Publication | Closed Access
Discovery of Symbiotic Nitrogen-Fixing Cyanobacteria in Corals
461
Citations
23
References
2004
Year
EngineeringCoral EcosystemsCyanobacteriaCoral PhysiologyCoral ReefMicrobial EcologyPhotosynthesisHealth SciencesCyanobacteria CoexistSymbiotic Nitrogen-fixing CyanobacteriaPlant Functional TypesAlgal BiologyMarine BiotaBiologySolar-stimulated Orange-red FluorescenceNitrogen-fixing Enzyme NitrogenasePhycologyMicrobiologyMarine BiologySymbiosis
Colonies of the Caribbean coral Montastraea cavernosa exhibit a solar-stimulated orange-red fluorescence that is spectrally similar to a variety of fluorescent proteins expressed by corals. The source of this fluorescence is phycoerythrin in unicellular, nonheterocystis, symbiotic cyanobacteria within the host cells of the coral. The cyanobacteria coexist with the symbiotic dinoflagellates (zooxanthellae) of the coral and express the nitrogen-fixing enzyme nitrogenase. The presence of this prokaryotic symbiont in a nitrogen-limited zooxanthellate coral suggests that nitrogen fixation may be an important source of this limiting element for the symbiotic association.
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