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Thursday, May 30, 2013

Newly discovered specie provides probable link between cyanobacteria and chloroplast!

This is my another blog on cyanobacteria. It is not only about a newly discovered specie but also a newly discovered symbiotic relationship. This cyanobacterium has not been cultured yet and so has been given a provisional name Candidatus Atelocyanobacterium thalassa. This cyanobacterium is unusual in the sense that it lacks some v.basic components without which it is not able to perform photosynthesis and thus unable to fix carbon for sustaining itself; these components are RuBisCo, photosystem II, tricarboxylic acid cycle.
Despite the absence of these enzymes and pathways, this cyanobacteria survive; this makes us think how? The answer to this lie in a phenomenon that could provide us insights about the very birth of chloroplast!

This cyanobacterium is found in a symbiotic association with an alga; a single celled,free living, photosynthetic picoeukaryote prymnesiophyte. The cyanobacterium gets its carbon requirements from this alga and in return it provides the alga fixed nitrogen which it efficiently fixes from marine environment. There is an imbalance in synergy because the cyanobacterium gives around 95% of fixed nitrogen to the alga whereas the alga gives a v.little amount of carbon(1-17%) but this imbalance can be attributed to the difference in their sizes.

This discovery does not only gives an insight to the planktonic symbiotic world but also gives some proof for the much sought out answer about the link between  ancient cyanobacteria and chloroplast. Chloroplasts are organelles present inside photosynthetic cells and are responsible for fixing carbon and thus supporting all life forms. This cyanobacterium lives on the surface of the alga in some groove like structure. This type of association might have preceded the event of the alga engulfing the cyanobacterium and thus giving rise to the present chloroplast.
                                                Microscopy showing the symbiotic partners


Reference: Thompson AW, Foster RA, Krupke A, Carter BJ, Musat N, Vaulot D, Kuypers MM, Zehr JP. Unicellular cyanobacterium symbiotic with a single-celled eukaryotic alga. Science. 2012 Sep 21;337

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