4.5 Article

Screening and characterization of polyhydroxyalkanoate granules, and phylogenetic analysis of polyhydroxyalkanoate synthase gene PhaC in cyanobacteria

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY
Volume 57, Issue 3, Pages 754-765

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jpy.13123

Keywords

Carbon storage; Cyanobacteria; Horizontal gene transfer; Polyhydroxyalkanoates; Polyhydroxybutyrate

Funding

  1. Division of Biological Sciences at the University of California, San Diego, DOE [EE0008246]
  2. NIH/NIGMS [K12 GM068524]

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In this study, 20 cyanobacterial strains were screened for the accumulation of carbon storage granules using Nile Red and BODIPY 493/503 dye-staining and fluorescence microscopy. Six strains were found to have dye-staining granules, with 4 strains confirmed to produce polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) granules through gene analysis. Horizontal gene transfer was observed between distant genera, shedding light on the evolutionary history of PHA biosynthesis in Cyanobacteria.
Using Nile Red and BODIPY 493/503 dye-staining and fluorescence microscopy, twenty cyanobacterial strains, including ten commercially available strains and ten environmental isolates from estuaries, freshwater ponds, and lagoons, were screened for the accumulation of ecologically important and potentially biotechnologically significant carbon storage granules such as polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHA). Dye-staining granules were observed in six strains. Three Synechocystis, spp. strains WHSYN, LSNM, and CGF-1, and a Phormidium-like sp. CGFILA were isolated from environmental sources and found to produce granules of polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) according to PHA synthase gene (phaC) PCR screening and H-1 NMR analyses. The environmental isolate, Nodularia sp. Las Olas and commercially available Phormidium cf. iriguum CCALA 759 displayed granules but screened negative for PHA according to phaC PCR and H-1 NMR analyses. Partial polyhydroxyalkanoate synthase subunit C (phaC) and 16S rRNA gene sequences obtained from the PHA-accumulating strains and analyzed alongside publicly available phaC, phaE, 16S rRNA, and 23S rRNA data help in understanding the distribution and evolutionary history of PHA biosynthesis within the phylum Cyanobacteria. The data show that the presence of phaC is highly conserved within the genus Synechocystis, and present in at least one isolate of Phormidium. Maximum likelihood analyses and cophylogenetic modeling of PHA synthase gene sequences provide evidence of a recent horizontal gene transfer event between distant genera of cyanobacteria related to Pleurocapsa sp. PCC 7327 and Phormidium-like sp. CGFILA. These findings will help guide additional screening for PHA producers, and may explain why some Phormidium species produce PHAs, while others do not.

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