1. Introduction
Carbonic anhydrase (CA, EC 4.2.1.1) is the enzyme that maintains the equilibrium concentrations of two forms of inorganic carbon (Ci) based on the pH of the environment: CO2 + H2O ⇆ H+ + HCO3− (pKa ~ 6.36). Components of the CA reaction are present in cells of all organisms of carbon-based life. This explains the extraordinary occurrence of CA in nature. The enzyme is involved in a wide range of biological processes that require the acceleration of CO2/HCO3− interconversions or a rapid change in the concentration of one of the four reaction components.
CAs have been divided into eight classes (α, β, γ, δ, ζ, η, θ and ι) based on their catalytic characteristics, amino acid sequence, spatial structure, and active site organization [
1]. Cyanobacteria possesses three types of CAs: α, β, and γ. In model freshwater and marine species, these enzymes are found in carboxysomes, associated with thylakoid membranes, or in the cell’s outer layers external to the cytoplasmic membrane (CM) [
2,
3,
4,
5,
6].
The physiological significance of cyanobacterial intracellular (carboxysomal and thylakoid) CAs is determined by their involvement in the operation of the CO
2-concentrating mechanism (CCM), which enhances photosynthetic carbon fixation efficiency in the Calvin cycle [
5,
7,
8]. The intracellular pool of HCO
3− in CCM is formed with the participation of (1) three bicarbonate transporters—BCT1 (
bi
carbonate
transporter
1), SbtA (
sodium-
bicarbonate
transporter
A), and BicA (
bicarbonate transporter
A), and (2) two CO
2 uptake systems (NDH-1
3/4) that represent special modification of NADPH dehydrogenase (NDH-1) complexes [
9]. Sun et al. [
5] suggested that the thylakoid form of β-CA EcaB has a role in NDH-1
3/4 function. HCO
3−, which accumulates in the cytoplasm, is transformed into CO
2 by carboxysomal CAs located near the active site of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase. In different species of cyanobacteria, carboxysomal CAs include CcaA (
carboxysomal
carbonic
anhydrase
A) and CsoSCA (
carboxy
some
shell
carbonic
anhydrase) proteins of the β-class as well as CcmM (
carbon
concentrating
mechanism protein
M) of the γ-class [
4].
Unlike their internal counterparts, external CAs have unknown physiological roles. In freshwater and marine model strains, these CAs are represented by EcaA and EcaB proteins (
external
carbonic
anhydrase) of α- and β-class, respectively. Early studies of EcaA/B have shown that they do not participate in CCM operations [
2,
10]. The questionable involvement of EcaA/B in physiological processes was compounded by the fact that their catalytic activity had not been demonstrated at that time. It has been suggested that EcaA/B may deliver CO
2/HCO
3− for the C
i transporters, act as sensors to detect CO
2 levels in the environment or control CO
2 leakage from cells [
2,
10]. However, these assumptions have not yet been confirmed. The recent identification of specific CA activity in EcaA/B [
5,
6,
11] motivated us to explore the question of its physiological importance.
EcaA/B location within the cell’s outer layers is conditioned by the presence of a signal peptide region at the
N-terminus of their amino acid sequence for transfer through the CM. In addition, EcaB has a putative lipoprotein lipid attachment site [
10]. Despite the presence of the
ecaA and
ecaB genes in many cyanobacterial genomes, the literature offers just a few observations on the activity, localization, and potential biological roles of the corresponding proteins highlighted below.
Only two cyanobacteria have been shown to have EcaA in their outer layers: freshwater
Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 [
2] and marine
Cyanothece sp. ATCC 51142 [
6]. The latter is also known as
Crocosphaera subtropica [
12]. Early research found EcaA in total proteins of
Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942 [
2], but this was later refuted [
11].
EcaA in
Anabaena was not further investigated. In
Cyanothece, the EcaA protein (EcaA
Cya) ensures relatively high external CA activity [
6]. Its translocation through CM is provided by the Sec (
secretory) export system [
13]. The recombinant EcaA
Cya lacks redox regulation of activity, a characteristic feature of α-CAs. It should be emphases that EcaA
Cya is the only known α-class CA responsible for the external activity of cyanobacterial cells. However, the physiological significance of this protein in
Cyanothece remains unclear.
The
Cyanothece genome also contains a gene for a second external CA, EcaB. Unlike EcaB
6803 of
Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 [
5] (see below), the specific enzyme activity of EcaB
Cya has not been verified [
6], raising the question of whether this protein serves a distinct biological function.
The enzymatic activity of the single external CA of freshwater
S.
elongatus PCC 7942, EcaA
Syn, was demonstrated only in recombinant protein [
11]. Unlike EcaA
Cya, EcaA
Syn possesses an essential disulfide bond, which enables redox control of its activity. In retrospect, the failures of the early attempts to validate the enzymatic activity of this protein [
2,
10] could likely be attributed to the use of an ineffective expression system and/or isolation buffer containing reducing agents, such as dithiothreitol. It is worth mentioning that when EcaA
Syn is expressed heterologously in
E.
coli, the recombinant full-length protein remains inside the cells [
11]. This could imply poor recognition of its signal peptide by the relevant bacterial Tat (
twin-
arginine
translocation) export machinery.
Synechococcus cells possess a relatively low level of
ecaASyn transcript, which varies barely as the concentration of exogenous CO
2 decreases from 1.5 to 0.04% [
11]. As noted above, the presence of EcaA
Syn in
Synechococcus is not evident, and intact cyanobacterial cells lack external CA activity. In this regard, it is not conceivable to discuss EcaA
Syn’s physiological role under conventional laboratory culture conditions.
Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 genome has only one external CA gene,
ecaB. The presence of EcaB
6803 in the periplasmic space of
Synechocystis was initially directly confirmed using proteomics [
3]. The presence of the twin-arginine motif in the signal peptide of EcaB
6803 suggested that the Tat system was involved in its export through CM. However, further investigation revealed that the majority of EcaB
6803 is associated with thylakoid membranes, with only a minor portion of the protein allocated to the CM [
5]. As mentioned above, the biological function of EcaB
6803 thylakoid form is linked to the operation of CO
2-uptake systems NDH-1
3/4 [
5], while its role in the periplasm remains unknown. There have been no reports on the CA activity of native
Synechocystis cells.
In addition to studies on model cyanobacterial strains, multiple investigations have found active external CAs in a wide range of alkaliphilic and haloalkaliphilic species [
14,
15,
16]. However, in most cases, this activity has not been linked to any particular proteins. It is assumed that in dense cyanobacterial mats, where impeded diffusion of C
i may restrict photosynthetic efficiency, these CAs prevent CO
2 leakage from cells.
Globally, freshwater, marine, and alkaliphilic cyanobacteria cells appear to have distinct requirements for the presence of active CAs in their outer layers. The pattern of participation of these enzymes in the photosynthetic assimilation of Ci may vary, being directly reliant on its exogenous level and the prevailing available form (CO2/HCO3−), determined by the pH of the environment.
The present study focuses on evaluating the role of external CA in the freshwater
S.
elongatus strain PCC 7942. We generated a series of cyanobacterial transformants that constitutively express distinct EcaA protein variations (
Table 1). For the physiological tests, the transformant with full-length EcaA protein from
Cyanothece sp. ATCC 51142, with its own signal peptide (L
Cya-EcaA
Cya), was selected. Here, we designated it as “TF”.
Physiological processes in the periplasm that might require external CA should be accompanied by variations in CO
2, HCO
3−, or H
+ concentrations, all of which are components of the enzyme-catalyzed reaction. CA’s primary physiological role in cyanobacterial cells has traditionally been attributed to photosynthetic assimilation of C
i [
8,
18,
19]. Despite previous evidence that external CAs play no role in CCM function [
2,
10], we cannot rule out the possibility that the enzyme plays a role in the so-called “basal” state [
20] of this mechanism. From this perspective, the most evident role for CA located in the periplasm may be to supply CO
2/HCO
3− molecules for their transport through the CM. In addition, the enzyme may be involved in maintaining the cell’s Na
+/H
+ balance, which is strongly related to C
i consumption [
9].
To explore differences in the physiology of wild-type and TF cells, a series of experiments were performed to mimic fluctuations that occur in the natural environment of Synechococcus. The most crucial factors here are fluctuations in the hydrochemical properties of the environment and the resulting changes in the conditions of Ci supply. Such change may be caused by soil leaching and water enrichment with HCO3− ions, resulting in an increase in the pH of the environment to alkaline levels. Fluctuations in hydrochemical parameters can also occur as a result of the reverse process, desalination, which reduces the concentration of Na+ ions required for the Na+-dependent consumption of HCO3−. During this series of experiments, our primary focus was on monitoring growth parameters as well as changes in the expression level of systems for photosynthetic Ci uptake and maintaining the cell’s Na+/H+ balance, which was associated with changes in the periplasm concentration of molecules included in the CA reaction equation—CO2, HCO3−, and H+.
