to nblA. We cloned the two genes, identified a unique 5 mRNA end suggestive of a single transcription start site, and studied nblA expression under conditions of N or S starvation by Northern hybridization: transcripts were detected only under N starvation (no signal is detected in replete medium or with S starvation), whether nblA1 or nblA2 was used as a probe. Mutations in nblA1 and nblA2 were constructed by insertion of a kanamycin cassette; both mutations were nonbleaching under N starvation. Synechocystis strain PCC 6803 does not bleach under S starvation, consistent with the absence of nblA induction in these conditions. These results were confirmed by analysis of the PBS components: sequential degradation of phycocyanin and associated linkers was observed only under conditions of N starvation. This indicates differences between Synechocystis strain PCC 6803 and Synechococcus strain PCC 7942 in their regulatory and signaling pathways leading to N-and S-starved phenotypes.
The structure and function of phycobilisomes in the rhodophyte Porphyridium sp. were investigated by comparing the properties of the wild type with a pigment mutant called C12. When grown under low light, cells of C12 were bright orange, while wild‐type cells were deep red. The results obtained from a characterization of purified phycobilisomes of the mutant C12 led us to propose the existence in Porphyridium sp. phycobilisomes of two types of rods, some containing only phycoerythrin and others containing phycoerythrin bound to phycocyanin, which is in turn linked to the core by the linker LRC. By studying the partitioning of phycobiliproteins between phycobilisomes and pools of free phycobiliproteins, we found that phycocyanin in the C12 mutant was only present in the pool of free proteins and that its specific linker, LRC, was totally absent. Phycoerythrin was present in the free pool and in the purified phycobilisomes as well. One of the three specific phycoerythrin linkers γ was missing. In light of the fact that in the C12 mutant, the linker LRC is absent and that there is no phycocyanin bound to the phycobilisomes, we propose that the rods in the mutant contain only phycoerythrin. These phycobilisomes are nevertheless functional and exhibit an efficient excitation transfer from phycoerythrin directly to allophycocyanin. Electron microscopy showed the purified phycobilisomes of C12 to be less dense than those of the wild type. This change was attributed to the disappearance of the rods containing the combination phycocyanin/phycoerythrin. Light still regulates phycobiliprotein synthesis in the mutant, as shown by the change in the color of the culture, which turned green‐yellow when cells were shifted from low light to high light growth conditions. Light also regulates the structure of the phycobilisomes, which have fewer rods under high light growth conditions.
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