Abstract
Mg2+, the most abundant divalent cation in living cells, plays a pivotal role in numerous enzymatic reactions and is of particular importance for organisms performing oxygenic photosynthesis. Its significance extends beyond serving as the central ion of the chlorophyll molecule, as it also acts as a counterion during the light reaction to balance the proton gradient across the thylakoid membranes. In this study, we investigated the effects of Mg2+ limitation on the physiology of the well-known model microorganism Synechocystis sp. PCC6803. Our findings reveal that Mg2+ deficiency triggers both morphological and functional changes. As seen in other oxygenic photosynthetic organisms, Mg2+ deficiency led to a decrease in cellular chlorophyll concentration. Moreover, the PSI-to-PSII ratio decreased, impacting the photosynthetic efficiency of the cell. In line with this, Mg2+ deficiency led to a change in the proton gradient built up across the thylakoid membrane upon illumination.
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Introduction
Mg2+ is the most abundant divalent cation in living cells (Wacker 1969). In mammalian cells, the total Mg2+ concentration ranges between 17 and 20 mM (Romani and Scarpa 2000), whereas it is reportedly higher in bacterial cells where it ranges between 15 and 200 mM (Lusk et al. 1968; Silver 1969; Kung et al. 1976; Moncany and Kellenberger 1981). Within cells, most of the Mg2+ is bound to macromolecules (Flatman 1984), and only ~ 4 mM Mg2+ is “free” (Lusk et al. 1968). It is estimated that around 50% of the cellular Mg2+ is bound to ATP (Maguire and Cowan 2002), forming an ATP-Mg2+ complex, the biologically active ATP form. This makes Mg2+ extremely important for cellular bioenergetics. In plants, Mg2+ is an essential macronutrient (Merhaut 2007) and of particular importance for photosynthesis, as Mg2+ is part of chlorophyll (Chl) (Willstätter 1906), an essential pigment involved in light harvesting and photosynthetic light reactions. Consequently, reducing the amount of available Mg2+ results in a reduced amount of Chl in both algae and plants (Finkle and Appleman 1953; Kobayashi and Tanoi 2015; Peng et al. 2019; Giraldo et al. 2021). In line with a reduced Chl content, a decrease in the maximum quantum yield of photosystem II (PSII) has been observed in some plants (Hermans et al. 2004; Yang et al. 2012; Tang et al. 2012; Tränkner and Jamali Jaghdani 2019), as well as reduced photosynthetic CO2 fixation rates (Cakmak and Kirkby 2008). Additionally, the overall PSI activity was decreased due to a significantly reduced PSI abundance (Hermans et al. 2004; Farhat et al. 2015).
Plastids have evolved from a cyanobacterial ancestor (Schimper 1883; Mereschkowsky 1905; Sagan 1967; Gray 1989), and consequentially, the structures of modern-days cyanobacteria and chloroplasts are highly similar in many aspects. Cyanobacteria have a unique and highly differentiated internal membrane system compared to other bacteria. The cyanobacterial cell envelope has a typical Gram-negative membrane organization, consisting of an inner cytoplasmic membrane (CM), which is equivalent to the chloroplast inner envelope membrane, a peptidoglycan layer, and an outer membrane (OM). Furthermore, most cyanobacteria contain a separated internal membrane system that is also found in chloroplasts, the thylakoid membranes (TMs), where the pigment-protein complexes of the photosynthetic electron transport network are located (Liu 2016). As in plants, Mg2+ is an essential nutrient also in cyanobacteria (Pohland and Schneider 2019), and the lower limit for growth of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus (S. elongatus, formerly: Anacystis nidulans) is around 5 µM Mg2+ (Utkilen 1982). Mg2+ deficiency resulted in a lowered amount of total proteins in the cyanobacteria Cyanothece strain 16Som2 and Cyanospira capsulata, accompanied by a significant enhancement of the exopolysaccharide (EPS) production in the latter (De Philippis et al. 1991). Furthermore, as observed in plants, the PSII activity was also reduced in the cyanobacterium Arthrospira platensis Gomont 1892 when cells were grown in medium with a low Mg2+ content (Urek and Kerimoglu 2019).
TMs are composed of four major lipids, two of which have a negatively charged head group (Sakurai et al. 2006). This results in a negatively charged membrane surface, which is mainly screened by loosely bound Mg2+ ions (Pottosin and Dobrovinskaya 2015; Kaňa and Govindjee 2016). In plants, Mg2+ is crucial for grana stacking, and the observed altered photosynthesis at low Mg2+ concentrations might be caused by the disruption of grana stacks (Hall et al. 1972; Jennings et al. 1978).