In addition, we tested the validity of two additional hypotheses about the role of external CAs. The first concept centered on the enzymes’ putative protective role at extremely high exogenous concentrations of CO
2 [
21]. Previously, we discussed that external CAs may be an artifact of so-called pre-CCM, which operated in an early Earth’s CO
2-rich atmosphere. The physiological role of CA at that time may have been to counteract the unlimited entry of CO
2 into the cell by converting its major flux into HCO
3−, followed by the uptake of bicarbonate ions by low-affinity transporters in amounts sufficient for photosynthesis.
Another question was whether EcaA, similarly to α-CA III in mammals [
22], can be involved in the cellular response to oxidative stress. This function is due to the presence of two reactive cysteine sulfhydryl groups in α-CAs, which, in most cases, condition the ability of the enzyme to redox-regulate the activity. However, this characterization is also capable of conditioning the antioxidant properties of the molecule in analogy to glutathione, a key agent for resistance to oxidative stress in many living organisms, including plants. Like CA III, EcaA
Cya possesses two cysteine residues (Cys
55 and Cys
209 in the sequence of full-length protein). Despite the presence of thiol groups, redox status had no effect on enzyme functionality [
6]. It appears that due to the presence of Cys
55 and Cys
209, EcaA
Cya can neutralize or mitigate the action of oxidizing agents. In photosynthetic organisms living in natural environments, oxidative stress can arise as a result of a sudden increase in light intensity, causing an imbalance in the reactions of the light and dark phases of photosynthesis and the subsequent accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in cells.
According to our findings, freshwater Synechococcus typically does not require the presence of an active external CA under all of the examined conditions. Our results also point to the mechanisms that prevent the periplasmic appearance of the active EcaASyn in Synechococcus. It seems that this scenario resulted from the evolutionary reduction in Synechococcus of the mechanisms that assure the appearance of EcaASyn in the cell.
2. Results and Discussion
2.1. Generation of Synechococcus Transformants with Constitutive Expression of External CAs and Assessing the Presence of Specific mRNA
Several transformants of
S.
elongatus PCC 7942 with constitutive expression of external CA proteins have been generated (
Table 1). The target CAs were expressed in
Synechococcus cells using the
trc promoter, which ensures constitutive protein production in cyanobacterial cells regardless of growing circumstances. The pAM1303 vector used for transformation resulted in double homologous recombination of the cloned DNA fragment into a neutral region of the
Synechococcus genome [
23].
Figure S1 shows PCR results demonstrating the insertion of target nucleotide sequences into the
Synechococcus genome and the segregation of modified chromosomes.
It should be noted that replacing the native copy of the EcaA
Syn gene within the
Synechococcus chromosome via homologous recombination was irrational for two reasons: (1) The Synpcc7942_1389 gene, which encodes the D1 protein of photosystem II, is located right next to
ecaASyn (Synpcc7942_1388); (2) the native copy of
ecaASyn is unable to assure the synthesis of EcaA
Syn protein in
Synechococcus cells [
11].
Figure 1A depicts the results of semi-quantitative PCR, which demonstrate the presence of mRNA encoding recombinant proteins in all transformants. The results of real-time PCR confirm these data (
Figure 1B). Wild-type Cq values (~34) reflect the limit of reliable mRNA content. Although the amount of
LSyn-
ecaASyn gene transcripts in the transformant was higher than in wild-type cells (100:1), it was still much lower than what can be achieved through the expression controlled by the
trc promoter. Particularly, it was substantially lower compared to the transformant carrying the
LtorA-
ecaASyn sequence. One possible explanation for the small amount of
LSyn-
ecaASyn mRNA is the existence of a specific tag in its sequence for intracellular nuclease(s).
2.2. Confirmation of Recombinant Proteins’ Presence in Synechococcus Transformants and Their External CA Activity
The presence of recombinant proteins in the soluble protein fraction of
Synechococcus (enriched in cytoplasmic and periplasmic proteins) was clearly detected in transformants expressing L
TorA-EcaA
Syn, L
Cya-EcaA
Cya, and L
TorA-EcaA
Cya (
Figure 2).
The entire soluble L
Cya-EcaA
Cya protein exists in its mature processed form (EcaA
Cya). Because signal peptidases exclusively operate in the periplasmic space [
24], this finding suggests that recombinant L
Cya-EcaA
Cya translocated remarkably well through the
Synechococcus CM. The substitution of the signal peptide in EcaA
Cya from the original one (L
Cya) to L
TorA resulted in a portion of the recombinant L
TorA-EcaA
Cya remaining as a full-length, non-processed protein. This finding suggests that L
TorA-EcaA
Cya has lower translocation efficiency into the periplasmic space compared to L
Cya-EcaA
Cya.
LTorA-EcaASyn was also found in two forms in the transformant cells: processed and non-processed. Western blot analysis identified additional specific signals from polypeptides with molecular weights of less than 25 kDa that likely do not correspond to post-translationally modified EcaASyn. These signals are most likely generated by intracellular peptidases degrading EcaASyn in the transformant’s cytoplasm.
The western blot pattern for the transformant, which expressed L
Syn-EcaA
Syn, was similar to that of the wild-type cells, with no distinguished signals detected. This is completely compatible with the findings, which indicate the extremely low level of the relevant mRNA in the cells of this transformant (
Figure 1).
External CA activity in transformants was evaluated, confirming the presence of an active enzyme in cells expressing the proteins L
TorA-EcaA
Syn, L
Cya-EcaA
Cya, and L
TorA-EcaA
Cya (
Figure 3). This activity clearly matches the processed forms of proteins in the periplasm, as evidenced in the western blot pattern (
Figure 2). Visible differences in the slopes of equilibrium curves for wild-type cells and transformant with L
Syn-EcaA
Syn do not appear to result from the enzymatic reaction: the rate of equilibrium, in this case, did not correlate with the number of cells introduced into the reaction and did not change with the addition of a specific CA inhibitor, ethoxyzolamide.
Summarizing the data presented in
Figure 1,
Figure 2 and
Figure 3, we can conclude the following. External CAs were successfully expressed in
Synechococcus cells only when they were different from their own EcaA
Syn. We assume that
Synechococcus possesses the intracellular mechanism that is specially targeted at preventing the appearance of EcaA
Syn at both the transcript and protein product levels.
Quantitative analysis revealed that intact cells of the
Synechococcus transformant with constitutive expression of the L
Cya-EcaA
Cya protein exhibit the highest external CA activity (
Table 2). In this transformant, all recombinant CA was mature and processed (
Figure 2C), indicating a very high efficiency of translocation through the CM. This circumstance is critical for reducing the risks of the so-called “short circuit” caused by the presence of CA in the cytosol [
25], as such cells might be unable to perform efficient photosynthesis due to the efflux of accumulated C
i back into the environment. This is particularly important in the case of L
TorA-EcaA
Cya, which can function even in the reduced environment of cytoplasm due to the absence of redox control of its activity [
6]. Thus, for subsequent physiological studies, we selected a transformant that expressed the L
Cya-EcaA
Cya protein. In the following article, we shell refer to this transformant as TF.
2.3. Contribution of the External CA to Physiological Responses of Synechococcus When CO2 Is the Main Source of Ci
Cyanobacteria can utilize both CO
2 and the bicarbonate ion, HCO
3−, as an exogenous C
i for photosynthesis [
20]. The Henderson–Hasselbach equation, pH = 6.3 + lg([HCO
3−]/[CO
2]), directly determines the equilibrium ratio of the concentrations of these two types of C
i in the environment. At the same time, the cells always have access to CO
2, which is present in aquatic environments at an equilibrium concentration with air [
26].
The CO
2 molecule and the HCO
3− ion differ significantly in their physicochemical properties; therefore, cyanobacterial cells use different strategies for their consumption [
8,
20]. CO
2 can enter the cell by direct diffusion due to its high solubility in lipids. Cyanobacteria use the so-called “facilitated CO
2 uptake” strategy, in which the entrance of these molecules is facilitated by the establishment of their negative gradient due to the quick conversion of CO
2 that has already entered the cell into HCO
3−. Unlike lipophilic CO
2, negatively charged HCO
3− can cross cell membranes only via active transport. Energy equivalents for this process can be either ATP molecules or an electrochemical gradient of Na
+ ions. In this aspect, CO
2 consumption is preferable because the cell does not need to expend additional energy resources to obtain it.
If the periplasmic CA may supply CO2 and HCO3− molecules for transport across the CM, the LCya-EcaACya should contribute to the Ci uptake into TF cells. This fact should be reflected in the expression patterns of the associated assimilation systems. At the same time, the TF’s advantage over the wild type in certain conditions should correlate with the physiological parameters (higher growth rate, biomass accumulation, etc.).
