3.2. Usage of Cyanobacteria
Despite the negative impacts of some cyanobacteria species on the aquatic ecosystem, living organisms and human health, cyanobacteria can be beneficially used in various applications. Cyanobacteria, as the primary photosynthetic organism, can participate in carbon fixation and organic chemical production by converting CO
2 into biomass and producing carbohydrates, fatty acids, and alcohols as renewable sources of biofuels
[81][82].
Biofuels are considered as a renewable energy produced from grown biomass. Based on their production methods, biofuels are divided into three generations. The first-generation of biofuels are derived from edible biomass such as starch, while lignocellulosic materials from nonedible plant biomass are being used as feedstock for the second-generation. Microalgae and cyanobacteria represent the third-generation biofuels
[82][83].
Some of the advantages of using cyanobacteria as a feedstock for biofuel production reside in their high growth rates and high biomass production that can be converted to biofuels or their precursors. This type of biomass production does not require arable lands used for crop growing and cultivation
[81][84]. Cyanobacteria are capable to produce extensive amounts of lipids especially when the cells are under stress. Cyanobacteria can be easily manipulated genetically to convert the atmospheric carbon into biomass or desired end-products in comparison with eukaryotic microalgae
[81][82].
For the mass production of microalgae on an industrial scale, very often open ponds and photobioreactors (PBRs) have been used
[79][80]. Open ponds are the oldest and least expensive configurations among the different methods; however, the culture suspension in open ponds is highly susceptible to contamination with other microorganisms, difficult to control temperature fluctuations and evaporative losses, and prone to insufficient mixing and light illumination
[85][86][87][88]. The biomass production in PBRs, on the other hand, is more costly from the investment point of view, but this system allows a more controllable temperature and nutrient distribution, pH, light exposure, and contamination control strategies
[85][86][87][88][89]. Efficient mixing in the PBR volume can enhance the light exposure of microorganisms in suspension
[88][89]. However, it should be mentioned that not all bacterial species can survive under severe shear stress caused by mechanical mixing.
One of the most innovative examples of cultivating cyanobacteria and other types of microorganisms for renewable energies and atmospheric carbon fixation is the utilization of energy-efficient bio-solar façades in green buildings. In this application, the building’s façades are covered with double-walled rectangular PBR panels
[90], and the produced biomass in the façade bioreactors can be harvested on top of the building and sent to biorefinery for extraction of value-added chemical molecules
[91].
Cyanobacteria can also be used as bioremediation agents to eliminate toxic wastes from contaminated sites including soil, water, wastewater, and sediments
[92]. Cyanobacteria are able to degrade or detoxify many gaseous, solid, and liquid recalcitrant pollutants such as assimilate atmospheric nitrogen, remove heavy metals from aquatic ecosystems, and reduce the extra phosphate and nitrate in farmlands
[93][94][95][96]. Low cost, eco-friendly nature, high efficacity, and public acceptance are the major advantages of using cyanobacteria for bioremediation
[92][96][97][98].
The isolated compounds from various species of cyanobacteria of diverse habitats offer different bioactivities and structural properties with high potentials for drug development
[99]. Cyanobacteria by-products express antifungal, antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory, anticoagulant, antimalarial, antiprotozoal, antiviral, antituberculosis, antitumor, immunosuppressant to anticancer, and anti-HIV activities
[100][101][102][103][104][105]. For instance, the human lung cancer cell line showed apoptosis after exposure to the extract of
Oscillatoria terebriformis [106], or the methanol extract of
Anabaena sp. exhibited antibacterial activity against
Escherichia coli MTCC-739,
Staphylococcus aureus MTCC-740,
Bacillus subtilis MTCC-736,
Bacillus cereus MTCC-430,
Bacillus pumilus MTCC-1607
[107], while the isolated compounds from
Tolypothrix byssoidea EAWAG-195 revealed moderate antifungal activity against
Candida albicans [108]. It has been reported that the potential extracted bioactive compounds from more than 50% of marine cyanobacteria have the ability to kill cancer cells
[109]. C-phycocyanin isolated from
Spirulina platensis acts as a selective inhibitor of cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) with hepatoprotective, anti-inflammatory, and anti-arthritic characteristics
[110].