During the TM-associated photosynthetic light reaction, light energy is captured and used to drive electron transport from water to nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate through photosynthetic pigment-protein complexes, i.e., PSII, the cytochrome b6f complex, and PSI, as well as mobile electron carriers. The photosynthetic electron transport is tightly coupled to H+ translocation from the chloroplast stroma or the cyanobacterial cytoplasm, respectively, into the thylakoid lumen, resulting in acidification of the lumen and generation of a proton gradient (ΔpH) across the membrane, as initially proposed by Peter Mitchell (Mitchell 1961). A Mg2+ efflux from the chloroplast TM lumen electrically compensates for the light-generated ΔpH formation in plant chloroplasts (Dilley and Vernon 1965; Hind et al. 1974; Barber et al. 1974; Chow et al. 1976; Portis and Heldt 1976). Besides counterbalancing the ΔpH across TMs, Mg2+ can also regulate the activity of several chloroplast enzymes involved in CO2 fixation, such as Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase, fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase, and sedoheptulose 1,7-bisphosphatase (Portis et al. 1977; Portis 1992). Although not yet experimentally demonstrated, the intracellular Mg2+ concentration may also vary in cyanobacteria depending on the light conditions, as observed in chloroplasts. Moreover, unlike in chloroplasts, there is active respiratory electron flow in cyanobacteria, whose components are also localized in the TMs (for a review, see (Mullineaux 2014). This results in a ΔpH of about 2 units across the TM already in the dark (Peschek et al. 1985; Belkin et al. 1987), albeit the thylakoid lumen is further acidified upon illumination, with a decrease of at least 0.5 pH units (Belkin et al. 1987; Teuber et al. 2001).
In contrast to plants, the research on cyanobacteria has thus far primarily focused on the impact of limited Mg2+ availability on growth and biomass production (Utkilen 1982; De Philippis et al. 1991; Philippis et al. 1993), while its effects on photosynthetic light reactions have not yet been explored in detail.
Here, we have analyzed the impact of Mg2+ limitation on growth and photosynthetic performance of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 (from hereon: Synechocystis). When Synechocystis wild type cells were grown under Mg2+ limitation, both cell growth and photosynthetic activity were affected, in line with a reduced Chl a content. Furthermore, measuring light-induced pH changes using the fluorescent dye acridine orange (AO) revealed a distinct change in the pH gradient across the TM under Mg2+ limiting conditions. This highlights the involvement of Mg2+ in counterbalancing the ΔpH established across the TMs.
Materials and methods
Growth conditions
For the growth analyses, 25 mL cultures of glucose-tolerant Synechocystis wild type cells were grown in 50 mL Erlenmeyer flasks in a temperature-controlled incubation shaker (Multitron HT, Infors (Bottmingen, Switzerland) at 130 rpm and 30 °C under constant illumination of 120 µmol photons m− 2 s− 1. Synechocystis cells were grown without glucose either in a modified BG11 medium (modified from (Rippka et al. 1979) see Supplementary Table 1) including 300 µM Mg2+ and 5 mM HEPES/KOH pH 8.0 (from now on BG11) or, for growth under Mg2+ limiting conditions, in BG11 with decreased Mg2+ concentration where MgSO4 was replaced by Na2SO4 and a defined amount of Mg2+ (MgCl2) was added afterwards. Here, the final Mg2+ concentration ranged from 10 to 70 µM. Growth of Synechocystis was monitored by measuring the optical density at 750 nm (OD750). For each growth condition, three biological replicates were monitored.
For all other analyses, cyanobacterial cells were grown photoautotrophically at constant cell density (OD720 = 1.0) in a multi-cultivator (Multi-Cultivator MC 1000-OD, Photon Systems Instruments (PSI), Drásov, Czechia) equipped with a Turbidostat TS-1000 (PSI, Drásov, Czechia), bubbled with 5% (v/v) CO2 in air at 30 °C (controlled by a Cooling Unit AC-710 (PSI, Drásov, Czechia)). The intensity of the (white) growth light was set to 30 µmol photons m− 2 s− 1. Cells were grown either in BG11 with 300 µM Mg2+ or, under Mg2+ limitation, in BG11 media supplemented with 50 µM Mg2+. Prior to the measurements, cells were centrifuged at 1800 g at room temperature (RT) for 10 min, and the cell pellet was solubilized in fresh medium with the OD750 adjusted to 2.0.
Electron microscopy
Electron microscopic (EM) images were acquired by using whole cells grown under high and low Mg2+ conditions. 20 mL of a cell suspension was spun down at 1800 g for 10 min at RT. The supernatant was removed, and the cells were washed with 20 mM HEPES/KOH pH 7.0. After another centrifugation, the cells were resuspended in the same medium with a final OD750 of 5.0. The suspension was then mixed 1:1 with 10% glutaraldehyde. The fixed samples were sedimented at 3300 g for 10 min, washed with bi-distilled (bidest.) water at RT for 10 min, and then spun down again. The cells were post-fixed with 2% OsO4 (w/v in bidest. water) for 120 min at 4 °C. Thereafter, the samples were centrifuged for 10 min at 6600 g and washed with bidest. water three times. Cells grown at low Mg2+ conditions were infiltrated with 20% bovine serum albumin for 120 min at 4 °C, centrifuged for 10 min, and fixed in 5% glutaraldehyde in 0.05 M phosphate buffer pH 7.5 to obtain a dense pellet. All samples were then taken up in 2% agar, cut into small blocks, and washed in bidest. water for 5 min. The samples were dehydrated in ethanol of increasing concentrations. After dehydration, the solvent was replaced with a gradually increasing concentration of epon resin. After that, the samples were left in an embedding capsule for 2–3 days at 60 °C. Ultrathin sections were cut with an Ultracut EM UCT ultramicrotome (Leica Microsystems, Wetzlar, Germany) using a diamond knife (Type Ultra 45°, Diatome, Biel, Switzerland). Sections were collected on pioloform-coated copper slotted grids (Plano, Wetzlar, Germany) and stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate (Reynolds 1963). Cells were imaged using a JEM-1400Plus transmission electron microscope (JEOL (Tokyo, Japan) operated at 80 kV and equipped with a JEOL Ruby CCD camera (3,296 × 2,472 pixels).
