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Morphological, biochemical, and molecular characterization of Oscillatoria kawamurae (Oscillatoriales, Cyanobacteria ) isolated from different geographical regions
Author(s) -
Thu Nanda Kyaw,
Tanabe Yuuhiko,
Matsuura Hiroshi,
Watanabe Makoto M.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
phycological research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.438
H-Index - 44
eISSN - 1440-1835
pISSN - 1322-0829
DOI - 10.1111/pre.12419
Subject(s) - biology , trichome , phycocyanin , botany , 16s ribosomal rna , cyanobacteria , strain (injury) , bacteria , genetics , anatomy
SUMMARY Oscillatoria kawamurae is an unusual freshwater cyanobacterium because of its large trichome and ambiguous gas vacuole. Because little is known about its phenotypic or genotypic characteristics, this study conducted morphological, biochemical, and genetic characterization of O. kawamurae strains isolated from Japan, Laos, and Myanmar. All strains displayed similar morphological characteristics; however some differences were observed in vegetative cell widths, trichome colors, and the distribution patterns of their gas vacuole‐like structures. The in vivo and phycobiliprotein absorption spectra revealed the two different trichome colors found in the four representative strains of O. kawamurae (Inle1, Lao7, Biwa6, and Inba3). These different trichome colors corresponded to the different ratios of phycoerythrin and phycocyanin, the two types of phycobilin pigments: 0.25 for olive‐green strain (Inle1) and 0.65–0.73 for brown‐green strains (Biwa6, Inba3, and Lao7). Cellular fatty acid compositions of the four strains were C14:0, C15:0, C16:0, C16:1 c , C17:0, C18:0, C18:1 c , C18:3 α and C18:4, whereas two strains (Biwa6 and Inba3) lacked C17:0. Of the fatty acids, palmitic acid (C16:0) was predominant. PCR experiments using primers targeting a gas vesicle gene ( gvpA ) recovered gvpA fragments from all O. kawamurae strains, suggesting that this species has true gas vacuoles. The 16S rDNA sequences of all of the strains were identical regardless of their different trichome colors and/or geographic origins. Phylogenetic analyses based on the 16S rDNA sequences indicated that O. kawamurae forms a monophyletic clade with O. princeps CCALA 1115 clB1 and O. duplisecta ETS‐06. We discuss the taxonomy of O. kawamurae based on the data obtained in this study.