4.4 Article

Acclimation of the photosynthetic apparatus to low light in a thermophilic Synechococcus sp. strain

Journal

PHOTOSYNTHESIS RESEARCH
Volume 153, Issue 1-2, Pages 21-42

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11120-022-00918-7

Keywords

Photosynthesis; Far-red light; Thermophilic cyanobacteria; Low-light photoacclimation; Allophycocyanin; Cyanobacteriochrome; GAF domain; Iron-sulfur cluster; Phycobiliprotein; IsiA

Categories

Funding

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation [MCB-1613022]
  2. Photosynthetic Antenna Research Center (PARC), an Energy Frontier Research Center - DOE, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DE-SC 0001035]
  3. NIH [P410GM103311]

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Based on their growth responses to high and low irradiance, thermophilic Synechococcus sp. isolates from Mushroom Spring in Yellowstone National Park can be classified as high-light or low-light ecotypes. The low-light ecotypes show increased growth at low irradiance and develop far-red absorbance and fluorescence after growth in low light. These ecotypes have unique gene clusters encoding cyanobacteriochrome, sensor histidine kinase, far-red light absorbing allophycocyanin, and a chlorophyll a-binding protein. The emergence of far-red absorbance in low-light adapted cells is a result of a novel antenna complex containing far-red light absorbing allophycocyanin. Additionally, the two GAF domains of the cyanobacteriochrome LcyA bind different ligands that potentially enable this photoreceptor to respond to various environmental factors.
Depending upon their growth responses to high and low irradiance, respectively, thermophilic Synechococcus sp. isolates from microbial mats associated with the effluent channels of Mushroom Spring, an alkaline siliceous hot spring in Yellowstone National Park, can be described as either high-light (HL) or low-light (LL) ecotypes. Strains isolated from the bottom of the photic zone grow more rapidly at low irradiance compared to strains isolated from the uppermost layer of the mat, which conversely grow better at high irradiance. The LL-ecotypes develop far-red absorbance and fluorescence emission features after growth in LL. These isolates have a unique gene cluster that encodes a putative cyanobacteriochrome denoted LcyA, a putative sensor histidine kinase; an allophycocyanin (FRL-AP; ApcD4-ApcB3) that absorbs far-red light; and a putative chlorophyll a-binding protein, denoted IsiX, which is homologous to IsiA. The emergence of FRL absorbance in LL-adapted cells of Synechococcus sp. strain A1463 was analyzed in cultures responding to differences in light intensity. The far-red absorbance phenotype arises from expression of a novel antenna complex containing the FRL-AP, ApcD4-ApcB3, which is produced when cells were grown at very low irradiance. Additionally, the two GAF domains of LcyA were shown to bind phycocyanobilin and a [4Fe-4S] cluster, respectively. These ligands potentially enable this photoreceptor to respond to a variety of environmental factors including irradiance, redox potential, and/or oxygen concentration. The products of the gene clusters specific to LL-ecotypes likely facilitate growth in low-light environments through a process called Low-Light Photoacclimation.

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