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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Nov 1997, 4298-4303, Vol 63, No. 11
G Toledo and B Palenik
Because they are ubiquitous in a range of aquatic environments and culture
methods are relatively advanced, cyanobacteria may be useful models for
understanding the extent of evolutionary adaptation of prokaryotes in
general to environmental gradients. The roles of environmental variables
such as light and nutrients in influencing cyanobacterial genetic diversity
are still poorly characterized, however. In this study, a total of 15
Synechococcus strains were isolated from the oligotrophic edge of the
California Current from two depths (5 and 95 m) with large differences in
light intensity, light quality, and nutrient concentrations. RNA polymerase
gene (rpoC1) fragment sequences of the strains revealed two major genetic
lineages, distinct from other marine or freshwater cyanobacterial isolates
or groups seen in shotgun-cloned sequences from the oligotrophic Atlantic
Ocean. The California Current low-phycourobilin (CCLPUB) group represented
by six isolates in a single lineage was less diverse than the California
Current high-phycourobilin (CCHPUB) group with nine isolates in three
relatively divergent lineages. The former was found to be the closest known
genetic group to Prochlorococcus spp., a chlorophyll b-containing
cyanobacterial group. Having an isolate from this group will be valuable
for looking at the molecular changes necessary for the transition from the
use of phycobiliproteins to chlorophyll b as light-harvesting pigments.
Both of the CCHPUB and CCLPUB groups included strains obtained from surface
(5 m) and deep (95 m) samples. Thus, contrary to expectations, there was no
clear correlation between sampling depth and isolation of genetic groups,
despite the large environmental gradients present. To our knowledge, this
is the first demonstration with isolates that genetically divergent
Synechococcus groups coexist in the same seawater sample.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Synechococcus diversity in the California current as seen by RNA polymerase (rpoC1) gene sequences of isolated strains
Marine Biology Research Division, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla 92093-0202, USA.
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