Phycocyanin and phycoerythrin pigments, isolated from cyanobacteria, can be utilized, as natural coloring agents in food, drug, and cosmetic industries to replace synthetic pigments
[111]. Chewing gums, jellies, ice creams, and fermented milk products are some foodstuffs in which phycobiliproteins are used as natural food colorants
[112]. The water-resistant extract of phycocyanin from
Spirulina is used in cosmetic products such as eyeliner, eyeshadow, and lipsticks
[57]. The market value for phycobiliprotein products was estimated to be more than USD 60 million
[113]. Some unusual biomolecules, known as mycosporine-like amino acids (MAAs) and Scytonemin produced by cyanobacteria act as sunscreen agents that protect the skin cells against harmful consequences of UV radiation
[114][115][116][117].
In agriculture, cyanobacteria are used as bio-fertilizer to improve soil fertility, agricultural productivity, and serve as available nitrogen sources particularly in rice cultivation in many Asian countries
[118][119][120]. Employing cyanobacteria products and biomass is a more sustainable and highly effective method to improve crop production and protection due to their fertilizing, biostimulating, and biopesticide potential
[121]. Free fatty acids, polysaccharides, carotenoids, and phytohormones are some cyanobacterial biologically active compounds with potential interest in agricultural practices
[121]. Genetically engineered cyanobacteria can be used as multifunctional bioagents for eco-friendly and sustainable agriculture
[120].
On the other hand, cyanobacteria contain many essential nutrients including proteins, amino acids, vitamins, minerals, essential fatty acids, and phytonutrients; that are being used as dietary supplements and whole food in many countries around the globe
[122].
Anabaena,
Nostoc, and
Spirulina genera have been consumed as food for centuries
[49][123].
2. Synechocystis sp.: A Model Microorganism
Synechocystis sp. is a unicellular, spherical, non-nitrogen-fixing cyanobacterium with 0.7–8 μm in diameter and no or fine and colorless mucilage layer (Figure 7) [19]. The cell
envelop of Synechocystis sp. contains the outer membrane, a peptidoglycan layer, and cytoplasmic membrane. The thylakoid membranes, derived from the cytoplasmic membrane,
cover the peripheral region of the cell [124,125]. From cyanobacteria to higher plants, thylakoid membranes are the site of photosynthesis [126] converged near the cytoplasmic membrane.
Thylakoid centers, fibrous coated cylindrical structures, 40–50 nm in diameter and 50–1000 nm in length, establish and maintain thylakoid membrane organization [127,128].
In the cytoplasm, various components such as carboxysomes, ribosomes, polyphosphate bodies, lipid bodies, and cyanophycin granules are detectable [125,128]. In the central
cytoplasmic region, carboxysomes improve the carbon fixation by the cell [125,129], while the stored phosphate in polyphosphate bodies can be used for adenosine triphosphate
(ATP), phospholipid, and nucleic acid biosynthesis [125].
Synechocystis sp. cell’s content is more or less homogeneous and proliferates by binary fission (cleavage). The divided cells can be paired for a short time after division [10,19].
Appendages on the surface of Synechocystis sp., called pili, are engaged in motility, adhesion, biofilm formation, and DNA uptake [41]. The pili on the Synechocystis sp. surface
are identified as type IV (T4P), after genome sequencing [19]. T4Ps are also responsible for suspending the cells and controlling their position in the water column by increasing
the cell viscous drag and also the extension/retraction activity [130]. Pili structures are detectable with a scanning electron microscope and transmission electron microscope after
negative staining [41].
