Affiliation:
1. Unité des Cyanobactéries (URA-CNRS 2172), Département de Microbiologie fondamentale et médicale
2. Plate-forme Génomique—Pasteur, Génopole Ile de France, Institut Pasteur, 75724 Paris Cedex 15, France
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Microcystis aeruginosa
is a planktonic unicellular cyanobacterium often responsible for seasonal mass occurrences at the surface of freshwater environments. An abundant production of intracellular structures, the gas vesicles, provides cells with buoyancy. A 8.7-kb gene cluster that comprises twelve genes involved in gas vesicle synthesis was identified. Ten of these are organized in two operons,
gvpA
I
A
II
A
III
CNJX
and
gvpKFG
, and two,
gvpV
and
gvpW
, are individually expressed. In an attempt to elucidate the basis for the frequent occurrence of nonbuoyant mutants in laboratory cultures, four gas vesicle-deficient mutants from two strains of
M. aeruginosa
, PCC 7806 and PCC 9354, were isolated and characterized. Their molecular analysis unveiled DNA rearrangements due to four different insertion elements that interrupted
gvpN
,
gvpV
, or
gvpW
or led to the deletion of the
gvpA
I
-A
III
region. While
gvpA
, encoding the major gas vesicle structural protein, was expressed in the
gvpN
,
gvpV
, and
gvpW
mutants, immunodetection revealed no corresponding GvpA protein. Moreover, the absence of a gas vesicle structure was confirmed by electron microscopy. This study brings out clues concerning the process driving loss of buoyancy in
M. aeruginosa
and reveals the requirement for gas vesicle synthesis of two newly described genes,
gvpV
and
gvpW
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
93 articles.
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