The abundance and cellular location of Fe-containing superoxide
dismutase (Fe-SOD) in trichomes of Nodularia,
Aphanizomenon and Anabaena collected from various depths
in the Baltic Sea, and in trichomes of a cultured
Nodularia strain, BC Nod-9427, isolated from the Baltic Sea, was
examined by immunogold labelling. For
trichomes collected from natural populations the areal concentration of
Fe-SOD labelling decreased with depth:
trichomes collected from surface accumulations had between 8 and 11 gold
particles
μm−2 whereas trichomes
collected from a depth of 18 m were unlabelled. When trichomes collected
from a depth of 10 m (mean areal
labelling density 0·5 gold particles μm−2) were
exposed to the higher irradiances present at 1 m, the areal
concentration of Fe-SOD increased to 3·5–4 gold particles
μm−2 within 4 h. When cultures of Nodularia
strain BC
Nod-9427, adapted to low light (10 μmol m−2 s−1),
were transferred to an incident irradiance of 1350 μmol
m−2 s−1,
a doubling of the areal concentration of Fe-SOD gold label was observed
within 1 h. Addition of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1′-dimethylurea
(DCMU) to cultures immediately before their transfer to increased
illumination resulted in a decrease in areal Fe-SOD concentrations whereas
addition of CdCl2 caused an increase
over and above that induced by the elevated irradiance. These results
suggest that Baltic Sea cyanobacteria are able
to modulate their Fe-SOD content but that this might be in response to
oxidative stress rather than to light per se.