2.3.1. Cultures Growth and Transcriptional Regulation of Ci Uptake Systems in Response to Changes in CO2-Supply
The phenotypes of wild-type and TF cells were compared using their growth curves at varied CO
2 concentrations in the gas–air mixture (
Figure 4). No statistically significant differences have been found between these two types of cells. Notably, at 10% CO
2, the cultures showed slightly better growth rates than under standard conditions (1.5%). It should be noted that bubbling with 30 and 100% CO
2 resulted in a pH drop in the culture medium from 7.5 to 6.5 and 6.0, respectively, by the end of the first hour after the commencement of adaptation, despite the presence of a buffer agent (HEPES-NaOH, pH 7.5). Thus, the cells suffered an additional nonspecific stress caused by acidification [
27,
28]. Particularly, under 100% CO
2, culture growth significantly declined (
Figure 4), and the pigments absorption spectra changed, reflecting a drop in the amount of chlorophyll and carotenoids.
The only components of the cyanobacterial CCM that are transcriptionally regulated in response to variations in the level of exogenous C
i are C
i assimilation systems [
29,
30,
31,
32].
S.
elongatus PCC 7942 contains two high-affinity HCO
3− transporters, BCT1 and SbtA, as well as two CO
2 uptake systems, low-affinity NDH-1
4 and high-affinity NDH-1
3. High-affinity systems are only expressed at low exogenous C
i concentrations (≤100 µM), which are insufficient for effective photosynthesis [
33]. During conventional laboratory cultivation, C
i-limiting conditions correspond to growth at or below the ambient CO
2 concentration (0.04%).
After switching the wild-type cell culture from 1.5% to 0.04% CO
2, the maximal level of mRNA for the
sbtA and
cmpA genes (the latter encodes one of the BCT1 complex subunits) was attained by the sixth hour of adaptation (
Figure 5): their transcript levels increased by approximately 6000 and 5400 times, respectively. By the third hour of adaptation, wild-type cells had attained the maximal amount of mRNA for the
ndhF3 gene, which encodes one of NDH-1
3 subunits: it increased by 150 times relative to control conditions (1.5% CO
2). The expression of
ndhF4, which encodes one of the NDH-1
4 proteins, changed by less than two-fold. In general, these results are consistent with previously known data [
29].
When TF cells were switched from 1.5% to 0.04% CO
2, a similar pattern emerged as in wild-type cells, with induction of the
cmpA,
sbtA, and
ndhF3 genes, but no changes in
ndhF4 expression. The difference was that the highest levels of
cmpA,
sbtA, and
ndhF3 transcripts were achieved during the third hour of adaptation (
Figure 5). The mRNA levels of these genes grew by around 70,000, 20,000, and 190 times, respectively.
This might be related to the function of periplasmic EcaA
Cya as follows. At 1.5% CO
2, carbon dioxide saturates the culture medium, and it is partially converted into HCO
3−—the main form of C
i at pH 7.5 [
34]. When cultures are switched to 0.04% CO
2, EcaA
Cya, which has access to the external substrate, rapidly transfers the reserves of dissolved HCO
3− into CO
2, followed by the release of the latter out of the culture medium. This is also facilitated by intensive bubbling of the cell suspension. Therefore, TF cells sense a decrease in the amount of HCO
3− in the medium more quickly than the wild-type. This explains the earlier induction of HCO
3− uptake systems (BCT1 and SbtA) in the TF compared to the wild type, as well as the timing of induction of the CO
2-uptake system NDH-1
3. Thus, when exogenous CO
2 concentrations suddenly drop, external CA activity becomes a disadvantage rather than a physiological priority.
When cultures were switched from 1.5% to 10% CO
2, the amount of
ndhF3 and
ndhF4 genes mRNAs changed by less than twofold in both cell types, showing that their transcription was neither induced nor repressed (
Figure 6A). The observed Cq values (~35) for
sbtA indicated the limit of the reliable mRNA content. Most likely, under control (1.5% CO
2) and experimental (10% CO
2) conditions, the mRNA of this gene was absent. Similarly, for
cmpA, the Cq value was greater than 37 at both 1.5% and 10% CO
2, showing the absence of the specific transcript under both conditions.
In tests involving cultures transfer to 30 and 100% CO
2, we did not explore the long-term adaptation responses since cells encountered clear non-specific stress due to the decrease in pH of the culture medium (see above). Under both experimental conditions (30 and 100% CO
2), the Cq values for
cmpA and
sbtA were more than 37, indicating the lack of specific mRNA. When cultures were switched from 1.5% to 30% CO
2, the expression levels of the
ndhF3 and
ndhF4 genes fell within one hour of the commencement of adaptation (
Figure 6B). These transcript levels decreased 2.4 and 3.2 times in the wild-type and 1.8 and 2.8 times in the TF cells, respectively. The Cq values of 29–32 for
ndhF3 and
ndhF4 at 30% CO
2 confirm the reliability of the data.
When cells were exposed to 100% CO
2, the amounts of
ndhF3 and
ndhF4 mRNAs decreased even more significantly (
Figure 6C): one hour after starting adaptation, wild-type cells experienced a drop of 27 and 26 times, respectively. In transformed cells,
ndhF3 and
ndhF4 transcript levels decreased by approximately 18 and 14 times, respectively. Both genes’ Cq values increased from ~31 (at 1.5% CO
2) to >36 (at 100% CO
2), indicating the complete elimination of the specific mRNAs at extremely high CO
2 concentrations.
With the exception of slight variations in changes in
ndhF3 and
ndhF4 transcription levels at 30 and 100% CO
2, the results shown in
Figure 6 were comparable for wild-type and TF cells. In general, the data presented in
Figure 5 and
Figure 6 indicate that
Synechococcus high-affinity bicarbonate uptake systems, BCT1 and SbtA, are activated exclusively at atmospheric CO
2 concentrations. At C
i concentrations sufficient to saturate photosynthesis (in our case, 1.5% CO
2 or more), the cyanobacterium uses CO
2 in an energy-saving manner. At the same time, CO
2-uptake systems NDH-1
3/4 in
Synechococcus are gradually inhibited as CO
2 concentrations rise from natural to extremely high levels. The most striking discovery is the inhibition of the NDH-1
4, which was previously assumed to be constitutive and whose expression is independent of the level of exogenous CO
2 supply.
Simultaneously, we may infer that the gathered data do not support our hypothesis regarding the protective effect of external CAs in the conditions of an ancient CO
2-rich atmosphere [
21]. If the external CA helped to create a barrier that prevented unrestricted CO
2 entry into the cell, the TF would have advantages over the wild type since it would experience less CO
2 stress. In this instance, we would have detected a distinct change in the parameters presented in
Figure 4 and
Figure 6.
Since bubbling with high (30%) and extremely high (100%) CO
2 concentrations caused a decrease in the pH of the culture medium to 6.5–6.0, we conducted an additional experiment to determine whether the changes observed in
Figure 6B,C were specific. Wild-type and TF
Synechococcus cells cultivated under conventional conditions (1.5% CO
2, BG-11, 20 mM HEPES, pH 7.5) were transferred to BG-11 with pH 6.0 and 20 mM MES as a buffer, keeping the percentage of CO
2 in the gas–air mixture unchanged. This allowed us to re-create acidification of the environment in response to excessive CO
2 percentage while subtracting the CO
2 stress factor itself. In this experiment, cells showed no significant changes in
cmpA,
sbtA,
ndhF3, or
ndhF4 expression (
Figure 7A). At the same time,
cmpA and
sbtA had Cq values greater than 36; Cq for
ndhF3 was ~34. This scenario was markedly different from that in
Figure 6B,C, and, in terms of C
i assimilation system behavior, mirroring the state of cells when they were normally cultivated at 1.5% CO
2 (repression of BCT1, SbtA, and NDH-1
3; C
i assimilation through CO
2-uptake system NDH-1
4). Thus, it can be stated that transcriptional alterations in
ndhF3 and
ndhF4 in
Figure 6B,C resulted from specific cell responses during adaptation to high and extremely high CO
2 levels.
2.3.2. Operation of Na+/H+-Balance Systems during Ci Assimilation under Different CO2-Supply Conditions
C
i assimilation by a cyanobacterial cell is directly linked to the maintenance of its Na
+/H
+ balance, in which periplasmic CA may play a role due to its ability to quickly adjust H
+ concentration. The CM contains the following auxiliary elements that ensure the operation of C
i uptake systems in model strains of cyanobacteria: (a) Na
+/H
+ antiporter Nha, which contributes to the formation of a sodium ion gradient during Na
+-dependent bicarbonate transport; (b) proton pump PxcA, which works to release H
+ from the cytoplasm and maintains a constant pH in the cell in the slightly alkaline range; and (c) the specialized NDH-1 complex Mnh, which functions as a Na
+/H
+ antiporter or H
+ pump [
9].
A literature search [
35] and a survey of the genome of
S.
elongatus PCC 7942 in Cyanobase (
http://genome.microbedb.jp/cyanobase/, accessed on 19 July 2024) reveals the presence of the following components of the Na
+/H
+ balance system in this cyanobacterium: the Mnh complex (individual subunits encoded by the genes Synpcc7942_1468, Synpcc7942_1469, Synpcc7942_1473, and Synpcc7942_1474); potential Na
+/H
+ antiporters Nha1–7 (Synpcc7942_0811, Synpcc7942_1264, Synpcc7942_2359, Synpcc7942_0546, Synpcc7942_0307, Synpcc7942_2394, and Synpcc7942_2186); as well as the PxcA proton pump (Synpcc7942_0991).
