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Plant Physiology 86:1116-1119 (1988)
© 1988 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Metabolism and Enzymology

Action Spectra for Nitrate and Nitrite Assimilation in Blue-Green Algae 1

Aurelio Serrano and Manuel Losada

Instituto de Bioquímica Vegetal y Fotosíntesis, Departmento de Bioquímica, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas y Facultad de Biología, Apdo. 1095, 41080-Sevilla, Spain

Action spectra for the assimilation of nitrate and nitrite have been obtained for several blue-green algae (cyanobacteria) with different accessory pigment composition. The action spectra for both nitrate and nitrite utilization by nitrate-grown Anacystis nidulans L-1402-1 cells exhibited a clear peak at about 620 nanometers, corresponding to photosystem II (PSII) C-phycocyanin absorption, the contribution of chlorophyll a (Chl a) being barely detectable. The action spectrum for nitrate reduction by a nitrite reductase mutant of A. nidulans R2 was very similar. All these action spectra resemble the fluorescence excitation spectrum of cell suspensions of the microalgae monitored at 685 nanometers—the fluorescence band of Chl a in PSII. In contrast, the action spectrum for nitrite utilization by nitrogen-starved A. nidulans cells, which are depleted of C-phycocyanin, showed a maximum near 680 nanometers, attributable to Chl a absorption. The action spectrum for nitrite utilization by Calothrix sp. PCC 7601 cells, which contain both C-phycoerythrin and C-phycocyanin as PSII accessory pigments, presented a plateau in the region from 550 to 630 nanometers. In this case, there was also a clear parallelism between the action spectrum and the fluorescence excitation spectrum, which showed two overlapped peaks with maxima at 562 and 633 nanometers. The correlation observed between the action spectra for both nitrate and nitrite assimilation and the light-harvesting pigment content of the blue-green algae studied strongly suggests that phycobiliproteins perform a direct and active role in these photosynthetic processes.


1 Supported by Comisión Asesora de Investigación Científica y Técnica, Spain (grant BT45/85). A preliminary account of this investigation has been communicated as an abstract to the Advanced FESPP Course on Inorganic Nitrogen Metabolism which was held in Jarandilla, Spain, in June 1986.







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Copyright © 1988 by the American Society of Plant Biologists