Published: Vol 7, Iss 14, Jul 20, 2017 DOI: 10.21769/BioProtoc.2402 Views: 8722
Reviewed by: Maria SinetovaAnonymous reviewer(s)
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Abstract
Cyanobacteria synthesize a variety of chemically-different, high-value biopolymers such as glycogen (polyglucose), poly-β-hydroxybutyrate (PHB), cyanophycin (polyamide of arginine and aspartic acid) and volutin (polyphosphate) under excess conditions. Especially under unbalanced C to N ratios, glycogen and in some cyanobacterial genera also PHB are massively accumulated in the progression of the general nitrogen stress response. Several different technologies have been established for in situ and in vitro PHB analysis from different microbial sources. In this protocol, a rapid and reliable spectrophotometric method is described for PHB quantification in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 upon nitrogen deprivation as described in (Damrow et al., 2016).
Keywords: CyanobacteriaBackground
Non-diazotrophic cyanobacteria such as Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 respond to the lack of combined nitrogen sources by bleaching, a process known as chlorosis (Allen and Smith, 1969). This acclimation response is characterized by four major structural and morphological changes: (i) a massive accumulation of electron-dense glycogen inclusions (approx. 40 nm in diameter) between the thylakoid layers accompanied by (ii) the degradation of the phycobilisome antenna complexes, (iii) the disassembling of the thylakoid membrane layers including a reduction by number and packing density, and (iv) the formation of distinct electron-transparent PHB granules (approx. 400-500 nm in diameter) (Damrow et al., 2016). The physiological function of cyanobacterial PHB metabolism, synthesized just in a few species, is quite opaque due to the absence of both catabolic enzymes and evident phenotype of PHB-deficient mutants (Beck et al., 2012; van der Woude et al., 2014; Damrow et al., 2016; Namakoshi et al., 2016).
Facing the world’s trash and global warming crisis, the demands for durable, recyclable, biodegradable, and synthetic-alternative plastics such as PHB is enormous and focus attention to cyanobacterial producers (Asada et al., 1999; Ansari and Fatma, 2016). Various different techniques are published for the analysis of PHB molecules (for updated review see [Godbole, 2016]). We are presenting a combination of hydrolytic degradation of PHB to 3-hydroxybutyrate (3-HB) in alkaline regime, and a coupled colorimetric enzymatic assay. Here the coupling with a phenazine methosulphate-p-iodonitrotetrazolium violet (PMS-INT) system directs the enzymatic redox reaction of both NADH oxidation and 3-HB reduction by the 3-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase (HBDH) and thus precludes an interfering backward reaction. This rapid spectrophotometric quantification of PHB just needs very simple lab equipment, is not much time-consuming, and is yet both reliable and reproducible.
Materials and Reagents
Equipment
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Notes
Recipes
Note: Unless otherwise indicated, bi-distilled water was used as a solvent in solutions.
Acknowledgments
We particularly acknowledge Wolfgang Lockau for his commitment and valuable discussions on this topic and for his sustained support of our research. We gratefully thank Gisa Baumert (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany) for her excellent technical assistance. We thank the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) for financial support (to YZ) in the framework of the Collaborative Research Center 1078 on ‘Protonation Dynamics in Protein Function’ (SFB1078, project A4/Holger Dau).
References
Article Information
Copyright
© 2017 The Authors; exclusive licensee Bio-protocol LLC.
How to cite
Zilliges, Y. and Damrow, R. (2017). Quantitative Determination of Poly-β-hydroxybutyrate in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. Bio-protocol 7(14): e2402. DOI: 10.21769/BioProtoc.2402.
Category
Microbiology > Microbial biochemistry > Other compound
Biochemistry > Other compound > Poly-β-hydroxybutyrate
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