Gas vesicle synthesis in the cyanobacterium Pseudanabaena sp.: occurrence of a single photoregulated gene

1991 
Summary Gas vesicles are subcellular inclusions found in a large number of aquatic prokaryotes. The gvpA gene, which frequently occurs as a multigene family, encodes the major gas vesicle structural protein. In several cyanobacteria, another gene, gvpC, encodes a different protein which might be a dispensable element for gas vesicle formation. We report here the molecular characterization of a gvpA gene in Pseudanabaena sp. PCC 6901. In this planktonic cyanobacterium, it is the only gvp gene which could be detected, and electrophoretic analysis of isolated gas vesicles revealed the presence of a single protein. A monocistronic mRNA species corresponds to the transcription of the gvpA gene and the abundance of the gvpA mRNA is inversely correlated with photosynthetic photon flux density, indicating that a light-dependent transcriptional regulation is likely to be involved in the control of gas vacuolation in this strain.
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