Cell counting
For cell counting, cultures were diluted 20-fold in the appropriate growth medium, and 10 µL were loaded into a counting chamber (Thoma scale). After cells had settled, cells were counted regularly to determine the mean cell density of at least three biological replicates.
Determination of pigment composition
To determine the Chl a and carotenoid (Car) contents, an equivalent of 500 µL culture with an OD750 of 2.0 was harvested via centrifugation for 10 min at 16,000 g at RT. The supernatant was discarded, and 1.0 mL of 100% methanol was added to the pellet. Then, the sample was rigorously vortexed and incubated on a platform shaker (Duomax 1030 Heidolph, Schwabach, Germany) at RT for 15 min. After an additional centrifugation step for 10 min at 16,000 g and 4 °C, the absorption (A) of the supernatant at 665.2 nm and 652 nm (for Chl a), and 470 nm and 720 nm (for Car) was measured in a standard 10 mm polystyrene cuvette using a Perkin Elmer, Lambda 435 spectrophotometer (PerkinElmer, Rodgau, Germany). The Chl a concentration was determined according to (Porra et al. 1989):
The Car concentration was determined according to (Zavrel et al. 2015):
Whole-cell absorbance spectra
Spectra of whole cells were recorded using a Perkin-Elmer Lambda 35 (PerkinElmer, Rodgau, Germany) spectrophotometer equipped with an integrating sphere. Spectra were recorded in the 300–800 nm spectral region and the absorbance value at 800 nm was subtracted. After normalization to the Chl a absorbance at 678 nm the molar phycocyanin (PC)-to-Chl a ratio was calculated according to (Rakhimberdieva et al. 2001).
Low temperature (77 K) fluorescence emission spectroscopy
Low-temperature fluorescence emission spectra were recorded using an Aminco Bowman Series 2 fluorimeter equipped with a 77 K accessory. 1 mL of a cell suspension with an OD750 of 2.0 was filled into a glass tube and shock frozen in liquid nitrogen. Chl a and phycobilisomes (PBS) were excited at 435 nm and 580 nm, respectively. Spectra were recorded in the 630–760 nm spectral range. The spectra were baseline corrected and normalized to the 695 nm and 665 nm emission upon Chl a and PBS excitation, respectively. For further evaluation, the peak areas of the PSII and PSI emissions, centered at 695 nm and 725 nm, respectively, upon Chl a excitation were integrated using the Fityk curve fitting software (Wojdyr 2010). The ratio of these areas can be considered equivalent to the PSII : PSI molar ratio (Murakami 1997). The cellular PSI and PSII contents (in mol cell− 1), in turn, were estimated as described in (Luimstra et al. 2019), which approach exploits this ratio, as well as the cellular Chl a content (in mol cell− 1) and number of Chl a molecules per PSI (100) and PSII (35) reaction center (Jordan et al. 2001; Umena et al. 2011; Malavath et al. 2018; Gisriel et al. 2022).
Oxygen (O2) yield measurements
Photosynthetic O2 evolution was determined in a custom-made, thermo-regulated chamber using a fiber-optic O2 meter (PreSens, Regensburg, Germany) at 30 °C. The optode was calibrated with air-saturated (100% O2) and O2-free water (0% O2, obtained upon the addition of sodium thiosulfate). Samples were dark incubated for 15 min prior to the measurements. 10 mM sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3) was added as an electron acceptor. The recordings started with measuring the O2 consumption in the dark, followed by monitoring O2 production upon strong light exposure (3000 K; KL 2500 LCD, Schott, Mainz, Germany). The net O2 evolution was determined by subtracting the slope of the signal during the dark from the slope of the subsequent O2 evolution.
Pulse amplitude modulation (PAM) fluorometry
PSI and PSII associated quantum yields were determined using a Dual-PAM-100 measuring system equipped with Dual-E and DUAL-DR modules (Walz GmbH, Effeltrich, Germany). The maximum quantum yield of PSII (Fv/Fm) (Kitajima and Butler 1975) was determined by recording fluorescence induction curves at RT (Table 1; Fig. 1) after 5 min of dark acclimation. The initial fluorescence, Fo, and the maximal fluorescence under actinic light upon addition of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) (Campbell et al. 1998), Fm, were used for the determination of Fv/Fm.
Furthermore, weak blue light was used to induce state 1 transition (Schreiber et al. 1995). During each phase 600 ms saturating light pulses were applied on top to follow the corresponding maximal signal intensity (I = 10,000 µmol photons m–2 s–1).
