Iron bioavailability limits biological activity in many aquatic and terrestrial environments. Broad scale genomic meta-analyses indicated that within a single organism, multiple iron transporters may contribute to iron acquisition. Here, we present a functional characterization of a cyanobacterial iron transport pathway that utilizes concerted transporter activities. Cyanobacteria are significant contributors to global primary productivity with high iron demands. Certain cyanobacterial species employ a siderophore-mediated uptake strategy; however, many strains possess neither siderophore biosynthesis nor siderophore transport genes. The unicellular, planktonic, freshwater cyanobacterium, Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, employs an alternative to siderophore-based uptake-reduction of Fe(III) species before transport through the plasma membrane. In this study, we combine short-term radioactive iron uptake and reduction assays with a range of disruption mutants to generate a working model for iron reduction and uptake in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. We found that the Fe(II) transporter, FeoB, is the major iron transporter in this organism. In addition, we uncovered a link between a respiratory terminal oxidase (Alternate Respiratory Terminal Oxidase) and iron reduction -suggesting a coupling between these two electron transfer reactions. Furthermore, quantitative RNA transcript analysis identified a function for subunits of the Fe(III) transporter, FutABC, in modulating reductive iron uptake. Collectively, our results provide a molecular basis for a tightly coordinated, high-affinity iron transport system.
SummaryN 2 fixation is an O 2 -sensitive process and some filamentous diazotrophic cyanobacteria that grow performing oxygenic photosynthesis confine their N 2 fixation machinery to heterocysts, specialized cells that maintain a reducing environment adequate for N 2 fixation. Respiration is thought to contribute to the diazotrophic metabolism of heterocysts and the genome of the heterocyst-forming cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 bears three gene clusters putatively encoding cytochrome c oxidases. Transcript analysis of these cox gene clusters through RNA/DNA hybridization identified two cox operons, cox2 and cox3 , that are induced after nitrogen stepdown in an NtcA-and HetR-dependent manner and appear to be expressed specifically in heterocysts. In contrast, cox1 was expressed only in vegetative cells. Expression of cox2 and cox3 occurred at an intermediate stage (about 9 h) during the process of heterocyst development following nitrogen step-down. Inactivation of genes in the two inducible cox operons, but not separately in either of them, strongly reduced nitrogenase activity and prevented diazotrophic growth in aerobic conditions. These results show that the nitrogen-regulated cytochrome c oxidase-type respiratory terminal oxidases Cox2 and Cox3 are essential for heterocyst function in Anabaena sp. PCC 7120.
Mutants of Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120 unable to grow aerobically on dinitrogen were isolated by mutagenesis with UV irradiation, followed by a period of incubation in yellow light and then by penicillin enrichment. A cosmid vector, pRL25C, containing replicons functional in Escherichia coli and in Anabaena species was constructed. DNA from wild-type Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120 was partially digested with Sau3AI, and size-fractionated fragments about 40 kilobases (kb) in length were ligated into the phosphatasetreated unique BamHI site of pRL25C. A library of 1,054 cosmid clones was generated in E. coli DH1 bearing helper plasmid pDS4101. A derivative of conjugative plasmid RP-4 was transferred to this library by conjugation, and the library was replicated to lawns of mutant Anabaena strains with defects in the polysaccharide layer of the envelopes of the heterocysts. Mutant EF116 was complemented by five cosmids, three of which were subjected to detailed restriction mapping; a 2.8-kb fragment of DNA derived from one of the cosmids was found to complement EF116. Mutant EF113 was complemented by a single cosmid, which was also restriction mapped, and was shown to be complemented by a 4.8-kb fragment of DNA derived from this cosmid.
Fructose was bactericidal for the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803. Each of ten independently isolated fructose-resistant mutants had an alteration of the glucose transport system, measured as uptake of glucose or of 3-0-methyl-D-glucose. In the presence of the analog, the wild-type Synechocystis strain was protected against fructose. Two mutants altered in photoautotrophy were also isolated.
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