The following genes were selected for this study: (1)
ndhD5 (Synpcc7942_1473), which encodes one of the Mnh complex’s subunits; (2)
nha2 (Synpcc7942_1264), and
nha3 (Synpcc7942_2359) for potential Na
+/H
+ antiporters, which have been chosen based on the data of Billini et al. [
35]; and (3) pxcA (Synpcc7942_0991), which encodes the corresponding proton pump.
Figure 8 shows the transcriptional response of the above-mentioned genes to variations in the concentration of exogenous CO
2. The effects were identical in both wild-type and TF cells. When cultures were switched from 1.5 to 10 and 30% CO
2, we observed no significant changes in the expression of any of the genes tested. The Mnh complex showed a clear rise in the expression level, both during a drop (from 1.5 to 0.04%) and an excessive increase (from 1.5 to 100%) in exogenous CO
2. The induction of Mnh under 0.04% CO
2 coincides with an increase in the expression of bicarbonate uptake systems under these conditions (
Figure 5). The function of Mnh here is clearly related to the maintenance of Na
+-dependent HCO
3− uptake by the SbtA transporter. Predicting Mnh’s physiological role at extremely high CO
2 levels (100%) is challenging. It cannot be employed to counteract acidification because Mnh can only offer an intracellular H
+ supply in exchange for Na
+ ions. By the way, when the culture medium was intentionally acidified, we did not find a comparable increase in
ndhD5 transcript levels (
Figure 7B).
When both cell types were exposed to extremely high CO
2 levels (100%), the level of transcripts for all other examined genes (
nha2,
nha3, and
pxcA) sharply decreased within one hour, paralleling the increase in
ndhD5 expression (
Figure 8). Because there was no similar response to acidification of the environment (
Figure 7B), we interpret Nha2/3 and PxcA suppression as a CO
2 stress-specific response, the physiological impact of which is unknown. One can suppose that the repression of Nha2/3 and PxcA is due to the strong suppression of Na
+-dependent bicarbonate transport at 100% CO
2 (
Figure 6,
sbtA data). However, at 10 and 30% CO
2, the levels of
nha2,
nha3, and
pxcA transcripts remained unchanged, although the expression of SbtA was also suppressed.
We observed equivalent fluctuations in the expression levels of ndhD5, nha2, nha3, and pxcA in both cell types. Thus, the presence of external CA in the TF had no effect on the cell’s Na+/H+ balance during photosynthetic assimilation of Ci at the examined conditions.
2.4. Contribution of the External CA to Physiological Responses of Synechococcus When HCO3− Is the Main Source of Ci
Synechococcus, as a freshwater microorganism, can withstand relatively high concentrations of bicarbonate and the resulting alkaline pH value in its habitat. This conclusion can be derived from the findings of early investigations on
Synechococcus species that are close to
S.
elongatus PCC 7942 [
36,
37,
38].
In this series of experiments, the media where HCO3− was the main carbon source was used (in contrast to cultivation on BG-11 under bubbling with CO2-containing gas–air mixture). As in previous cases, our goal was to look for differences between the physiological responses of TF and those of wild-type cells.
2.4.1. Evaluation of Synechococcus Tolerance to Different HCO3− Contents in the Culture Medium
To determine the appropriate HCO3− amount in the culture medium for Synechococcus growth, we conducted three independent experiments in which wild-type and TF cells were grown in BG-11 with various concentrations of NaHCO3 (from 10 to 200 mM). NaHCO3 basic characteristics resulted in an initial pH~9.5 for all medium variants.
The spectral characteristics of the experimental cultures appeared normal and similar to those of the control cells (
Figure S2). The maximum pigment content was found in cultures grown at 10–100 mM NaHCO
3, which was consistent with their overall view (
Figure S3). The alkalization of the environment in all variations with NaHCO
3 obtained comparable values, implying that photosynthetic intensity was almost the same. The optimal NaHCO
3 level for both cell types ranged between 10 and 50 mM. Under these conditions, the culture suspension density and biomass accumulation were at their peak (
Figure S2). Meanwhile, we found no variations in the physiological responses to culture conditions in wild-type and TF cells.
2.4.2. Transcriptional Response of Synechococcus Cells during Adaptation to Bicarbonate-Containing Media
In the experiments, we employed BG-11 media with 10 or 50 mM NaHCO
3 as boundary values of this parameter to ensure optimal cyanobacterial growth (
Figures S2 and S3). Daily assessment of the transcriptional response of genes associated with C
i uptake and Na
+/H
+ balance-maintaining systems under adaptation to bicarbonate-containing environments found no significant differences between the two cell types under both experimental settings (
Figure 9).
Remarkably, the transcriptional response of cells to a switch from 1.5% CO
2 to 10 or 50 mM bicarbonate (
Figure 9) was identical to that observed in response to a drop in CO
2 from the optimal (1.5%) to the atmospheric (0.04%) level (
Figure 5). In both scenarios, transcripts of genes related to inducible HCO
3− and CO
2 uptake systems (
cmpA,
sbtA, and
ndhF3) were significantly up-regulated, as well as of
ndhD5, which encodes one of the Mnh complex’s subunits and serves as an auxiliary element for SbtA’s operation. At the same time, the NDH-1
4 CO
2 uptake system, which exhibits constitutive behavior at low C
i levels, did not respond to the changes. Thus, the transfer of
Synechococcus cells from 1.5% CO
2 to bicarbonate media caused the detectable and convincing induction of the CCM.
It is thought that cyanobacteria assess the overall concentration of exogenous C
i (CO
2 + HCO
3−) and initiate CCM only when its level is insufficient to saturate the dark phase of photosynthesis [
8,
39]. For cyanobacteria, C
i-limiting conditions are defined as a total C
i level of no more than 0.1 mM in the medium [
33]. While bubbling, 1.5% CO
2 corresponds to at least 2 mM of total dissolved C
i [
40]. Thus, a transfer of cells from 1.5% CO
2 to 10 and 50 mM NaHCO
3 provides even more total C
i, the conditions that do not imply CCM induction. Our findings suggest that a shift from CO
2 to HCO
3− (without a simultaneous decrease in the total amount of C
i) forces
Synechococcus to re-arrange CCM architecture in order to restructure C
i consumption from CO
2 to HCO
3−. The induction of
cmpA and
sbtA expression (
Figure 9) appears to be linked to the necessity for the synthesis of the HCO
3− transporters BCT1 and SbtA. The activation of the CO
2-uptake system NDH-1
3 indicates that cells detect a decrease in the exogenous amount of a specific form of C
i (in this case, CO
2) but not in the overall sum of CO
2 + HCO
3−.
This conclusion is supported by data comparing the expression level of C
i assimilation systems in
Synechococcus, which is fully adapted to bicarbonate-containing media, to that in cells grown in ordinary BG-11 medium with no bubbling and a priori having a fully induced CCM (
Figure S4). In this situation, we found similar levels of NDH-1
3 expression in all variants, implying that cells equally sensed the low level of exogenous CO
2. Simultaneously, cells that have been fully adapted to a bicarbonate-containing environment suppress both HCO
3− uptake systems—BCT1 and SbtA (
cmpA and
sbtA genes). This appears to be a “proper” reaction to large amounts of exogenous HCO
3−. SbtA expression drops even at 10 mM NaHCO
3, whereas BCT1 is only suppressed at 50 mM. The BCT1 of
S.
elongatus PCC 7942 has a
K0.5 (HCO
3−) value of around 15 µM [
41]. The precise
K0.5 (HCO
3−) value of SbtA could not be determined [
42]. Based on these findings, we can expect that SbtA has a higher affinity for bicarbonate than BCT1.
2.5. Contribution of External CA to Physiological Responses of Synechococcus under Conditions Where CO2 and HCO3− Are Simultaneously Available to Cells
To better understand the impact of external CA on Ci photosynthetic assimilation, we conducted a one-time assessment of Synechococcus transcriptional responses to different [HCO3−]/[CO2] supply. For this purpose, wild-type and TF cells were cultivated under standard conditions (BG-11, pH 7.5, bubbling with 1.5% CO2) and then transferred to the following experimental settings:
BG-11, pH 7.5, no bubbling. Severe restriction on Ci. Cells only have access to CO2, which diffuses into the medium from the air, as well as to HCO3−, which is generated from CO2 according to the Henderson–Hasselbach equation at pH 7.5;
BG-11, pH 7.5, bubbling with 0.04% CO2. These conditions, like those in option 1, correspond to cell growth at atmospheric CO2 levels. However, due to bubbling, the aquatic environment is actively saturated with the corresponding level of carbon dioxide;
BG-11, pH 9.5, 50 mM NaHCO
3, no bubbling. Cells have access to a high concentration of HCO
3− in the environment; dissolved CO
2, which diffuses into the medium from the air, is also available. Due to the high pH, additional CO
2 cannot be generated from HCO
3−according to [
34];
BG-11, pH 9.5, 50 mM NaHCO3, bubbling with 0.04% CO2. Cells have access to a high amount of HCO3− as well as to atmospheric CO2 level; the saturation of the medium with the latter is maintained by bubbling;
BG-11, pH 9.5, 50 mM NaHCO3, bubbling with 1.5% CO2. Cells have access to high amounts of both HCO3− and CO2.