The effective quantum yield of PSI (Y(I), the PSI quantum yield with donor and acceptor side limitations (Y(ND) and Y(NA), respectively), and the effective PSII quantum yield (Y(II) were determined via recording rapid light curves by the Dual-PAM-100 system. Here, the actinic light intensities increased stepwise from 0 to 827 µmol photons m− 2 s− 1. Steady state (Fs) and maximal (Fm’) fluorescence levels were determined after 30 s illumination period at each light intensity where 300 ms saturating pulses with an intensity of 10,000 µmol photons m− 2 s− 1 were applied. The corresponding PSI parameters, i.e. the maximum amplitude of the P700 signal after far red illumination (Pm), the steady state (P) and maximum (Pm’) P700 signal under illumination were determined concomitantly. Parameters were calculated according to (Genty et al. 1989; Klughammer and Schreiber 2008).
P700 re-reduction kinetics
P700 re-reduction kinetics were measured using a Dual-PAM-100 measuring system (Klughammer and Schreiber 1994). Complete P700 oxidation was achieved by a 100-ms saturating pulse (I = 10,000 µmol photons m–2 s–1). P700+ decay kinetics were fitted with single exponential functions to determine the corresponding rate constant (k).
Acridine orange (AO) fluorescence measurements
The magnitude and kinetics of pH changes within Synechocystis cells upon illumination were monitored using the fluorescent dye AO (Teuber et al. 2001) with a Dual-PAM-100 measuring system equipped with an Acridine Orange/Yellow fluorescence emitter-detector module. For each measurement, 1.5 mL cell suspension was mixed with 100 µL of Tricine buffer (1 M, pH 8.0) and 1 µL of an AO solution (10 mM), in a 10 mm quartz cuvette. Each measurement is preceded by a 15-minute dark incubation. After starting the measurements, cells were kept for another three minutes in the dark, then red AL with an intensity of 216 µmol photons m–2 s–1 was provided for five minutes. Eventually, AO fluorescence was recorded for another two minutes in the dark. Spectra were baseline corrected and normalized to the fluorescence intensity monitored during the first three minutes in the dark.
Results
Mg2+ is essential for the cell growth of Synechocystis
To first elucidate the importance of Mg2+ for cell viability, Synechocystis cells were grown in standard growth medium as well as in media with reduced Mg2+ contents, and cell growth was monitored.
BG11, the standard growth medium of Synechocystis, contains a Mg2+ concentration of about 300 µM (Rippka et al. 1979); we refer to this as “high Mg2+” (HM) from hereon. As shown in Fig. 2A, Synechocystis has the highest growth rates at this condition. With decreasing Mg2+ concentrations Synechocystis is still able to grow, even at a Mg2+ concentration of as low as 10 µM, albeit at low Mg2+ concentrations the maximal culture densities, expressed as OD750, decreased significantly and cells reached a stationary phase later compared to standard conditions. When grown in the presence of 10 µM Mg2+ in the growth medium the doubling time (Td) was about 1.7 times longer (44.2 ± 1.4 h) compared to the control (HM, Td = 25.9 ± 1.3 h) (Fig. 2B). Furthermore, a prolonged initial lag phase can be observed at Mg2+ concentrations below 40 µM. Above this concentration, the growth characteristics were similar to HM conditions, and thus, we decided to use 50 µM Mg2+ (low Mg2+, LM) in the culture medium for all subsequent measurements to ensure the survival of Synechocystis cells under Mg2+ limiting growth conditions. Noteworthy, while Synechocystis cultures grew well under LM conditions, a massive EPS-layer, composed of secreted (exo) polysaccharides (EPS), surrounding the individual cells accumulated when cells were grown under LM conditions (Fig. 3).
Content and composition of pigment-containing protein complexes involved in photosynthesis
When Synechocystis cells were grown in LM medium, the absorbance spectra of whole cells differed significantly from spectra of HM-grown cells: the characteristic Chl a absorbance maxima at 437 nm and 678 nm were severely reduced, indicating a highly reduced Chl a content, which suggests a lower cellular abundance of Chl a-containing protein complexes, i.e. PSs (Fig. 4A). The PC-to-Chl a ratio increased from 0.19 ± 0.03 under HM conditions to 0.38 ± 0.05 under LM conditions calculated from normalized spectra, as described in Material and Methods.
The decreased Chl a content observed in the absorbance spectra of LM cultures was confirmed by spectroscopic analyses of methanolic cell extracts (Supplementary Fig. 1). The cellular Car content, which is visible as a shoulder at 480 nm in the whole cell absorbance spectra (Fig. 4A), was also reduced in the LM cultures, albeit to much lower extents (Supplementary Fig. 1B). Thus, the calculated Chl a-to-Car ratio was lower in LM grown cells compared to HM grown (Supplementary Fig. 1C).
Next, we analyzed the relative abundance of the two PSs, as well as energy transfer from (PBS) to PSI and PSII via low temperature (77 K) fluorescence spectroscopy. Cyanobacteria regulate the energy distribution between the two PSs by adjusting their soluble antenna systems, the PBS which consist of six rods of phycocyanin (PC) and one core of allophycocyanin (APC) (Kirilovsky et al. 2014; Calzadilla and Kirilovsky 2020). PBSs are primarily associated with PSII when the PQ pool is oxidized (state I) and with PSI when the PQ pool is reduced (state II) (Mullineaux and Allen 1990).
