Ocean Sciences, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA 95064, USA.
Science. 2012 Sep 21;337(6101):1546-50. doi: 10.1126/science.1222700.
Symbioses between nitrogen (N)(2)-fixing prokaryotes and photosynthetic eukaryotes are important for nitrogen acquisition in N-limited environments. Recently, a widely distributed planktonic uncultured nitrogen-fixing cyanobacterium (UCYN-A) was found to have unprecedented genome reduction, including the lack of oxygen-evolving photosystem II and the tricarboxylic acid cycle, which suggested partnership in a symbiosis. We showed that UCYN-A has a symbiotic association with a unicellular prymnesiophyte, closely related to calcifying taxa present in the fossil record. The partnership is mutualistic, because the prymnesiophyte receives fixed N in exchange for transferring fixed carbon to UCYN-A. This unusual partnership between a cyanobacterium and a unicellular alga is a model for symbiosis and is analogous to plastid and organismal evolution, and if calcifying, may have important implications for past and present oceanic N(2) fixation.
固氮原核生物和光合真核生物之间的共生关系对于在氮限制环境中获取氮是很重要的。最近,人们发现一种广泛分布的浮游性未培养固氮蓝细菌(UCYN-A)具有前所未有的基因组缩减,包括缺乏产氧光合作用系统 II 和三羧酸循环,这表明它与共生体有联系。我们表明,UCYN-A 与单细胞甲藻有共生关系,这种甲藻与化石记录中存在的钙化分类群密切相关。这种伙伴关系是互利的,因为甲藻获得固定氮,以换取将固定碳转移给 UCYN-A。这种蓝细菌和单细胞藻类之间不寻常的伙伴关系是共生关系的一个模型,类似于质体和生物进化,如果是钙化的,可能对过去和现在的海洋氮固定有重要意义。