The entire genome of Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803, as the first photosynthetic autotroph, was sequenced in 1996 by Kaneko et al. [21]. Due to short generation times, the ease of genetic manipulation, and the limited size of genome and proteome, Synechocystis sp. is a suitable model organism to study photosynthesis, lipid metabolism, stress responses, molecular biology, genetic systems, pili system, biofilm formation, etc. [15,19,43,81,131,132]. Genetic manipulation with the aim to improve valuable products has attracted a great deal of attention in the past years; however, it is still in its infancy. In a study on protein-protein interactions (PPIs) it was shown that photosynthesis plays a role in metabolism, cell motility, DNA repair, cell division, and other physiological processes. The additional level of PPIs information greatly enhanced the molecular mechanisms of photosynthesis and therefore improved the understanding of the molecular organization in Synechocystis sp. [133]. The mutant strain of Synechocystis sp. with a knockout gene (slr512) showed a better high light acclimation compared to the wild-type strain [134]. Metabolic engineering design with target genes involved in the process improved the lipid and ethanol productions [135,136] and proliferative growth and certain contents of intracellular pigments including chlorophyll-a and carotenoids [137,138].
2.1. Motility
2.1.1. Type IV Pili
Type IV pili are complex multi-protein apparatus with 15–20 kDa pilin subunits, extremely thin (6–9 nm in diameter), and longer than 1 μm, with the ability to form
bundles [41,139,140]. After negative staining, three morphologically different type IV pili were identified in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803; thick, thin, and bundle [42,43,141]. Thick
morphotype has a length of 1–3 m and 6–8 nm in diameter, thin morphotype has 0.5–1 μm in length and 2–3 nm in diameter, and a bundle of pili with a diameter less than 45 nm.
The thin morphotype covers the entire outer surface of the Synechocystis cell, while the thick ones are used to link between cells, and are required for motility and transformation
competency [42,141]. Type IV pili play important roles in the twitching motility of cells, biofilm formation, aggregation, adhesion, uptake of DNA, and natural competence or
secretion [41].
The pilus rod, outer membrane complex, cytoplasmic pilus platform, and secretion ATPases are four distinct subcomplexes of the type IV pili apparatus (Figure 8) [41]. Pilus
is made of 500–1000 major structural component protein units called pilin. In addition to pilin, PilQ, PilN, PilO, PilM, PilC, PilB, PilT, and PilD are other proteins in the type IV pilus
system [41,141–143]. The transport of pilins across the outer membrane and alignment of the pore complex with the pilus platform is facilitated by the protein structure in the
membrane complex and powered by secretion ATPases [41,144]. The motility direction of the Synechocystis cell is controlled by the localization of the type IV pili apparatus and
strongly correlates with the orientation of the PilB protein adjacent to a specific region of the cytoplasmic membrane (Figure 8) [142,145]. Different studies show two groups of
genes: a group of genes that are involved in pilus biogenesis, motility, and assembled proteins [42,43,146,147], and another group that is involved in signal transduction for pilus
assembly and phototaxis [147–149]. Inactivated genes are involved in pilus biogenesis and abolish cell motility [42].
It was identified that the motility of cyanobacteria is partially controlled by light and several genes that are important for phototaxis [139,150]. The mutant strain of Synechocystis
sp. with lacking structural and regulatory components that encode pilin resulted in the loss of motility [131,146,151].
2.1.2. Cell Movement
Motility is a way to respond to a changing environment [152]. Twitching or gliding motility has been detected in many Gram-negative bacteria, including cyanobacteria, mediated by type IV pili [42]. Twitching is translocation over a moist surface, which requires an extension, tethering, and then retraction activities of pili [153]. Gliding motility is a smooth motion in a direction parallel to the long axis of the cell that occurs at an interface such as solid-liquid, solid–air, and solid-solid [154]. Gliding has been observed in filamentous cyanobacteria such as Oscillatoria and Phormidium species [42] while twitching or gliding motility has been detected especially in Synechocystis sp. [151]. The motile behavior of cyanobacteria, including Synechocystis sp., can be regulated by the direction, intensity, and wavelength of light, which is known as phototaxis [42,143,155]. Cell size, shape, cell refractive index, and the refractive index of the surrounding medium are the parameters that impact phototaxis [143,156]. In phototaxis, Synechocystis cells act as tiny spherical lenses where the image of a light source in the cell’s environment is focused on the cell inner wall. From the focused light, which is detected and analyzed by the light-detecting molecules (called photoreceptors), a signal is sent to the IV pili complexes. Then, the type IV pili complexes, distributed on the cell wall, enable or disable the particular pili for directing the cell towards or away from the light source, leading to a positive or negative phototaxis (Figure 9) [157]. The photosynthetic apparatus also acts as a signaling photoreceptor by absorbing light through chlorophylls, phycobilins, or carotenoids to initiate signal transduction cascades [158]. Red to green wavelengths result in positive phototaxis, while blue wavelength leads to negative phototaxis [159].