Upon excitation of Chl a at 435 nm, the HM cultures exhibit fluorescence emission spectra typical for Synechocystis (Fig. 4B) with main emission peaks at around 685 nm, 695 nm, and 725 nm, which originate from the PSII core antennas CP43 and CP47 and (to some extent) the PBS terminal emitter (at 685 nm), CP47 of PSII (695 nm), and PSI (725 nm), respectively (Rijgersberg and Amesz 1980; Shen et al. 1993; Andrizhiyevskaya et al. 2005). Under LM conditions, the decrease in the relative fluorescence emission at 725 nm indicates a reduced relative amount of PSI. This is in good agreement with the observation that about 90% of the total Chl a in Synechocystis is bound by PSI (Jordan et al. 2001; Umena et al. 2011; Zakar et al. 2018; Malavath et al. 2018). To quantify the relative changes in the cellular abundance of the PSs, we next calculated the photosystem per cell content as described in Material and Methods. According to the results, the number of PSII/cell hardly changed under LM conditions compared to HM conditions (0.030 ± 0.002 10− 18 mol/cell (N = 4) vs. 0.031 ± 0.002 10− 18 mol/cell (N = 3), respectively). In contrast, the number of PSI decreased significantly from (0.27 ± 0.03) × 10− 18 mol/cell (HM, N = 4) to (0.10 ± 0.02) × 10− 18 mol/cell (LM, N = 3). In line with the lowered cellular PSI content, a decreased energy transfer from PBS to PSI was observed upon PBS excitation at 580 nm (Fig. 4C). Meanwhile, the fluorescence emission at 685 nm and 695 nm increased, indicating an increased PBS-to-PSII energy transfer. Nevertheless, as the PBS terminal emitter may also contribute to the 685 nm fluorescence emission signal, this increased fluorescence emission intensity rather suggests an increased abundance of uncoupled PBSs, as observed previously (Mullineaux 1994; Barthel et al. 2013; Kłodawska et al. 2020), in line with an increased relative PC content (Fig. 4A).
The activity of photosystem I and II
While an altered PSI-to-PSII ratio was indicated, it remained unclear whether Mg2+ limitation has an impact of the activity of the respective PS.
The activity of PSII was analyzed by recording fluorescence induction curves. While the method, in principle, probes the redox state of QA, the primary electron acceptor of PSII, it also probes the redox state of the PQ pool as well as the status of the entire electron transport chain and the antenna systems (Schreiber 2004).
At first, the maximum PSII quantum efficiency Fv/Fm was determined, an often used proxy to characterize the PSII performance in plants (Maxwell and Johnson 2000) as well as in cyanobacteria (Campbell et al. 1998). As shown in Fig. 5, both the initial (“minimal”) fluorescence yield Fo as well as the maximum fluorescence yield upon illumination (Fm´) were higher in LM grown Synechocystis cells compared to cells grown under HM conditions. Yet, as the applied measuring light (λex = 620 nm) excites not only Chl a molecules but also PBSs, PBS fluorescence emission may also significantly contribute to the higher Fo value (Campbell et al. 1996). The observed increase in the PC-to-Chl a ratio seen in the absorbance spectra (Fig. 4A) and the higher amount of uncoupled PBS observed in the 77 K fluorescence emission measurements (Fig. 4C) are in line with this assumption. In the case of the HM cultures, the Fm´ values determined under blue light illumination were very similar to the values determined under red light in the presence of DCMU, while in the LM cultures, these were substantially lower. This suggests a less effective state I transition in the LM cultures, most likely due to the lower abundance of PSI, which is crucial for the oxidation of one key element of state transitions, the PQ pool.
In line with this, in LM grown cells some fluorescence quenching was observed upon blue light illumination (Fig. 5B). The Fv/Fm values (maximal PSII quantum yields) calculated based on Fo and the maximum fluorescence yields obtained in the presence of DCMU (Fm) were slightly smaller in the LM compared to the HM cultures (Fig. 5C). However, this is most likely due to the enhanced Fo level. To further analyze the PSII activity, we next applyed rapid light curves to probe energy conversion efficiency at different light intensities. The effective quantum yield of PSII (Y(II)), which indicates the quantity of absorbed light that is “used” by PSII, was decreased when cells were grown under LM conditions (Fig. 6A).
Next, we measured O2 evolution rates using intact Synechocystis cells grown either under LM or HM conditions (Fig. 6B). As the PSII contents per cell were rather similar, yet the Chl a concentration differed between the HM and LM cultures, we decided to express the O2 yields as µmol O2 L− 1 min− 1 at an OD750 = 2.0 (see Supplementary Fig. 4 for oxygen evolution rate per cell). Compared to HM conditions, the net oxygen evolution rate was significantly reduced under LM conditions, in line with the Y(II) measurements. Yet, Mg2+-limitation influenced respiration much more than O2 production, thus, the observed lower apparent O2 production rates in cells grown under LM conditions were mainly due to reduced O2 consumption, in excellent agreemen with the observation that the PSII content per cell is largely unchanged.
