| Literature DB >> 35447738 |
Katharina Meixner1,2, Christina Daffert1, Lisa Bauer2, Bernhard Drosg1,2, Ines Fritz1.
Abstract
Cyanobacteria are a large group of prokaryotic microalgae that are able to grow photo-autotrophically by utilizing sunlight and by assimilating carbon dioxide to build new biomass. One of the most interesting among many cyanobacteria cell components is the storage biopolymer polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB), a member of the group of polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHA). Cyanobacteria occur in almost all habitats, ranging from freshwater to saltwater, freely drifting or adhered to solid surfaces or growing in the porewater of soil, they appear in meltwater of glaciers as well as in hot springs and can handle even high salinities and nutrient imbalances. The broad range of habitat conditions makes them interesting for biotechnological production in facilities located in such climate zones with the expectation of using the best adapted organisms in low-tech bioreactors instead of using "universal" strains, which require high technical effort to adapt the production conditions to the organism's need. These were the prerequisites for why and how we searched for locally adapted cyanobacteria in different habitats. Our manuscript provides insight to the sites we sampled, how we isolated and enriched, identified (morphology, 16S rDNA), tested (growth, PHB accumulation) and purified (physical and biochemical purification methods) promising PHB-producing cyanobacteria that can be used as robust production strains. Finally, we provide a guideline about how we managed to find potential production strains and prepared others for basic metabolism studies.Entities:
Keywords: PHB; axenic cultures; cyanobacteria; growth; habitat conditions; purification; sampling; single species selection; wild types
Year: 2022 PMID: 35447738 PMCID: PMC9030849 DOI: 10.3390/bioengineering9040178
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioengineering (Basel) ISSN: 2306-5354
Figure 1Agar-plate with the locations for sample (green) and glucose (blue) as well as the spot where light reaches the plate (orange) as well as the expected movement of cyanobacteria and heterotrophic bacteria (arrows).
Figure 2Example sampling locations of different climates: (A) Los Glaciares Laguna Torre ARG; (B) Heinrichs AUT (isolate: Chlorogloeopsis fritschii; (C) Tulln IFA-Teich AUT (isolate: Synechocystis sp.); and (D) Presa de Beninar ESP (isolate: Crocosphaera sp.).
Sampling locations with climate types and identified single-species strains. PHB production was tested by cultivation in a laboratory photobioreactor of ca. 5 L volume. Sequences are provided in Appendix B.
| Sampling Location | Coordinates | Climate Region 1 | No. of Samples | Identification via 16S rDNA | Dry Biomass and PHB Content |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Admont (AUT) | 47°34′51.0″ N 14°27′13.5″ E | Dfc | 4 | n.d. | |
| Beagle Channel (ARG) | 54°50′59.7″ S 68°29′37.9″ W | ET | 1 | n.d. | n.d. |
| Branná (CZE) | 50°09′24.6″ N 17°01′17.1″ E | Dfb | 7 | n.d. | |
| Chlum & Třeboně (CZE) | 48°57′33.1″ N 14°56′03.3″ E | Cfb | 6 | n.d. | n.d. |
| Elisabethsee Amerbach (AUT) | 47°10′43.4″ N 12°31′44.7″ E | ET | 1 | n.d. | n.d. |
| Glaciar Perito Moreno (ARG) | 50°29′19.6″ S 73°03′35.9″ W | Cfc/ET | 1 | n.d. | n.d. |
| Gmünd, Mondteich (AUT) | 48°46′40.3″ N 14°59′51.5″ E | Cfb | 2 | n.d. | |
| Greenland (GRL) | n.d. | EF/ET | 5 | n.d. | |
