Trichodesmium erythraeum: Difference between revisions

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Negri, A., O. Bunter, B. Jones, L. Llewllyn. 2003. Effects of the bloom-forming alga <I>Trichodesmium erythraeum</I> on the pearl oyster <I>Pinctada maxima</I>.  Aquaculture:91-102.
Negri, A., O. Bunter, B. Jones, L. Llewllyn. 2003. Effects of the bloom-forming alga <I>Trichodesmium erythraeum</I> on the pearl oyster <I>Pinctada maxima</I>.  Aquaculture:91-102.
Sudek S, Haygood MG, Youssef DT, Schmidt EW. 2006.


Suvapepun, S., 1989. Occurrences of red tide in the Gulf of Thailand. In: Okaichi, T., Anderson, D.M., Nemoto,
Suvapepun, S., 1989. Occurrences of red tide in the Gulf of Thailand. In: Okaichi, T., Anderson, D.M., Nemoto,

Revision as of 08:01, 4 June 2007

A Microbial Biorealm page on the genus Trichodesmium erythraeum

Classification

Higher order taxa

Bacteria; Cyanobacteria; Oscillatoriales; Trichodesmium; Trichodesmium erythraeum

Species

NCBI: Taxonomy

Trichodesmium erythraeum

Description and significance

Tricodesmium is a genus of cyanobacteria that is found in tropical and subtropical ocean waters with low nutrient levels. This genus is of great interest because it has been found to contribute over 40% of all nitrogen fixation that occurs in the ocean. In addition, there has been evidence that Trichodesmium blossoms can have a toxic effect on invertebrates and humans. Trichodesmium erythraeum is a species of the Trichodesmium genus and occurs as filaments of 20-200 cells. These filaments often congregate to form larger colonies that can be seen by the naked eye.

Genome structure

Has a circular genome that is 7750108 nucleotides long. This includes 4451 genes and 48 RNA genes.

Cell structure and metabolism

Trichodesumium erythraeum contain gas vesicles which can occupy up to 60-70% of the total cell volume. Within the cell, these gas vacuoles are aligned so that their longitudinal axis is oriented perpendicular to the direction of the filament. These gas vesicles allow T. erythraeum an amount of buoyancy and possibly play a role in protecting the inside of the cell from harmful wavelengths of light. Trichodesumium erythraeum also contain photosynthetic lamellae. While these structures can be seen throughout the cell, they tend to be more populous toward the center of the cell (Van Baalen 1969).

Like other cyanobacteria, Trichodesmium erythraeum are able to derive energy through the process of photosynthesis. Since nitrogenase, enzyme needed for nitrogen fixation, is inactivated in the presence of oxygen, nitrogen fixing bacteria have developed ways to protect the nitrogenase within them from oxygen. Trichodesmium are thought to do this by keeping nitrogenase and oxygen physically separated in a manner not unlike the compartmentalization of oxygen demonstrated by heterocystous cyanobacteria (Bergman 1991). During times of high nitrogen fixation researcher have observed an increase in photosynthetically inactive areas in Trichodesmium colonies. This suggests that in addition to spatial separation, nitrogenase is segregated from oxygen in time by downregulating the amount of photosynthetically derived oxygen when nitrogenase activites are at their highest (Bergman 2001).

Ecology

Trichodesumium erythraeum is found in tropical and subtropical ocean waters. It combines with Trichodesmium thiebautii to form blooms which have been found to be toxic to various invertebrates as well as humans. Despite it’s toxic effects, the Trichodesumium genus is important and necessary to the environment because it is a major contributor to nitrogen fixation.

Pathology

Cyanobacteria are known to produce toxin (cyanotoxins) that can lead to to the death of various organisms.


Trichodesmium erythraeum is suspected to have toxic effects. While T. erythraeum cells were not found to be toxic to mice, except at high concentrations (500g/kg mouse), they have been linked to the mortality of various marine organisms. When blossoms of this cyanobacteria decay, they cause the surrounding environmnet to become anoxic. The low oxygen conditions resulting from bloom decay have caused the death of pearl oysters at a farm in India as well as the death of shrimp and fish in a farm in Thailand (Chellham 1978, Suvavpun 1989). Chemical assays of lipophilic T. erythraeum from Australia have not been able to detect common neurotoxins, but it is possible that different strains of bacteria as well as different environmental factors may lead to a difference in the development of toxins in T. erythraeum (Negri 2003).