After the transfer of the cells to the new environment, the expression levels of genes related to C
i assimilation systems were evaluated and compared to those under standard conditions (BG-11 media, pH 7.5, 1.5% CO
2) (
Figure 10). In all experimental variants, wild-type and TF cells exhibited similar responses. The only variation was in the strength of the effects that were observed: the TF often showed a less prominent transcriptional response when exposed to bicarbonate-containing media. This discrepancy was most likely caused by the TF’s outer CA’s capacity to “blur” the stress pattern by restoring the ratio of C
i forms in the pericellular region. Nonetheless, we found no significant phenotypic difference between wild-type and TF cells in the relevant experimental variants after three days of the experiment (
Figure S5C). External CA activity appears to provide no discernible benefit to the TF under any of the experimental settings employed. In general, the obtained data confirmed the results of the prior experiment using bicarbonate media (
Figure 9).
Due to the methodological changes, the results cannot be compared to those from the previous experiment aimed at lowering CO
2 levels (
Figure 5). The first experiment (
Figure 5) involved immediate vessel changeover to barbotage with a gas–air combination containing less CO
2. As a result, even after CO
2 levels have decreased, certain crucial concentrations of C
i remain in the culture media. The current experiment (
Figure 10) entailed changing the culture conditions by centrifuging the cells to remove them from the standard medium and then resuspending them in the experimental media. In this case, the cells were exposed to the novel conditions right away.
Variants 1 and 2 (BG-11, no bubbling or bubbling with 0.04% CO
2) showed the greatest increase in the expression of the
cmpA,
sbtA, and
ndhF3 genes (
Figure 10). On bicarbonate-containing media under 0.04% CO
2 (variant No. 4), a significant increase in the expression of
cmpA,
sbtA, and
ndhF3 was observed only by the sixth hour after the cells were transferred to new conditions. While in settings with no bubbling (variant No. 3), the induction was visible as early as the third hour (
Tables S1 and S2). In the first 6 h following transfer to new conditions, we did not notice significant changes in the mRNA level of the
ndhF4 gene (
Figure 10).
These results may be interpreted as follows. Under normal growth conditions (BG-11, 1.5% CO2), Synechococcus does not experience photosynthesis-related Ci deficiency. CO2 entering the environment is in balance with HCO3−, which is generated from CO2 at pH 7.5 according to the Henderson-Hasselbach equation. The low-affinity CO2 uptake system (NDH-14) appears to be responsible for Ci assimilation under these conditions. Furthermore, in an environment where CO2 is abundant, there is no need to maintain the energy-consuming HCO3−-uptake systems, BCT1 and SbtA.
When cells are switched from standard to CO2-limiting conditions (options No. 1 and No. 2: BG-11, without bubbling or bubbling with 0.04% CO2), they experience a simultaneous lack of both CO2 and HCO3− due to a rapid decrease in total Ci. That is why they activate all available Ci-uptake systems, including NDH-13, BCT1, and SbtA.
When cells are transferred to HCO3−-containing media, the rise in the expression of all inducible Ci-uptake systems is modest for variant No. 5 (50 mM HCO3− + 1.5% CO2), increases in variant No. 4 (50 mM HCO3− + 0.04% CO2), and reaches a maximum value in variant No. 3 (50 mM HCO3−, no bubbling). Obviously, the induction of BCT1 and SbtA in variants 3–5 is related to the necessity to shift Ci-assimilation from CO2 to HCO3−. The induction of NDH-13 (with the exception of variant No. 5) is apparently associated with a decrease in CO2 amount in the medium at pH 9.5 as compared to pH 7.5. These results provide additional evidence that Synechococcus cells can sense a drop in the exogenous concentration of a specific type of Ci rather than the total concentration of CO2 and HCO3− when they are shifted to new Ci-supply conditions.
The strength of the induction of BCT1 and SbtA in “bicarbonate” variants Nos. 3–5 is inversely correlated with the level of CO
2, which can be used as an extra source of exogenous C
i to HCO
3−. This suggests that the possibility of energy-independent CO
2 assimilation has a significant influence on the induction of HCO
3− uptake systems, even when this form of C
i is abundant. Variants Nos. 3–5 showed lower induction of NDH-1
3, BCT1, and SbtA compared to Nos. 1–2, indicating the relevance of the total amount of available exogenous C
i (CO
2 + HCO
3−). Growth in optical density and dry biomass content in cell suspensions, as well as the overall look of the cultures in variants Nos. 1–5, shown in
Figure S5A,B support these conclusions. Clearly, option 5 (50 mM NaHCO
3 + 1.5% CO
2) provides the optimal growth conditions.
These results may contribute to our understanding of the cell’s physiological processes in response to variations in the availability of various forms of C
i. On the one hand, cyanobacteria can sense the total amount of exogenous C
i and adjust CCM activity in response to intracellular changes caused by variations in its availability. C
i-limiting conditions alter cell biochemistry [
8,
39,
43], resulting in increased intracellular levels of RBP and 2-phosphoglycolate, which are indicators of Calvin cycle repression and photorespiration activation, respectively. These molecules can function as effectors, modulating the ability of CCM-associated transcription factors to bind to DNA and regulate gene expression. At the post-translational level, CCM regulation may occur via adenyl nucleotides. Their ratio is directly related to the efficiency of photosynthesis, which in turn depends on the conditions of C
i-supply [
44].
On the other hand, the CCM operation can also be tuned based on the predominant form of exogenous C
i. Thus, the cAMP molecule, which serves as a C
i-sensing signal, triggers the regulation of the
sbtA operon [
45]. It has been demonstrated that the activity of soluble adenylate cyclase is directly proportional to the concentration of exogenous HCO
3− [
46]. However, activation by CO
2 has also been detected [
47], implying that cAMP may play a role in the regulation of CO
2-uptake system expression. The ability of allophycocyanin to bind CO
2 may also indicate that it serves as a primary C
i sensor [
48].
Our findings show that when the predominant form of exogenous Ci changes (without a simultaneous decrease in the total amount), Synechococcus experiences a lack of Ci entry into the cell, as evidenced by the induction of CCM components and the reorganization of the Ci uptake pattern based on its most accessible form. Consequently, in our case, we deal with the second variant of CCM regulation. The consistency of the molecular mechanisms underlying these processes remains to be elucidated.
2.6. Evaluation of the Appearance of Native External CA EcaASyn in Synechococcus under Different CO2/HCO3−-Supply Conditions
Previously, we demonstrated that
Synechococcus cells lacked their own EcaA
Syn protein when cultured at 0.04 or 1.5% CO
2 [
11]. Here, we evaluated the emergence of EcaA
Syn in
Synechococcus under a variety of conditions, including changes in CO
2 and HCO
3− content, as well as their concentration ratios. Cells of both the wild-type and the TF were collected for the analysis, with the expectation that the latter would serve as a control variant: the presence of active EcaA
Cya would reduce the requirement for EcaA
Syn to appear. We evaluated the change in the level of
ecaASyn mRNA when cells were transferred from the standard (BG-11, 1.5% CO
2) to experimental conditions and the presence of the corresponding protein product at the end of adaptation (6 h at 30 and 100% CO
2 and 24 h for all other variants).
EcaA
Syn showed no transcriptional response under the majority of the conditions tested (
Figure S6). However, in BG-11, in the absence of bubbling, cells exhibited an unexpectedly substantial rise in
ecaASyn expression 3 h after the onset of adaptation. Despite the observed oscillations, the protein product
ecaASyn was entirely missing in all experimental settings (
Figure S7). Western blotting did not show any signal corresponding to the full-length (27 kDa) or processed (24.6 kDa) EcaA
Syn forms. It should be highlighted that, in addition to the sensitive signal visualization method, which detects femtogram levels of the protein, we utilized lengthy exposure times (up to 4.5 min), which would allow us to detect the presence of EcaA
Syn even in the smallest amounts. However, in all cases, the antibodies reacted nonspecifically with various polypeptides of
Synechococcus. Thus, it was impossible to determine whether the EcaA
Syn protein has any physiological role.
2.7. Effect of Active External CA on Na+-Independent HCO3− Uptake
Synechococcus cells can transport bicarbonate ions in either a Na
+-independent or Na
+-dependent manner. The former involves the ATP-driven BCT1 system, whereas the latter requires the SbtA symporter, which transports HCO
3− across the CM alongside the symport of Na
+ ions and, hence, requires Na
+-gradient to function [
9].