While the activity of PSII was only slightly affected, we subsequentely focused on the activity of PSI. Due to a significant decrease in the amount of PSI under LM conditions, we anticipated a changed activity. To study the electron transport to and from PSI at different light intensities, we applied rapid light curves. With increasing light intensities the effective quantum yield of PSI (Y(I)) decreases less prominently in the LM grown cultures compared to the HM grown cells, due to a lower donor side limitation, Y(ND), while limitations at the acceptor side Y(NA) were negligible under both conditions (Fig. 7A). This implies that in cells grown under LM conditions, electron shortage is less pronounced and more electrons arrive at PSI to reduce P700+ to P700. The lowered Y(ND) is in agreement with a reduced PSI content. The reduced number of oxidizable P700 centers in LM grown cells is also evident by two features visible in P700/P700+ oxidation/re-reduction kinetic measurements (Fig. 7B, C): (i) by the decreased Pm intensities /Fig. 7B) and (ii) by the faster P700 re-reduction kinetics (Fig. 7C) due to the decreased PSI-to-PSII ratio (Fig. 4B).
Mg2+ limitation affects the ΔpH established across thylakoid membranes
Mg2+ depletion affects the PS stoichiometry, and thus electron transport properties, plus Mg2+ is essential to counterbalance the ΔpH built-up across the TM driven by photosynthetic electron transport (Dilley and Vernon 1965; Hind et al. 1974; Barber et al. 1974; Chow et al. 1976; Portis and Heldt 1976). Consequentely, we next analyzed whether Mg2+ limitation affected formation of the ΔpH using the fluorescent dye acridine orange (AO) (Fig. 8), as described in Teuber et al. (Teuber et al. 2001). Upon turning on actinic light, a rapid drop in the AO fluorescence signal intensity was observed, due to acidification of the thylakoid lumen via water splitting at PSII (Teuber et al. 2001), followed by a gradual fluorescence increase for two minutes until a plateau was reached.This rise in the fluorescence intensity can be interpreted as an alkalization of the cytoplasm (Teuber et al. 2001). Upon switching the light off, the fluorescence intensity rapidly increased, indicating re-alkalization of the thylakoid lumen, followed by a slow signal decrease. It should be noted that, because the periplasm was buffered to pH 8.0, the influx of protons from the periplasm into the cytoplasm was limited. Thus, a complete signal recovery cannot be expected. The overall pattern of the AO fluorescence emission changes was similar for HM and LM grown Synechocystis cells. However, while acidification of the TM lumen via water splitting was only slightly affected, in perfect agreement with the essentially unchanged PSII content per cell, a much lower plateau was reached upon illumination of LM grown cells, suggesting a reduced alkalization of the cytoplasm. Thus, a reduced amount of available Mg2+ apparently significantly affects generation of the ΔpH across the TM, albeit PSII acidified the thylakoid lumen to a similar extent at both HM and LM conditions.
Discussion
Mg2+ is crucial for growth and development of Synechocystis cells. Decreasing Mg2+ concentrations in the growth medium led to an increased doubling time (Fig. 2), yet Synechocystis cells can still grow at Mg2+ concentrations as low as 10 µM. Such ability to adapt to very low Mg2+ concentrations was previously noticed for the cyanobacterium S. elongatus (Utkilen 1982). While growth was only little affected at Mg2+ concentrations of 50 µM and above, cells grown at lower concentrations did not reach saturation levels observed with cells grown at higher Mg2+ concentrations. The extended lag phase observed at low Mg2+ concentrations suggests that the cellular metabolism adapted to the new growth condition (Bertrand 2019). Since the growth of Synechocystis appeared to be only slightly affected in a medium containing 50 µM Mg2+, this concentration was used in all further measurements.
In several non-photosynthetic bacteria (Webb 1951; Brock 1962) and in the cyanobacterium S. elongatus (Utkilen 1982), Mg2+ limitation impairs cell division. While the Mg2+ concentration was high enough in our experiments to not affect cell division, EM images clearly revealed an enlarged EPS layer (Fig. 3). The formation of EPSs in biofilms typically correlates with the ability to cope with changing environmental conditions (Pereira et al. 2009; De Philippis et al. 2011; Rossi and De Philippis 2015). Former observations suggest a link between Mg2+ deficiency and increased EPS formation, as this response was also observed in the cyanobacterium Cyanospira capsulata (De Philippis et al. 1991) as well as in Pseudomonas aeruginosa (Mulcahy and Lewenza 2011). EPS chelates bivalent cations, (De Philippis et al. 2011) and it has been suggested that Microcystis flos-aquae C3-40 accumulates Fe2+/Fe3+ and Mn2+ in the polysaccharide capsule (Parker et al. 1996). Thus, the increased EPS layer may assist Synechocystis in accumulating Mg2+ in its immediate environment at LM conditions.
