Publication | Open Access
Pathways of assimilation of [13N]N2 and 13NH4+ by cyanobacteria with and without heterocysts
129
Citations
18
References
1978
Year
Methionine SulfoximineMolecular BiologyCyanobacteriaBiosynthesisReactive Nitrogen SpecieBioenergeticsMicrobial EcologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyProkaryotic SystemBiotransformationBiochemistryMolecular MicrobiologyGlutamate IncreasesBiologyNatural SciencesGlutamate SynthaseMicrobiologyMedicineNitrosative Stress
The principal initial product of metabolism of [13N]N2 and 13NH4+ by five diverse cyanobacteria is glutamine. Methionine sulfoximine inhibits formation of [13N]glutamine except in the case of Gloeothece sp., an organism with a thick sheath through which the inhibitor may not penetrate. Thus, glutamine synthetase appears to catalyze the initial step in the assimilation of N2-derived or exogenous NH4+ by these organisms. [13N]Glutamate is, in all cases, the second major product of assimilation of 13N-labeled N2 and NH4+. In all of the N2-fixing cyanobacteria studied, the fraction of 13N in glutamine declines and that in glutamate increases with increasing times of assimilation of [13N]N2 and 13NH4+, and (Gloeothece again excepted) methionine sulfoximine reduces incorporation of 13N into glutamate as well as into glutamine. Glutamate synthase therefore appears to catalyze the formation of glutamate in a wide range of N2-fixing cyanobacteria. However, the major fraction of [13N]glutamate formed by Anacystis nidulans incubated with 13NH4+ may be formed by glutamic acid dehydrogenase. The formation of [13N]alanine from 13NH4+ appears to be catalyzed principally either by alanine dehydrogenase (as in Cylindrospermum licheniforme) or by a transaminase (as in Anabaena variabilis).
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