As already mentioned in
Section 2.4.2, the
K0.5 (HCO
3−) value for BCT1 of
S.
elongatus PCC 7942 is around 15 µM [
41]. BCT1 provides a medium flux rate of HCO
3− into the cell. The exact
K0.5 (HCO
3−) value for SbtA (which has a low flux rate, at least in marine cyanobacteria [
49]) was not determined [
42]. Both BCT1 and SbtA are high-affinity systems, as they are activated only at low CO
2 (
Figure 5,
Figure 6 and
Figure 10).
Obviously, to assess the contribution of external CA to the Na
+-independent consumption of HCO
3−, it was necessary to work under conditions of low CO
2 concentrations (0.04%) because, under optimal 1.5% CO
2, cells satisfy the need for C
i primarily due to CO
2 uptake using the low-affinity NDH-1
4 system (
Section 2.5).
Indeed, depletion in Na
+ ions under optimal growth conditions (BG-11, pH 7.5, 1.5% CO
2) had no noticeable effect on the growth of wild-type or TF cells (
Figure 11A). In contrast, at low CO
2 concentrations (0.04%) in a Na
+-depleted medium (BG-11, pH 7.5), the TF grew substantially slower (
Figure 11B). The growth rate of the cultures leveled off once more when they were cultivated on BG-11 minus Na
+, pH 6.0 (
Figure 11C). We explain these findings as follows. Because the ratio of equilibrium forms of C
i at pH 7.5 favors HCO
3−, external CA activity will contribute to the HCO
3− predominance in the pericellular space of the TF. At the same time, the HCO
3− flow rate provided by Na
+-independent BCT1 is insufficient for effective C
i uptake, as evidenced by the TF’s slow growth. In contrast to the TF, the CO
2 substrate is still more easily accessible for wild-type cells. For this reason, under CO
2-limiting conditions—that is, when the environment does not contain an oversupply of these molecules—the wild type can demonstrate its superiority. In a medium with a pH of less than 6.3, CO
2 becomes the primary form of C
i. Under these conditions, the presence of external CA activity will not exacerbate the depletion of Na
+ ions because the CO
2-uptake systems will still have access to CO
2 in the pericellular space. This is why there is no difference between the cultivation of wild-type and TF cells in BG-11 minus Na
+, pH 6.0.
After about four days of cultivation, KHCO
3 at 50 mM was added to parts of the cultures growing in BG-11 minus Na
+, pH 7.5, and 0.04% CO
2, which further contrasted the differences between wild-type and TF cells. The TF dies within 24 h due to its inability to handle the circumstances, while the wild type still looks quite satisfactory (
Figure 11D, upper panel, vessels WT3 and TF3). The addition of KHCO
3 to other vessels (WT1 and TF1) leads, a day later, to a similar result (
Figure 11D, lower panel). At this moment, the wild-type culture that received the first portion of KHCO
3 (WT3) also dies one day after the TF1 transformant. The pH rises to 9.5 concurrently with the addition of KHCO
3, and HCO
3− becomes the predominant form of C
i in the medium. It is evident that, even if the BCT1 system is active, it cannot ensure a significant supply of HCO
3− for photosynthesis. A vicious circle is created: BCT1 is powered by ATP energy; photosynthesis needs to be effective in order to generate ATP molecules in sufficient quantities; reduced C
i influx into the cell decreases the activity of the Calvin cycle followed by suppressing the light phase of photosynthesis, which is responsible for ATP synthesis.
These results lead to the following conclusion: under desalination conditions, with a decrease in the concentration of Na+ ions, even at somewhat alkaline pH, external CA activity in Synechococcus reduces Ci photosynthetic assimilation efficiency, thus giving a counter-advantage rather than a physiological priority.
2.8. The Impact of Active External CA on the Development of Oxidative Stress
At high light intensities, cyanobacteria may encounter oxidative stress due to an imbalance between the light and dark photosynthesis reactions, as well as the generation of ROS in cells. Low CO2 concentrations are predicted to exacerbate the situation by reducing the efficacy of the Calvin cycle. The latter scenario will be prevented once the CCM is active.
As previously mentioned, we observed the induction of expression of the own
ecaASyn gene in
Synechococcus cells grown in BG-11 medium without bubbling with air or gas–air mixture (
Figure S5B; variant No. 1). Since these severe C
i-limiting conditions stimulate the formation of ROS, it can be expected that the attempt to trigger the mechanism of synthesis of the corresponding external CA may indicate its potential importance under these conditions.
ROS are formed in photosynthetic cells as singlet oxygen (
1O
2), superoxide anion (O
2−•), hydroxyl radical (HO
•), and hydrogen peroxide (H
2O
2) [
50]. Hydrogen peroxide is the most stable ROS; therefore, adding H
2O
2 to the culture medium is widely used to simulate oxidative stress.
In this set of experiments, wild-type and TF cells were grown at 1.5% CO
2 and low light intensity (30 µmol m
−2 s
−1 photons), then diluted to a low optical density (OD
750 ~ 0.03), and then subjected to 1000 µmol photons m
−2 s
−1. The CO
2 supply was constantly maintained at 1.5 or 0.04%. Because of their low optical density, the cells did not darken and were fully exposed to light stress. Cultivation occurred for the first 2–3 days, and the experiment was terminated when the suspensions reached an OD
750 > 0.3. The evaluation of growth curves revealed no significant differences between the two types of cells, neither under optimal CO
2 supply (1.5%) nor under CO
2-limiting conditions (0.04%) (
Figure 12A). The spectral properties of the cell cultures were likewise similar.
The intracellular system of ROS neutralization in
S.
elongatus PCC 7942 is far less studied than that of
Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. According to the literature [
51,
52] and Cyanobase database (
http://genome.microbedb.jp/cyanobase/, accessed on 19 July 2024),
Synechococcus cells contain the following potential components of the system for H
2O
2 neutralization: (1) catalase, encoded by the Synpcc7942_1656 gene (
katG), (2) glutathione peroxidase (GSHPx, Synpcc7942_1214), (3) 1-Cys peroxiredoxin (
1-
cys prx, Synpcc7942_2449), (4) 2-Cys peroxiredoxin/thioredoxin peroxidase (
2-
cys prx, Synpcc7942_2309), (5) PrxQ-A1 peroxiredoxin/thioredoxin peroxidase (
prxQ-
A1, Synpcc7942_2180), (6) PrxQ-A2 peroxiredoxin (
prxQ-
A2, Synpcc7942_1806), (7) PrxQ-A3 peroxiredoxin/thioredoxin peroxidase (
prxQ-
A3, Synpcc7942_1942), (8) PrxQ-B peroxiredoxin/thioredoxin peroxidase (
prxQ-
B, SynPCC7942_0642).
For the analysis, five genes were selected (
katG,
GSHPx,
2-
cys prx,
prxQ-
A1, and
prxQ-
B) that, among other things, exhibited the strongest response to cell treatment with hydrogen peroxide, according to earlier data [
51,
52]. The assessment of changes in the expression levels of these genes after the addition of 0.25 mM H
2O
2 revealed no difference between wild-type and TF cells (
Figure 12B). The data indicate that the injection of H
2O
2 causes comparable responses to oxidative stress in both cell types. Thus, the presence of active external CA appears to have no effect on cells’ resistance to this type of ROS.
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Construction of Plasmids
All enzymes were purchased from Thermo Fisher Scientific (Vilnius, Lithuania), New England Biolabs (Ipswich, MA, USA), or Evrogen JSC (Moscow, Russia). Total nucleic acids from cyanobacteria were isolated using the phenol method [
53], and RNA was removed using RNase A. Purified genomic DNA served as a template for PCR. Oligonucleotide primers (
Table S3) with restriction endonuclease sites at their 5′ ends were synthesized by Evrogen JSC. DNA fragments were amplified with high-fidelity DNA polymerases.
Two DNA fragments were amplified from the ecaA gene of Cyanothece sp. ATCC 51142 (CyanoBase ID: cce_4328). One corresponded to the entire sequence of ecaACya, including the 81-bp starting region at the 5′ end that encodes the protein signal peptide (LCya-ecaACya, 780 bp); the other represented a gene variation missing this region (ecaACya, 699 bp). Both PCR products had an extra 49 base pairs from the gene’s 3′ end. This feature was created to make it easier to select a reverse primer while keeping the gene’s natural stop codon.
The ecaA gene from Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942 (CyanoBase ID: Synpcc7942_1388) was also amplified in two versions: (a) a full-length sequence (714 bp) including the region encoding the signal sequence (LSyn-ecaASyn) and (b) a fragment corresponding to the mature protein (ecaASyn, 648 bp).
The DNA fragment encoding the TorA protein’s signal peptide (LtorA) was recovered using PCR from the genomic DNA of Escherichia coli strain BL21 (Novagen-Merck, San Diego, CA, USA). The torA gene, which encodes trimethylamine-N-oxide reductase, is highly conserved (up to 100%) across E. coli strains. Amplification primers were created using the torA sequence of E. coli strain K-12 (GenBank NC_000913.3).