Application to Biotechnology

Does this organism produce any useful compounds or enzymes? What are they and how are they used?

Current Research

Phosphonate utilization by the globally important marine diazotroph Trichodesmium (Dyhrman 2006)

Trichodesmium erythraeum are able to utilize about 75% of the dissolved organic phosphate (DOP) in their ocean environment. This study proposes that Trichodesmium erythraeum is also able to use phosphonate (the remaining 25% of the DOP) as a source of phosphorous in metabolic processes. Analysis of the T. erythraeum genome has shown that the organism possesses orthologs of phn genes that are responsible for phosphonate transport and a C-P lyase complex in the cell membrane in other species of bacteria. These cellular components are important in C-P lyase pathways that allow the breaking of carbon-phosphate ester bonds to free phosphate for use in the cell. The presence of such orthologs in all species of Trichodesmium that have been tested suggests that these features arised early in the evolution of the genus. The similarity of phn orthologs in Trichodesmium to genes in Thiobacillus as well as their increased GC content in comparison to the rest of the Trichodesmium genome are evidence that they were incorporated by horizontal gene transfer. mRNA analysis of T. erythraeum samples from the Sargasso Sea show that phn genes are expressed only when cells experience low levels of phosphorous cycling. This ability of T. erythraeum to regulate gene expression suggests that this bacteria is indeed able to utilize phosphonate as a source of phosphorous through a C-P lyase pathway when other phosphorous sources are limited. This ability could convey an advantage to T. erythraeum and help explain the high abundance of this cyanobacteria in ocean environments with limited nutrients.

Structure of trichamide, a cyclic peptide from the bloom-forming cyanobacterium Trichodesmium erythraeum, predicted from the genome sequence

References

http://expasy.org/sprot/hamap/TRIEI.html

Bergman, B., and E. J. Carpenter. 1991. Nitrogenase confined to randomly distributed trichomes in the marine cyanobacterium Trichodesmium thiebautii. J. Phycol. 27:158-165.

Berman-Frank, I., P. Lundgren, Y.-B. Chen, H. Kupper, Z. Kolber, B. Bergman, and P. Falkowski. 2001. Segregation of nitrogen fixation and oxygenic photosynthesis in the marine cyanobacterium Trichodesmium. Science 294:1534-1537.

Chellham, A., Alagarswami, K., 1978. Blooms of Trichodesmium thiebautii and their effects on experimental pearl culture in the Pambau area and its effect on the fauna. Curr. Sci. 10, 263.

Dyhrman, S., et al. 2006. Phosphonate utilization by the globally important marine diazotroph Trichodesmium. Nature 439(7072):68-71.

Karl, D., A. Michaels, B. Bergman, D. Capone, E. Carpenter, R. Letelier, F. Lipschultz, H. Paerl, D. Sigman, and L. Stal. 2002. Dinitrogen fixation in the world's oceans. Biogeochemistry 57:-58:47-98.

Negri, A., O. Bunter, B. Jones, L. Llewllyn. 2003. Effects of the bloom-forming alga Trichodesmium erythraeum on the pearl oyster Pinctada maxima. Aquaculture:91-102.

Sudek S, Haygood MG, Youssef DT, Schmidt EW. 2006.

Suvapepun, S., 1989. Occurrences of red tide in the Gulf of Thailand. In: Okaichi, T., Anderson, D.M., Nemoto, T. (Eds.), International Symposium on Red Tides, Takamatsu (Japan), 10– 14 Nov 1987, Red Tides: Biology, Environmental Science and Toxicology. Elsevier, New York, pp. 41– 44.

Van Baalen C, Brown RM Jr. 1969. The ultrastructure of the marine blue green alga, Trichodesmium erythraeum, with special reference to the cell wall, gas vacuoles, and cylindrical bodies. Arch Mikrobiol. 69(1):79-91.


Edited by Tara Tsukamoto student of Rachel Larsen and Kit Pogliano