Introduction
The cyanobacteria are morphologically diverse bacteria that perform oxygenic photosynthesis and possess chlorophyll a. Cyanobacteria have also been recognized as a model system for studying the photosynthesis and endosymbiotic origins of chloroplasts in plants [1]. At present, cyanobacteria are classified into five sections and formally recognized primarily according to their morphology and developmental characteristics [2-4, 15-17]. Unicellular cyanobacteria are classified into the Subsection I and II in terms of their different division patterns. The division pattern of Subsection I show a binary fission or budding, but that of the Subsection II is expressed by multiple fission which results in the formation of baeocytes [16]. The Subsection III is composed of filamentous cyanobacteria reproducing by trichome breakage [16]. The Subsection IV and V comprise the filamentous and heterocytous cyanobacteria reproducing by hormogonia formation [16], and are able to develop heterocysts and akinetes. These two sections are separated on more one plane. Members of the Subsection IV are divided on only one plane, and members of the Subsection V can be divided on more than one plane [16]. The Subsection IV and V are composed of eight genera (Anabaena, Calothrix, Cylindropermum, Nostoc, Nodularia, Scytonema, Chlorogloeopsis, and Fischerella) that are common to most classification system [2-4, 9, 16], as well as additional genera (Tolypothrix and Hapalosiphon) in more recent classification systems [2-4]. Cyanobacterial classifications based on morphological characteristics remain controversial and may not reflect true phylogenetic relationships [5, 8, 9, 11, 18, 22, 26].
Recently, phylogenetic analyses of cyanobacteria based on small subunit rRNA (16S rRNA) have been performed. Several studies based on 16S rRNA have reported that in contrast to unicellular and filamentous non-heterocytous cyanobacterial strains composed of Subsection I, II, and III, that do not form clusters to be consistent with their classification, the heterocytous members of cyanobacterial Subsection IV and V are monophyletic [8, 11, 21, 23, 24].
In this study, we investigated the phylogenetic relationships of the cyanobacterial strains of the Subsection IV and V based on 16S rRNA and compared the phylogenetic position of cyanobacterial strain with each of them.
Materials and Methods
Cyanobacterial strains and growth conditions
The cyanobacterial strains investigated and media are listed in Table 1. All were cultured at 20℃, 12:12 hr L: D (light : dark) with fluorescent lamp illumination of 500 lux.
Table 1.Sequences in bold were determined in this study. T: type strain. aRippka and Herdman, 1992 [6]; b IAM Catalogue of strains, 1998 [26].
The preparation of cell lysate
Cells were harvested from 1.5 ml culture broth by centrifugation, washed with 1 ml of deionized water, and suspended in 100 μl of 20 mM Tris (pH 8.0) containing 0.1 mM EDTA, 0.5% Tween 20, and 0.1% Non-iodet P-40 (Boehringer Mannheim, Germany). Final lysis was achieved by the addition of 10 μg of Proteinase K and incubation for 20 min at 60℃.
PCR amplification
The almost complete 16S rDNA from the genomic DNA of the respective strains was amplified by PCR using oligonucleotide primers of 1R (forward primer: 5′-AGAGTTTGATCCTGGCTCAG-3′) and 16C (reverse primer: 5′-AAGGAGGTGATCCAGCCGCA-3′) [27]. PCR was performed at 3 min at 94℃ and then at 30 cycles with the following features: 1 min at 94℃, 1 min at 55℃, and 2 min at 72℃, followed by a final elongation step for 10 min at 72℃.
Sequencing of 16S rRNA
The refined PCR products were directly sequenced with the use of a BigDye Terminator Cycle Sequencing Ready Reaction Kit (Applied Biosystems, USA). Primers used for the cycle sequencing were 1R, 320R (5′-CTGCTGCCTCCCGATA-3′), 520F (5′-CAGCAGCCGCGGTAATAC-3′), 704R (5′-TCTACGCATTTCACCGCTAC-3′), 926F (5′-AAACTCAAAGGAATTGACGG-3′), 1100R (5′-GGGTTGCGCTVGTTG-3′) (V, G or C or A), and 16C. The cycle sequencing reaction was performed with a PCR Thermal CyclerMP (Takara, TP3080, Japan). The sequencing reaction was performed for 5 min at 96℃ at first and consisted of 25 cycles of the following: 10 sec at 96℃, 10 sec at 52℃, and 2 min at 60℃. The cycle sequencing products were purified with use of CENTRI-SEP Spin Columns (Applied Biosystems, USA). DNA sequences were analyzed using an ABI PRISM 310 Genetic Analyzer (Applied Biosystems, USA).