Mg2+limitation causes changes in cell pigmentation, a reduced amount of PSI, and changed energy distribution between the photosystems
As Mg2+ is the central ion of Chl molecules, lowering the Mg2+ concentration in the growth medium was expected to affect the amount of pigments per cell, as has been observed in plant and algae chloroplasts (Finkle and Appleman 1953; Volgusheva et al. 2015; Kobayashi and Tanoi 2015; Peng et al. 2019; Giraldo et al. 2021), as well as in the cyanobacterium S. elongatus (Utkilen 1982). Indeed, in Synechocystis cells grown in LM medium the Chl a content was significantly reduced (Fig. 4). The concentration and the intracellular transport of Mg2+ are tightly regulated, and as free Mg2+ is involved in various cellular processes, its cellular level is of special relevance (Maguire 1990). Therefore, it is likely that the overall concentration of Chl a decreased in order to mobilize Mg2+ and to not lower the total amount of free Mg2+ too dramatically, as has been observed in rice (Peng et al. 2019). The decreased cellular Chl a content was mainly due to a reduction in PSI abundance (see above). This resulted in the observed decrease in the PSI-to-PSII ratio, as seen in the 77 K fluorescence emission spectra (Fig. 4B). A reduction in the PSI level at LM conditions appears to be reasonable in Synechocystis, as most Chl a is bound to PSI due to a high PSI-to-PSII ratio (2:1 to 5:1 under standard conditions, (Shen et al. 1993; Murakami 1997), and the observation that each PSI unit contains about 100 Chl a molecules (Jordan et al. 2001; Malavath et al. 2018), whereas PSII binds only about 35 (Umena et al. 2011; Gisriel et al. 2022). Analogously, a reduction in the PSI content has also been proposed/observed in plant chloroplasts under Mg2+ limitation (Hermans et al. 2004; Farhat et al. 2015). Such a reduction in PSI was previously observed under several stress conditions. A decrease in PSI has long been known as a response when Synechocystis cells are shifted from low to high light conditions, presumably to reduce the production of reactive oxygen species (Fujita 1997; Hihara et al. 1998; Sonoike et al. 2001). Furthermore, the PSI abundance is reduced when electron transfer is impaired (Schneider et al. 2001) or cells are grown under iron starvation to prevent oxidative stress (Fraser et al. 2013). Altered PSI-to-PSII ratios are often observed when cells are stressed and in fact the relative enrichment of carotenoids (Fig. 4 and Supplementary Fig. 1BC) further supports cellular stress, as carotenoids play a crucial role in preventing oxidative damage (Steiger et al. 1999; Zakar et al. 2017). In cyanobacteria, carotenoid-binding proteins are heavily involved in preventing overexcitation by regulating the energy transfer from the PBS to the PSs (Kirilovsky et al. 2014). The absorption of blue-green light by the carotenoid bound to the orange carotenoid protein (OCP) induces conformational changes, allowing the protein to bind to the PBS and dissipate excess energy as heat (Wilson et al. 2008; Gwizdala et al. 2011) and the bound carotenoids of the High Light-Inducible Carotenoid-Binding Protein Complex (HLCC) also prevent oxidative damage (Daddy et al. 2015).
Besides a changed Chl a-to-Car ratio, we also observed an increase in the PC-to-Chl a ratio at LM conditions (Fig. 4A). The decreased PSI content and the increased PC-to-Chl a ratio have caused a shift in the energy distribution between the two PSs, as observed via 77 K fluorescence emission spectroscopy (Fig. 4BC). Due to the increased PC-to-Chl a ratio and the decreased PSI amount (Fig. 4AB), PBS-to-PSII energy transfer is enhanced. Furthermore, the increased fluorescence emission at 685 nm (relative to the 695 nm) observed in the 77 K fluorescence emsission spectra upon excitation of Chl a at 435 nm (Fig. 4C) suggests uncoupled PBS´s, as the PBS terminal emitter also emits light at 685 nm (Mullineaux 1994; Barthel et al. 2013; Kłodawska et al. 2020). PBS uncoupling is commonly caused by environmental stresses, such as heat or high irradiance (Kirilovsky et al. 2014). This process could help preventing over-excitation of the electron transport chain (Tamary et al. 2012), which likely occurs at LM due to the altered PSI-to-PSII ratio.
Changes in PSI-to-PSII stoichiometry alter electron transport properties in LM grown Synechocystis
The increase in the PBS to PSII energy transfer as well as the presence of potentially uncoupled PBS under LM conditions perfecely explain the higher Fo and Fm signals observed in the fluorescence induction curves (Fig. 5B). For instance, high Fo signals were previously observed in Synechococcus sp. PCC7942 when the PC-to-Chl ratio was high (Campbell et al. 1996). A reduced Fv/Fm value was also previously observed in plants grown under Mg2+ deficiency (Hermans et al. 2004; Yang et al. 2012; Tang et al. 2012; Jamali Jaghdani et al. 2021). Generally, a decreased Fv/Fm ratio is a sign of cellular stress or damage associated with PSII (Maxwell and Johnson 2000; Murchie and Lawson 2013), might indicating a reduced PSII content in LM grown cells.