The amplified segments were cloned in
E.
coli XL1-Blue cells (Agilent Technologies, La Jolla, CA, USA) using the pTZ57R vector (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Vilnius, Lithuania). The fragments were then digested at restriction sites on their ends and utilized to construct the following recombinant plasmids based on the pTrc99a vector (Pharmacia, Uppsala, Sweden) (
Table S3):
pTrc99::LSyn-ecaASyn. The DNA fragment LSyn-ecaASyn was cloned into NcoI and BamHI sites of pTrc99a;
pTrc99a::LtorA-ecaASyn. The DNA fragment LtorA was cloned into NcoI and EcoRI sites of pTrc99a; then the construct pTrc99::LtorA was treated with EcoRI and BamHI restriction endonucleases and ligated to ecaASyn fragment that possessed the analogous restriction sites at its ends;
pTrc99a::LCya-ecaACya. The DNA fragment LCya-ecaACya was cloned into NcoI and BamHI sites of pTrc99a;
pTrc99a::LtorA-ecaACya. The plasmid was assembled as described for variant 2 (pTrc99a::LtorA-ecaASyn). The ecaACya-fragment that possessed the EcoRI and BamHI restriction sites at its ends was ligated with pTrc99::LtorA, which was treated with analogous restriction endonucleases.
After obtaining constructs based on pTrc99a, the regions included the vector’s promoter (
trc) region, and the subsequent region encoding the target protein was excised using
EheI and
BamHI restriction endonucleases (
Figure 13). The isolated segment was ligated into the pAM1303 vector [
23] that was digested with
SmaI and
BamHI restriction endonucleases. The resultant constructs were cloned in
E.
coli XL1-Blue cells in the presence of streptomycin, taking into account the strain’s spectinomycin resistance. The constructions were subsequently used to transform
S.
elongatus PCC 7942 cells. Sanger-type nucleotide sequencing (Evrogen) revealed that the observed structures were correctly assembled.
3.2. Transformation of Synechococcus
S.
elongatus PCC 7942 cells were transformed with constructs based on the pAM1303 vector using the cyanobacterium’s natural competence [
54]. Transformant colonies were selected on Petri dishes using BG-11 agar medium [
55] and spectinomycin. The insertion of the target DNA sequence into a neutral site of the
Synechococcus chromosome conditioned by the vector design [
23] was detected using PCR. For screening, primers NS13 (5′-GTGCAGCAGCAACTTCAAG) and NS14 (5′-GTGCGTTCCACAGACATC) were employed [
56] (
Figure 13). The presence of specific mRNA encoding target recombinant proteins in
Synechococcus transformant cells was determined using real-time or semi-quantitative PCR (
Section 3.6).
3.3. Culture Conditions and Evaluation of Growth Parameters of Synechococcus
Standard conditions for culturing wild-type cells or transformants of
S.
elongatus PCC 7942 assumed photoautotrophic growth at 32 °C in BG-11 medium with the addition of a buffer agent (20 mM HEPES-NaOH, pH 7.5) under constant illumination with warm white LED lamps at an intensity of 100–150 μmol m
−2 s
−1 photons and bubbling with a gas–air mixture containing 1.5% CO
2. Cultivation was performed in glass culture vessels using a laboratory-intensive culture system [
57]. To isolate genomic DNA,
Cyanothece sp. ATCC 51142 cells were cultivated in ASP2 medium under similar conditions.
Alternatively, in some experiments, cultivation was carried out in a Sanyo Versatile Environmental Test Chamber MLR-351 (Sanyo Electric Co., Osaka, Japan) in flat-bottomed flasks or penicillin vials capped on top with silicone or cellulose stoppers that allow gas exchange. In this scenario, the cultures were grown without bubbling, with occasional shaking, at 32 °C and illuminated with fluorescent lamps at 50 µmol m−2 s−1 photons.
Under experimental conditions, cultures were left without bubbling (only CO2 in the medium that presented in equilibrium with the surrounding air was available to them). Alternatively, bubbling was performed with air containing a natural atmospheric concentration of CO2 (0.04%) or with a gas–air mixture containing 10% (moderately high concentration), 30% (high concentration), and 100% (extremely high concentration) CO2. To explore the impact of light stress on growth, cells were preadapted to 30 µmol m−2 s−1 photons, which increased to up to 1000 µmol m−2 s−1 during the experiment.
The experiments employed the alternative variants of the BG-11 media listed below: (1) without Na
2CO
3 and HEPES-NaOH but containing NaHCO
3 from 10 to 200 mM (pH ~ 9.5 for all options); (2) with Na
+ ion depletion, replacing NaNO
3 and Na
2CO
3 with equimolar amounts of KNO
3 and K
2CO
3, respectively, and HEPES-NaOH with HEPES-KOH (pH 7.5). In a study to determine the influence of ambient acidification on the expression of genes encoding C
i uptake and Na
+/H
+ balance systems, 20 mM MES, pH 6.0, was utilized as a buffer agent [
58]. In tests to imitate oxidative stress, H
2O
2 was added to the medium at a final concentration of 0.25 mM [
59].
The media have been prepared using chemicals with a purity of at least 99.5% from the manufacturers listed below: Chimmed (Moscow, Russia), Servicebio (Wuhan, China), AppliChem (Darmstadt, Germany), Merck (Darmstadt, Germany), neoFroxx (Einhausen, Germany), CDH (New Delhi, India). Buffer agents were obtained from neoFroxx (HEPES, MES) or Merck (Trisma base). Solid media were prepared using bacteriologic agar-agar purchased from BD (Waltham, MA, USA) or Dia-M (Moscow, Russia). Water was purified by using a Milli-Q Plus system (Merck Millipore, Burlington, MA, USA). Hydrogen peroxide was obtained from Merck.
The optical density of cells was measured at 750 nm (OD750). Absorption spectra of cell suspensions were measured at wavelengths ranging from 350 to 750 nm. The measurements were taken using a Genesys 40 spectrophotometer (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA).
The assessment of the amount of dry biomass in the volume of cell suspension was performed as described before [
60].
3.4. Cell Fractionation, Electrophoresis and Immunoblotting
Synechococcus wild type or transformants cells were grown until OD
750 value reached ~2. To analyze the appearance of
Synechococcus’s own protein L
Syn-EcaA
Syn, we employed cells that had been acclimated to the experimental conditions for 24 h. Cell disruption and fractionation were carried out, as reported before [
11]. A supernatant fraction rich in soluble proteins from the cytoplasm and periplasmic space was used for the studies. The protein content of the samples was determined using a commercial DC Protein Assay Kit (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA, USA).
Proteins were separated by electrophoresis in 12.5% denaturing PAGE [
61]. Precision Plus Protein™ All Blue Standards (Bio-Rad) served as molecular weight markers. Gels were stained with Coomassie Brilliant Blue R-250.
Western blotting was carried out according to Bio-Rad Laboratories protocols. Proteins have been transferred onto a nitrocellulose membrane. The primary antibodies used were as follows: (1) Rabbit polyclonal antibodies against the EcaA
Cya protein of
Cyanothece sp. ATCC 51142 [
6]; (2) Rabbit polyclonal antibodies against the EcaA
Syn protein of
S.
elongatus PCC 7942 [
11]. To assess signal specificity when utilizing anti-EcaA
Syn, antibodies were preincubated with the excess of the recombinant EcaA
Syn, as described in [
11]. Antibodies against rabbit immunoglobulins fused to horseradish peroxidase were used as secondary antibodies (Cytiva, Marlborough, MA, USA; NA934). Antibody-antigen complexes were visualized with ClarityTM Western ECL substrates (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA, USA). Signals were detected using a ChemiDoc MP system and Image Lab 5.1 software from Bio-Rad.
3.5. Assay of Carbonic Anhydrase Activity
Synechococcus cells, both wild-type and transformants, were grown until OD
750 ~ 2, then collected by centrifugation (3500×
g, 10 min, 4 °C), washed with chilled 30 mM HEPES-KOH buffer (pH 8.2), and suspended in the same buffer. CA activity was assessed electrometrically [
62] by monitoring the rate of H
+ evaluation during CO
2 hydration, as previously described [
6,
11]. pH measurements were taken every 0.5 s. The specificity of the reactions was validated by pre-incubating the samples for 30 min with the CA inhibitor ethoxyzolamide at a final concentration of 0.5 mM. The CA activity was expressed in Wilbur-Anderson units (WAU) per 1 mg of total cell protein.
3.6. Samples Collection, RNA Isolation, RT-qPCR and Semi-Quantitative RT-PCR
To determine the existence of specific mRNA in Synechococcus transformants with constitutive expression of various external CAs, cells grown under standard conditions were employed. Wild-type cells served as the control.
