Effects of UVA and UVB radiation were evaluated on two cyanobacterial
strains (Phormidium murrayi and Oscillatoria priestleyi)
isolated
from the McMurdo Ice Shelf, Antarctica. The two isolates showed some
similarities, but also major differences in their qualitative and
quantitative responses to ultraviolet radiation (UVR). Growth decreased
with
increasing UVR, but with a 5-fold (UVA) or 10-fold (UVB)
greater effect on O. priestleyi than P. murrayi. In
both isolates, cellular concentrations of phycobiliproteins (measured by in vivo absorbance), and to a lesser extent chlorophyll a,
diminished with increasing UVR exposure. Spectral scans of methanol
extracts indicated
the presence of UVR-screening compounds in O. priestleyi but not
P. murrayi; however, the absorbance per unit dry weight was low,
and
similar in cultures with and without UVR. Carotenoid pigments increased
up to a threshold UVB flux and thereafter decreased. In both
isolates, moderate UVA lessened the effect of growth inhibition by UVB,
consistent with a UVA-activated repair mechanism.
Comparative motility tests showed that O. priestleyi is a
fast gliding species that can rapidly relocate in response to changes in
ambient
light, while P. murrayi is non-motile. The ability of O.
priestleyi to escape UVR by gliding, and the greater ability of
P. murrayi to tolerate
UVA and UVB exposure, illustrate the differences in UVR survival
strategies even between closely related species of cyanobacteria.