However, the PSII activity, quantified as O2 evolution rates, under LM conditions was rather unaffected, while the O2 consumption rates in LM grown cells were significantly decreased (Fig. 6B). In terms of quantum efficiency, the effective quantum yields of both PSs were influenced by Mg2+ limitation, though to different extents. We observed a substantial decrease in the PSII quantum yield, Y(II) (Fig. 6A), in accordance with the decreased Fv/Fm ratios. Such decrease in Y(II) has also been reported for barley chloroplasts (Jamali Jaghdani et al. 2021) and the cyanobacterium Arthrospira platensis Gomont 1892 grown at low Mg2+ concentrations (Urek and Kerimoglu 2019). As the PSII content per cell appears to be largely unaffected by the LM growth conditions, the decreased Fv/Fm ratio can be explained by an increased basic and steady state fluorescence and/or a more reduced PQ pool upon illumination. Concomitantly, we observed a simultaneous increase in the effective quantum yields of PSI Y(I) under LM conditions (Fig. 7A), mainly due to a decrease in Y(ND), which is consistent with the decrease in the PSI-to-PSII ratio. As recently shown, the P700+ reduction kinetics mostly slowed down when the amount of PSI was decreased (Moore and Vermaas 2024), and thus the altered ΔpH across TMs might play a role in increasing the P700+ re-reduction rates. In fact, using an uncoupler results in increased electron transport rates with a simultaneous decrease in ΔpH (Evron and McCarty 2000) which, in turn, results in lower Y(ND) and faster P700+ re-reduction kinetics. In accordance, we observed a lower light-induced ΔpH across the TM under LM condition (Fig. 8). Therefore, the faster P700+ re-reduction rates (Fig. 7C) and lower Y(ND) (Fig. 7A) observed under Mg2+ limiting conditions are likely due to both an decreased PSI-to-PSII ratio and a lower ΔpH.
Mg2+ deficiency results in a decreased transmembrane ΔpH
The above described changes, including lower Fv/Fm and Y(II), along with an increased Y(I), were accompanied by an altered pattern of ΔpH formation across Synechocystis membranes (Fig. 8), including a much lower alkalization of the cytoplasm in cells grown under LM conditions compared to HM conditions. When a pH gradient is formed across the TMs upon illumination, the concomitantly generated transmembrane electric potential is balanced by Mg2+ and K+ flux from the lumen to the cytoplasm plus Cl− flux in the opposite direction (Dilley and Vernon 1965; Hind et al. 1974; Chow et al. 1976; Lyu and Lazár 2017). Therefore, when cells were grown under LM conditions, altered Mg2+ concentrations in the cytoplasm and/or lumen may impair proton flux across the TM. Based on AO measurements performed with a Synechocystis mutant where a predominantly TM-localized potassium channel (SynK) was deleted, the acidification of the lumen was less pronounced upon illumination compared to the wild type (Checchetto et al. 2012). Likewise, the reduced ΔpH observed in LM cells could well be caused by the reduced Mg2+ concentration, and thus, reduced Mg2+ flux across the TM.
According to the AO measurements, the signal increase, reflecting alkalization of the cytoplasm, was only about half in size in LM grown cells compared with cells grown under HM conditions. The light-induced alkalization of the cytoplasm is achieved by proton pumping to the TM lumen by electron transport-coupled proton translocation and also by proton extrusion through the CM (Teuber et al. 2001). Proton extrusion across the CM is the result of respiration as well as ATP hydrolysis (Teuber et al. 2001) and/or proton extrusion by the PxcA (former CotA) protein driven by a still unknown mechanism (Katoh et al. 1996; Sonoda et al. 1998; Inago et al. 2020). Therefore, the impaired respiration observed in cells grown under LM conditions (Fig. 6B) may also contribute to the alterations in the AO fluorescence signal, finally affecting the PSI activity (see above).
Upon switching the light off, a fast increase in the AO fluorescence intensity was observed, which is most likely due to a rapid re-alkalization of the lumen. According to Teuber et al. (Teuber et al. 2001), the subsequent signal decrease in the dark may reflect the consumption of redox equivalents. Since many enzymes in the Calvin–Benson–Bassham cycle require Mg2+ as a cofactor and alkalization of the lumen for proper function (Lorimer et al. 1976; Flügge et al. 1980; Mott and Berry 1986), a lowered cellular concentration of Mg2+ could be a cause for the less pronounced AO signal decrease.
Conclusion
Mg2+ is the central ion of Chl molecules, and thus a significant amount of the intracellular Mg2+ is part of Chl molecules in cyanobacteria. Accordingly, the Chl a content per cell was significantly lowered when Synechocystis cells were grown in LM medium. This reduction in Chl led to a remarkably decreased PSI content, and related changes in electron transport properties. Additionally, Mg2+ limitation resulted in an altered pH gradient build up across the TM under illumination.
Data availability
No datasets were generated or analysed during the current study.
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D.S. and A-C.P. designed experiments. D.S., A-C.P., G.B., and S.G. performed experiments, analyzed data, and discussed results. D.S.: Funding Acquisition, Project Administration, Resources, Supervision. A-C.P. and D.S. drafted the manuscript and all authors edited, reviewed and approved the final version of the manuscript.
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Pohland, AC., Bernát, G., Geimer, S. et al. Mg2+ limitation leads to a decrease in chlorophyll, resulting in an unbalanced photosynthetic apparatus in the cyanobacterium Synechocytis sp. PCC6803. Photosynth Res 162, 13–27 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11120-024-01112-7
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11120-024-01112-7