Alignment and phylogenetic analysis
The nucleotide sequences of 16S rRNA were aligned using the CLUSTAL W computer program, version 1.81 [20]. 16S rRNA sequences were aligned based on their secondary structures with a selection of cyanobacterial reference sequences obtained from the DNA Data Bank of Japan (DDBJ), and the alignment was manually corrected.
Neighbour-Joining (NJ)
The phylogenetic tree was constructed from the evolutionary distance matrix calculated by the neighbour-joining method [19] with Kimura`s two-parameter method [12]. Neighbour-joining analysis was performed using the MEGA2 program [13]. All gaps in the alignment were excluded in order to draw the tree. Bootstrap analyses were performed with 1,000 replicates.
Maximum-likelihood (ML) and Maximum-parsimony (MP)
A total of 100 bootstrap samples for alignment was produced by using the program SEQBOOT from PHYLIP version 3.6 [6, 7], and phylogenetic trees were inferred from each bootstrap sample by using maximum-likelihood (DNAMLK software in PHYLIP version 3.6) and maximum-parsimony (DNAPARS software in PHYLIP). The resulting trees were combined to yield a consensus tree (CONSENSE software in PHYLIP). A matrix of evolutionary distances was also derived from bootstrap alignment by using the DNADIST software in PHYLIP. Trees were inferred from the matrices by using the FITCH software in PHYLIP. The resulting trees were visualized to yield consensus trees (CONSENSE software in PHYLIP) using the TREEVIEW version 1.6.6 software [14].
Results and Discussion
The new 16S rDNA sequences were deposited in the DDBJ; accession numbers for each cyanobacterial strain used in this study and reference strains are given in Table 1. Positions with gaps and undetermined and ambiguous sequences were removed. A total of 1335 sites were used for the phylogenetic analysis.
Constructed phylogenetic trees, the NJ, the ML, and MP trees, reveal that all the numbers of cyanobacterial Subsection V were monophyletic (Fig. 1). However, as shown in Figure 1, the cyanobacterial strains of Subsection IV are clearly separated into two clusters. All members of cyanobacterial Subsection IV, except the genus Scytonema, consist of a major cluster on phylogentic trees, supported by bootstrap values of 99% of NJ, 95% of ML, and 75% of MP (Fig. 1). The cluster of the genus Scytonema is placed externally to those of Subsections IV and V, forming a well-supported cluster with bootstrap values of 95% of NJ, 87% of ML, and 88% of MP (Fig. 1). In some reports published earlier, although unicellular cyanobacterial strains of Subsections I and II, and filamentous cyanobacterial strains of Subsection III were shown to be polyphyletic, heterocystous strains of Subsections IV and V were shown to be monophyletic [8, 10, 11, 21, 23, 24]. However, interestingly, our phylogenetic analyses based on sequence determination of the 16S rDNA indicate Subsection IV was not monophyletic.
Fig. 1.Phylogenetic tree of cyanobacterial 16S rRNA sequences. Numbers at nodes are bootstrap values. NJ, ML, and MP bootstrap values are indicated as NJ/ML/MP. A total of 1335 unambiguously aligned positions were used. Local bootstrap probabilities are indicated at nodes if larger than 60. The strains of which the 16S rRNA gene sequences were determined in this study are indicated in bold. Starred strains were used as outgroups. T: type strain. Bar, 0.01 substitution per nucleotide position.
Our phylogenetic analyses indicate that the genus Scytonema could be a common ancestor of cyanobacterial Subsections IV and V. The results reveal that the divergence of the genus Scytonema is earlier than any other genus of Subsections IV and V. The results of analyses based on NJ, ML, and MP strongly support this (Fig. 1). Actually, in Bergey’s Manual of Systematic Bacteriology, the Scytonema hofmanni PCC 7110 was described as the following: “Scytonema hofmanni PCC 7110 has no close relatives in the phylogenetic trees with the recent addition of new sequences, however, some interesting relationships are emerging” [25]. Our results may constitute evidence to help explain the evolutional relationships of cyanobacterial Subsection IV and V.
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