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I studied the molecular mechanisms of ultraviolet radiation mitigation (UVR) in the terrestrial cyanobacterium Nostoc punctiforme ATCC 29133, which produces the indole-alkaloid sunscreen scytonemin and differentiates into motile filaments (hormogonia). While the early stages of scytonemin biosynthesis were known, the late stages were not. Gene deletion mutants were interrogated by

I studied the molecular mechanisms of ultraviolet radiation mitigation (UVR) in the terrestrial cyanobacterium Nostoc punctiforme ATCC 29133, which produces the indole-alkaloid sunscreen scytonemin and differentiates into motile filaments (hormogonia). While the early stages of scytonemin biosynthesis were known, the late stages were not. Gene deletion mutants were interrogated by metabolite analyses and confocal microscopy, demonstrating that the ebo gene cluster, was not only required for scytonemin biosynthesis, but was involved in the export of scytonemin monomers to the periplasm. Further, the product of gene scyE was also exported to the periplasm where it was responsible for terminal oxidative dimerization of the monomers. These results opened questions regarding the functional universality of the ebo cluster. To probe if it could play a similar role in organisms other than scytonemin producing cyanobacteria, I developed a bioinformatic pipeline (Functional Landscape And Neighbor Determining gEnomic Region Search; FLANDERS) and used it to scrutinize the neighboring regions of the ebo gene cluster in 90 different bacterial genomes for potentially informational features. Aside from the scytonemin operon and the edb cluster of Pseudomonas spp., responsible for nematode repellence, no known clusters were identified in genomic ebo neighbors, but many of the ebo adjacent regions were enriched in signal peptides for export, indicating a general functional connection between the ebo cluster and biosynthetic compartmentalization. Lastly, I investigated the regulatory span of the two-component regulator of the scytonemin operon (scyTCR) using RNAseq of scyTCR deletion mutants under UV induction. Surprisingly, the knockouts had decreased expression levels in many of the genes involved in hormogonia differentiation and in a putative multigene regulatory element, hcyA-D. This suggested that UV could be a cue for developmental motility responses in Nostoc, which I could confirm phenotypically. In fact, UV-A simultaneously elicited hormogonia differentiation and scytonemin production throughout a genetically homogenous population. I show through mutant analyses that the partner-switching mechanism coded for by hcyA-D acts as a hinge between the scytonemin and hormogonia based responses. Collectively, this dissertation contributes to the understanding of microbial adaptive responses to environmental stressors at the genetic and regulatory level, highlighting their phenomenological and mechanistic complexity.
ContributorsKlicki, Kevin (Author) / Garcia-Pichel, Ferran (Thesis advisor) / Wilson, Melissa (Committee member) / Mukhopadhyay, Aindrila (Committee member) / Misra, Rajeev (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021