The elemental and molecular composition, pigment content, and productivity of a phycoerythrin-rich nitrogen-fixing cyanobacterium—an Anabaena strain isolated from the coastal lagoon Albufera de Valencia, Spain—has been investigated. When compared with other heterocystous species, this strain exhibits similar chlorophyll a , carotene, and total phycobiliprotein contents but differs remarkably in the relative proportion of specific phycobiliproteins; the content of C-phycoerythrin amounts to 8.3% (versus about 1% in the other species) of cell dry weight. Absorption and fluorescence spectra of intact phycobilisomes isolated from this Anabaena sp. corroborate the marked contribution of phycoerythrin as an antenna pigment, a circumstance that is unusual for cyanobacteria capable of fixing N 2 . The pigment content of cells is affected by variations in irradiance and cell density, these adaptive changes being more patent for C-phycoerythrin than for phycocyanins. The Anabaena strain is clumpy and capable of rapid flocculation. It exhibits outdoor productivities higher than 20 g (dry weight) m −2 day −1 during summer.
CITATION STYLE
Rodriguez, H., Rivas, J., Guerrero, M. G., & Losada, M. (1989). Nitrogen-Fixing Cyanobacterium with a High Phycoerythrin Content. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 55(3), 758–760. https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.55.3.758-760.1989
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