In experiments to investigate the role of active external CA in
Synechococcus physiology, cultures of wild-type cells (WT) and the transformant constitutively expressing the L
Cya-EcaA
Cya protein (TF) were cultivated under standard conditions before being collected as control samples. To investigate the transcriptional response of cells during adaptation to different CO
2 concentrations, vessels containing culture suspensions were directly transferred to bubbling with a gas–air mixture with varying carbon dioxide content. All other growth conditions were unchanged. Culture samples for RNA isolation (25 mL of culture suspensions at OD
750 ~ 1) were collected at specific time intervals after the beginning of adaptation, according to [
53].
In experiments involving culture medium replacement, cells were pelleted by centrifugation (3500× g, 10 min, at room temperature) after the collection of control samples, rinsed with the experimental medium, and resuspended in it. The cultures were then returned to the previous growth conditions or subjected to additional changes in the concentration of exogenous CO2. Samples were withdrawn in the same manner as in the previous case.
In oxidative stress modeling experiments, cultures were grown under standard conditions, control samples were taken, and then H
2O
2 was added to the medium at a final concentration of 0.25 mM [
59]. Samples were collected 30 min after the onset of the treatment.
Each experiment was performed on three biological replicates. The selected cell samples were averaged from each variety. Each experiment was repeated at least three times independently.
Section 2 presents typical data from biological replicates.
Total RNA was isolated from
Synechococcus cells as described earlier [
53] and then additionally purified with DNase I (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Vilnius, Lithuania). The manufacturer’s protocol was followed for cDNA synthesis with MMLV reverse transcriptase (Evrogen, Moscow, Russia) and random decanucleotide primers (Evrogen).
For RT-qPCR, the supermix qPCRmix-HS SYBR (Evrogen) was used. The selection of gene-specific primers was performed as previously reported [
11] or using literature data [
29,
63]. Synthetic oligonucleotides used as primers were synthesized by Evrogen (
Table S4). The reaction was performed in the CFX96 Touch™ Real-Time PCR Detection System with Image Lab 5.1 software (Bio-Rad). The standard cDNA amplification process for 40 cycles included 3 min of pre-denaturation at 95 °C, 30 s of denaturation at 95 °C, 30 s of annealing at 54 °C, 30 s of extension at 72 °C, and melting curve analysis. The reaction was carried out in three technical replicates for each sample/gene pair. The data were calculated using the CFX Manager 3.1 software tool (Bio-Rad) using the ΔΔC
T method. The data were normalized to the transcript levels of the
secA (CyanoBase, Synpcc7942_0289),
petB (Synpcc7942_2331),
ilvD (Synpcc7942_0626), and
ppc (Synpcc7942_2252) genes, which were pre-selected as maintaining expression stability (change in transcript level less than two-fold) under the experimental conditions used.
Semi-quantitative RT-PCR was performed using the same primers as for RT-qPCR (
Table S4). PCR was carried out using the Hot-start Taq DNA polymerase (Evrogen). The amplification technique for 25 cycles included 3 min of pre-denaturation at 95 °C, 30 s of denaturation at 95 °C, 20 s of annealing at 58 °C, 30 s of extension at 72 °C, and 3 min of final incubation at 72 °C.
3.7. Data Visualization
Presentation of graphical content was carried out using the software MS Excel 2019 MSO. The amino acid alignment (
Supplementary Materials,
Figure S8) was performed using the Clustal V algorithm of the MegAlign module of Lasergene v. 12.3.1 software package (DNAStar Inc., Madison, WI, USA). All Figures were prepared using MS PowerPoint 2019 MSO.
4. Conclusions
The external α-CA EcaASyn from
S.
elongatus PCC 7942 has not yet been shown to have a clear physiological role in standard laboratory culture conditions. In this study, we assess the appearance of EcaA
Syn in
Synechococcus under a wide range of experimental conditions, varying in the level and ratio of CO
2 and HCO
3− concentrations, which could not confirm the presence of the protein in the cells, despite some fluctuations in the amount of the corresponding transcript (
Figures S6 and S7).
Furthermore, a number of facts imply that
Synechococcus’ intracellular mechanism is specifically targeted at preventing the appearance of EcaA
Syn. Thus, constitutive expression of various types of external CAs in
Synechococcus cells (
Table 1) was successful only when these proteins were different from their own EcaA
Syn (
Figure 1,
Figure 2 and
Figure 3 and
Table 2). It seems that
Synechococcus recognizes and destroys both transcripts and protein products only for its own external CA. However, it is unable to detect the appearance of homologous nucleotide sequences or proteins.
Previously, we found that when L
Syn-EcaA
Syn was heterologously expressed in
E.
coli, the recombinant full-length protein remained within cells [
11] that exhibited no external CA activity. This observation indicates that the relevant bacterial Tat export system does not recognize the protein signal peptide. This may happen due to a loss of phenylalanine residue required for Tat recognition (
Figure S8). These results obtained for
E.
coli can also be generalized to
Synechococcus cells, as both of these species are gram-negative prokaryotes with similar protein export mechanisms for translocation through the CM. It appears that even if L
Syn-EcaA
Syn was effectively translated in the
Synechococcus cells, the protein would be unable to pass through the CM and enter the periplasm.
To summarize, the appearance of EcaASyn in Synechococcus periplasm is constrained at several stages: low mRNA levels, protein digestion by proteases, and issues with secretion through CM. From these perspectives, comparing the physiology of wild-type Synechococcus cells to their transformant with an artificially inserted active external CA was intriguing.
In this study, we created a number of
Synechococcus transformants with constitutive expression of extracellular CAs (
Table 1). One of them with full-length EcaA protein from
Cyanothece sp. ATCC 51142 (L
Cya-EcaA
Cya) was selected, as it showed the most prominent feature of external CA activity while lacking the recombinant protein in the cytoplasm. This transformant was designated here as “TF”. To assess the role of an “additional” external CA in
Synechococcus physiology, a variety of investigations were carried out in which conditions were simulated to mimic the oscillations that occur in the natural environment of this cyanobacterium.
Most of the experiments revealed no substantial differences between wild-type and transformant cells. This assertion pertains to culture growth and physiological parameters across various CO
2 and HCO
3− concentrations and their ratios (
Figure 4,
Figures S2, S3 and S5), as well as to adaptive cell reactions to changes in cultivation modes (
Figure 6,
Figure 7,
Figure 8,
Figure 9 and
Figure 10). Simultaneously, when the level of exogenous CO
2 was drastically decreased (from 1.5 to 0.04%), TF cells demonstrated a disadvantage compared to the wild type. From the data obtained (
Figure 5), we concluded that the active external CA of the transformant contributed to a more rapid removal of CO
2 from the medium. Therefore, TF cells occurred under C
i-limiting conditions earlier compared to wild-type cells.
A similar conclusion indicating a counter-advantage of external CA rather than a physiological priority was achieved when analyzing the contribution of EcaA
Cya to Na
+-independent HCO
3− consumption (
Figure 11). Under desalination, when the concentration of Na
+ ions decreases, external CA activity reduces the efficiency of photosynthetic C
i assimilation, which is especially true in alkaline environments.
Experiments involving the adaptation and cultivation of
Synechococcus at high and extremely high CO
2 concentrations (30 and 100%) revealed no difference between the growth characteristics and transcriptional response of both cell types (
Figure 4 and
Figure 6). Thus, these data do not support our hypothesis regarding the protective role of external CAs in the conditions of an ancient CO
2-rich atmosphere [
21]. Yet, these experiments showed for the first time that the NDH-1
4 CO
2 uptake system, previously thought to be constitutive, is gradually repressed by the increase of exogenous CO
2 from natural (0.04%) to extremely high (100%) levels.
An examination of the influence of active external CA in
Synechococcus on the development of oxidative and light stress revealed no differences between physiological parameters on the transcriptional response of the H
2O
2 neutralization systems in wild-type and transformant cells (
Figure 12). It indicates that the presence of periplasmic CA has no influence on cell resistance to these ROS.
Based on the results of our research on
Synechococcus adaptation to fluctuating [CO
2]/[HCO
3−] supply (
Figure 9,
Figure 10 and
Figure S5), we made conclusions that contribute to our understanding of the cell’s physiological processes in response to variations in the availability of various forms of C
i. Our findings show that when the predominant form of exogenous C
i changes (without a simultaneous decrease in the total amount),
Synechococcus experiences a lack of C
i entry into the cell, as evidenced by the induction of CCM components and the reorganization of the C
i consumption pattern based on its most accessible form. Simultaneously, the possibility of energy-independent assimilation of CO
2 has a significant influence on the strength of the induction of HCO
3− uptake systems, even when HCO
3− form of C
i is abundant. These observations suggest that the predominant form of exogenous C
i can serve as a primary signal for the reconstruction of the CCM architecture. The consistency of the molecular mechanisms underlying these processes remains to be elucidated.
Summarizing the study, we conclude that Synechococcus does not normally require the presence of an active external CA. It is possible that the enzyme may have played a physiological role in Synechococcus at a certain evolutionary period. However, its uselessness in modern Synechococcus resulted in a reduction of the mechanisms that assure the appearance of active EcaASyn in the periplasmic space despite the preservation of the corresponding gene in the genome.