| Literature DB >> 23087677 |
Marcus Ludwig1, Donald A Bryant.
Abstract
Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7002 is a unicellular, euryhaline cyanobacterium. It is a model organism for studies of cyanobacterial metabolism and has great potential for biotechnological applications. It exhibits an exceptional tolerance of high-light irradiation and shows very rapid growth. The habitats from which this and closely related strains were isolated are subject to changes in several environmental factors, including light, nutrient supply, temperature, and salinity. In this study global transcriptome profiling via RNAseq has been used to perform a comparative and integrated study of global changes in cells grown at different temperatures, at different salinities, and under mixotrophic conditions, when a metabolizable organic carbon source was present. Furthermore, the transcriptomes were investigated for cells that were subjected to a heat shock and that were exposed to oxidative stress. Lower growth temperatures caused relatively minor changes of the transcriptome; the most prominent changes affected fatty acid desaturases. A heat shock caused severe changes of the transcriptome pattern; transcripts for genes associated with major metabolic pathways declined and those for different chaperones increased dramatically. Oxidative stress, however, left the transcript pattern almost unaffected. When grown at high salinity, Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 had increased expression of genes involved in compatible solute biosynthesis and showed increased mRNA levels for several genes involved in electron transport. Transcripts of two adjacent genes dramatically increased upon growth at high salinity; the respective proteins are putatively involved in coping with oxidative stress and in triggering ion channels. Only minor changes were observed when cells were grown at low salinity or when the growth medium was supplemented with glycerol. However, the transcriptome data suggest that cells must acclimate to excess reducing equivalents when a reduced C-source is present.Entities:
Keywords: RNAseq; cyanobacteria; heat shock; mixotrophy; photosynthesis; salinity; temperature; transcription profiling
Year: 2012 PMID: 23087677 PMCID: PMC3468840 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2012.00354
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Number of sequences obtained by SOLiD.
| Sample | Mapped reads | Mapped in rDNA regions | Percent rDNA | Remaining mapped reads | Uniquely mapped reads | Percent unique reads | Doubling time (% of standard conditions) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard 1 | 18,238,746 | 13,193,499 | 72.3 | 5,045,247 | 4,886,185 | 96.8 | |
| Standard 2 | 29,450,401 | 27,109,346 | 92.1 | 2,341,055 | 2,270,856 | 97.0 | 100 |
| Standard 3 | 25,082,458 | 22,558,727 | 89.9 | 2,523,731 | 2,455,018 | 97.3 | |
| Mixotrophic | 10,439,860 | 9,412,386 | 90.2 | 1,027,474 | 996,440 | 97.0 | 84 |
| Oxidative stress (MV) | 32,460,233 | 30,484,090 | 93.9 | 1,976,143 | 1,918,914 | 97.1 | n.d. |
| 22°C | 15,029,141 | 13,885,066 | 92.4 | 1,144,075 | 1,116,520 | 97.6 | 194 |
| 30°C | 12,172,383 | 11,276,145 | 92.6 | 896,238 | 871,777 | 97.3 | 109 |
| Standard 4 | 3,740,709 | 3,061,465 | 81.8 | 679,243 | 660,292 | 97.2 | |
| Standard 5 | 5,817,054 | 4,638,642 | 79.7 | 1,178,404 | 1,140,157 | 96.8 | 100 |
| Standard 6 | 5,161,758 | 3,704,426 | 71.7 | 1,455,423 | 1,413,735 | 97.1 | |
| Low salt | 6,423,270 | 5,192,513 | 80.7 | 1,222,976 | 1,162,636 | 95.1 | 98 |
| High salt | 5,758,000 | 4,755,907 | 82.6 | 999,930 | 972,762 | 97.3 | 270 |
| Heat shock | 6,513,432 | 5,788,273 | 88.8 | 720,347 | 699,012 | 97.0 | n.d. |
The number of reads obtained for the different samples, number of mapped reads, number of reads mapping within the rDNA regions and outside rDNA regions, and the number of reads mapping uniquely (outside rDNA regions) are given for the individual samples. Furthermore, the doubling time for cultures grown continuously under the respective conditions is given relative to that for cultures grown under standard conditions. Samples standard 1, 2, and 3 are the same as in our previous study (Ludwig and Bryant, .
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*These samples were treated to deplete rRNAs (see Ludwig and Bryant, .
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Figure 1Changes in the relative transcript abundance when cultures were grown at different temperatures, upon heat shock, and after exposure to oxidative stress. The scatter plots show the relative transcript abundances of cultures grown at (A) 22°C and (B) 30°C compared to that for standard growth conditions at 38°C. Scatter plots shows the relative transcript abundance of a culture (C) exposed to a 1-h heat shock at 47°C and (D) incubated with 5 μM methyl viologen to induce oxidative stress after standard growth compared to that obtained for standard growth conditions. The values for the standard conditions were calculated as the mean for three biological replicates. The gray lines give twofold changes in either direction. Selected genes are identified by name/locus tag number.
Figure 2Overview over the regulation pattern of cells in response growth at different temperatures, at different salinity, after a heat shock, when exposed to oxidative stress and when grown mixotrophically. The figure summarizes the general regulation patterns when cultures were grown at lower temperatures (22 or 30°C) instead of 38°C (22 and 30, respectively), after a 1-h heat shock at 47°C (47), at lower (LS) or higher (HS) salinity than standard A+ medium, after exposure to oxidative stress (OX), which was induced by incubating the culture with 5 μM methyl viologen for 30 min in light, and for photomixotrophic growth with 10 mM glycerol supplied as organic carbon source (MX). The changes of the relative mRNA levels in cultures grown under different conditions or upon additional incubation are compared to standard photoautotrophic growth conditions. These ratios are displayed for genes coding for a selection of cellular functions, among these the photosystems (PSI and PSII), phycobilisomes, the porphyrin/chlorophyll biosynthesis, the phycobilisome degradation protein NblA, other components of the photosynthetic electron transport chain, the carboxysome, bicarbonate transporters, the NADH dehydrogenase complex, the F0F1-Ztype ATP synthase I, ATPase II (N-ATPase), and terminal oxidases. Furthermore, genes coding for the transhydrogenase, for the multisubunit Na+/H+ antiporter, for enzymes involved in osmolyte biosynthesis and for the osmolyte ABC-transporter are depicted. In addition, genes are shown for the major carbon pathways: the Calvin–Benson–Bassham cycle, glycolysis, pyruvate degradation (via pyruvate kinase and pyruvate dehydrogenase), the oxidative pentose phosphate cycle, and the tricarboxylic acid cycle. Genes coding for the RNA polymerase (core complex) and for ribosomal proteins are also highlighted; finally, the changes in the transcript levels of two flavoproteins, superoxide dismutase, and catalase are given.
Figure 3Changes of the relative transcript abundance when cultures were grown at different salinities and in response to mixotrophic growth. The scatter plots show the relative transcript abundances of cultures grown at (A) low salinity and (B) high salinity compared to growth in non-modified medium A+ under standard conditions. (C) Shows the scatter plot of the relative transcript abundance of a culture grown photomixotrophically with 10 mM glycerol as carbon source compared to photoautotrophic (standard) growth. The values for the standard conditions were calculated as the mean for three biological replicates. The gray lines give twofold changes in either direction. Selected genes are identified by name/locus tag number.