A photoheterotrophic bacterium from Iceland has adapted its photosynthetic machinery to the long days of polar summer

  • Tomasch J
  • Kopejtka K
  • Bílý T
  • et al.
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Abstract

The photoheterotrophic bacterium Sediminicoccus sp. KRV36 was isolated from a cold stream in Iceland. It expresses its photosynthesis genes, synthesizes bacteriochlorophyll, and assembles functional photosynthetic complexes under continuous light in the presence of oxygen. Unraveling the molecular basis of this ability, which is exceptional among aerobic anoxygenic phototrophic species, will help to understand the evolution of bacterial photosynthesis in response to changing environmental conditions. It might also open new possibilities for genetic engineering of biotechnologically relevant phototrophs, with the aim of increasing photosynthetic activity and their tolerance to reactive oxygen species.

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Tomasch, J., Kopejtka, K., Bílý, T., Gardiner, A. T., Gardian, Z., Shivaramu, S., … Kaftan, D. (2024). A photoheterotrophic bacterium from Iceland has adapted its photosynthetic machinery to the long days of polar summer. MSystems, 9(3). https://doi.org/10.1128/msystems.01311-23

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