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New insight on the source/sink balance of cyanobacteria

Cyanobacteria balancing act 
Amit K. Singh (left) and Danny Ducat discuss cyanobacteria. Credit: Kara Headley, MSU-DOE Plant Research Laboratory

A new study from the Michigan State University-DOE Plant Research Laboratory (PRL) brings fresh insight on the source/sink balance of cyanobacteria and paves the way for further advancements in photosynthetic microbes for potential applications.

The research, conducted in the lab of MSU biochemist Danny Ducat, was recently published in Plant Âé¶¹ÒùÔºiology.

In photosynthesis, source/sink balance refers to how the organism equalizes the light it absorbs (source) with its capacity to use this energy (sink). This balance is well-studied in plants, but research on it in photosynthetic microbes remains under-developed. This study sheds new light on source/sink regulation in .

"We started this study with a big question: How do photosynthetic microbes balance source/sink?" said Amit K. Singh, a postdoc in the Ducat lab and lead author of the study. "As metabolic engineers, it is even more important to know the involved in balancing mechanisms, for example, when we engineer in pathways for production of biofuels or other bioproducts, we think those new energy needs can throw source/sink out of balance. Hence, the findings of this study will help us in fine tuning the cellular metabolism toward improved production of bio-based materials."

Using a genetically modified cyanobacterium developed in the Ducat lab, the researchers tested the impact of influx and efflux of sucrose (sugar) on the physiology and biochemistry of cyanobacterium.

"One thing that we were particularly surprised to see is the degree to which rubisco activity was a dominant component altered due to the changes in sugar availability we induced," said Ducat, an associate professor in the PRL and the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and study co-author. "Rather than a more systemic change in the expression levels of many proteins, rubisco appears to be the key lynchpin in this response."

With an improved understanding of how cyanobacteria regulate photosynthesis, these organisms can be genetically engineered to be better at it. This is important in order to use cyanobacteria as a base for engineering environmentally friendly biomaterials.

"A deeper understanding of the mechanisms that regulate source/sink balance in cyanobacteria is likely to have biotechnological implications given the potential for cyanobacteria as a 'carbon neutral' production platform to combat ," Amit said.

There is still much to learn in future studies about source/sink balance in cyanobacteria.

"It is curious that we find similar outputs regulated by source/sink signaling in cyanobacteria to those in plants, yet the central genes required in are not found in cyanobacteria," Ducat said. "This raises the possibility that these pathways are functionally conserved, despite a lack of evolutionary conservation of the key players."

More information: Amit K Singh et al, Rubisco regulation in response to altered carbon status in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942, Plant Âé¶¹ÒùÔºiology (2022).

Citation: New insight on the source/sink balance of cyanobacteria (2022, March 7) retrieved 27 April 2025 from /news/2022-03-insight-sourcesink-cyanobacteria.html
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