| Greifenstein, Danube (AUT) | 48°20′44.7″ N 16°14′19.3″ E | Cfb | 2 | n.d. | |
| Heidenreichstein, Hofwehrteich, (AUT) | 48°52′06.1″ N 15°07′44.2″ E | Dfb/Cfb | 1 | n.d. | n.d. |
| Heinrichs (AUT) | 48°44′56.3″ N 14°50′07.9″ E | Dfb/Cfb | 5 | n.d. | |
| 1040 mg L−1, | |||||
| Island (ISL) | 64°18′45.2″ N 20°18′08.3″ W | Cfc/ET | 1 | n.d. | n.d. |
| Island (ISL) | 63°54′53.8″ N 22°41′50.9″ W | Cfc/ET | 1 | n.d. | n.d. |
| Lago di San Vito (ITA) | 46°28′03.8″ N 12°12′06.4″ E | Dfc/ET | 1 | n.d. | n.d. |
| Langenrohr, gr. Tulln (AUT) | 48°19′06.8″ N 16°01′00.4″ E | Cfb | 3 | n.d. | |
| n.d. | |||||
| National park los glaciares, Laguna Torre (ARG) | 49°19′47.4″ S 72°59′23.4″ W | Cfc/ET | 1 | n.d. | n.d. |
| National park los glaciares, Lagunas Madre e hija (ARG) | 49°18′18.8″ S 72°57′03.7″ W | Cfc/ET | 1 | n.d. | n.d. |
| Passo di Falzarego (ITA) | 46°31′09.1″ N 12°00′32.0″ E | Dfc/ET | 1 | n.d. | n.d. |
| Passo della Guardia (ITA) | 44°03′04.7″ N 7°44′41.5″ E | Csb | 1 | n.d. | n.d. |
| Presa de Beninar (ESP) | 36°52′42.3″ N 3°01′31.6″ W | Csa | 3 | <1% PHB | |
| n.d. | |||||
| Pyhrabruck (AUT) | 48°46′11.0″ N 14°49′16.3″ E | Cfb | 3 | 16.8 mg L−1 | |
| Río Cacheuta (ARG) | 33°02′53.5″ S 69°11′47.3″ W | BSk/BWk | 1 | n.d. | n.d. |
| Río De la Cascada (ARG) | 49°17′37.0″ S 72°54′08.6″ W | Cfc/ET | 1 | n.d. | n.d. |
| Río Mendoza (ARG) | 32°56′13.5″ S 69°12′25.6″ W | BSk/BWk | 1 | n.d. | n.d. |
| Thermal SPA Loipersdorf (AUT) | 46°59′11.2″ N 16°06′36.9″ E | Cfb | 12 | n.d. | |
| n.d. | |||||
| n.d. | |||||
| n.d. | |||||
| Tulln, IFA-Teich (AUT) | 48°19′14.5″ N 16°03′59.2″ E | Cfb | 5 | n.d. | |
| 1680 mg L−1, | |||||
| n.d. |
1 According to Köppen climate classification [33]: BSk: Cold semi-arid climate, BWk: Cold desert climate, Cfb: Temperate oceanic climate, Cfc: Subpolar oceanic climate, Csa: Hot-summer Mediterranean climate, Csb: Warm-summer Mediterranean climate, Dfb: Warm-summer humid continental climate, Dfc: Subarctic climate, EF: Ice cap climate, ET: Tundra climate, n.d.: no data available.
Figure 3Microscopic control of phtoto-autotrophically cultivated samples from the fire-pond at IFA-Tulln (AUT); (A) original mixed culture enriched in BG-I mineral medium (bright field image) and (B) after cultivation in presence of cycloheximide (phase contrast image).
Figure 4Fractionated streaks of mixed cyanobacteria samples after cycloheximide treatment taken from (A) Admont (AUT) and (B) Tulln, IFA-Teich (AUT).
Figure 5Microscopic imaging of Chlorogloeopsis sp. (Heinrichs-4, AUT) cultures; (A) blue-green cells during the growth phase and (B) in the stage of nitrogen and phosphorus limitation; (C) aged culture in stationary phase in bright field visible light and (D) the same section in fluorescence mode after staining with Nile-red.
Figure A2Inoculation of the 5-L tubular photobioreactor in Tulln with Synechocystis sp. IFA-3 for outdoors operation.
Figure 6Dried biomasses from cultivation of Synechocystis sp. IFA-3 (left) and Chlorogloeopsis sp. Heinrichs-4 (right) in the 5-L tubular photobioreactor.
Figure 7Results of the phototaxis experiment with cultures of PCC6803 (top), CCALA192 (middle) and Synechocystis sp. IFA-3 (bottom) on agar plates with 0.4% (left) and 1% agar (right). Circle: spot where glucose was applied.
Figure 8Growth of isolated cyanobacterial accompanying flora inoculated in BG-I medium at room temperature (22 °C) and elevated temperature (37 °C).
Figure 9Synechocystis sp. IFA-3 inoculated in BG-I with and without NaCl at room temperature (22 °C) and elevated temperature (37 °C).