The secretion of extracellular substances from the cells improves cell motility, the direction of colony-forming cells, and light focusing by modifying the refractive index near the cell surface [143,155,161]. Single-cell shows limited motility behavior compared to the small colonies [161], by increasing the number of cells in a colony, as a result of cell division or cellular aggregation, the number of motile cells increases [161]. Single Synechocystis cells display an intermittent motion in cell suspensions with two phases; a high-motility “run” and a low-motility “tumble” (Figure 10) [150]. The two phases can be modified under various external stressors. Increasing the light intensity, uniformly over the space, increases the probability of Synechocystis being in the run state randomly in all directions. This feature, however, vanishes after a typical characteristic time of about 1 h, when the initial probability is recovered. These results were well described by a mathematical model based on the linear response theory proposed by Vourc’h et al. [150].
Synechocystis cells can also undergo biased motility under directional illumination. Under directional light flux, Synehcocystis cells perform phototactic motility and head toward the light source (in positive phototaxis). Vourc’h et al. [150] showed that this biased motility stems from the averaged displacements during run periods, which is no longer random (as it was in the uniform illumination). They showed the bias is the result of the number of runs, which is greater toward the light source, and not of longer runs in this direction. Brought together, these results suggest distinct pathways for the recognition of light intensity and light direction in this prokaryotic microorganism. This effect can be used in the active control of bacterial flows.
It has also been observed that very strong local illumination inactivates the motility apparatus [157]. Increasing the light intensity of more than ~475 µmol m−2 s−1 reverses the direction of Synechocystis cells to move away from the high levels of radiation source [162,163]. Moreover, Synechocystis cells show a negative phototaxis behavior under ultraviolet radiation as an effective escape mechanism to avoid damage to DNA and other cellular components of Synechocystis [159,163,164].
Contrary to the run phase that can extend from a fraction of a second to several minutes, the tumble lasts only a fraction of a second [165]. The tumbling phase is a clockwise rotation that allows the cell to change the motility direction of the next run [166,167].
Chemotaxis is another scheme that allows an organism to move toward or away from gradients of nutrients or other chemical stimuli. Detecting by transmembrane chemoreceptors [153,165,168] the microorganism performs a three-dimensional random walk is observed in a homogenous environment, and the direction of each run is identified after a tumble [166].
2.2. Biofilm Formation
Bacteria exist predominantly within biofilm in natural, industrial, and clinical settings. Recent research has established that more than 99% of microorganisms in natural settings are fixed on surfaces, due to nutritional and protective benefits linked with life in the adherent populations. In contact with a solid surface, cyanobacteria can aggregate and form a biofilm to grow and survive particularly under environmental stresses [131]. The formation of biofilm by pathogenetic organisms in industrial settings and clinical instruments can infect the living host and can cause chronic infections [169,170]. Alternatively, phototrophic biofilms can be employed in various useful applications such as wastewater purification, bioremediation, aquaculture, and agriculture [96,118,171,172].
Nutrient gradient, cell differentiation, quorum sensing, bacterial motion, and their interaction with the environment can affect the biofilm structure [173]. Microcolonies can form once the bacteria contact the solid surface [174]. Then, once the biofilm developed and matured, some cells secrete chemical molecules that allow the cells to disperse in the environment [175].
Recent research suggests that in cyanobacteria, signaling by secretion of extracellular polysaccharides reduces the diffusion coefficient with time (Figure 11) [131] and, therefore, enhances the formation of biofilm. The hardness of the substrate surface also can affect the motility and the proportion of the motile cells that in turn impact the shape of microcolonies [176].
On a surface exposed to light, phototrophic microorganisms such as unicellular and filamentous cyanobacteria, green algae, and diatoms, are able to form surface-attached communities, called phototrophic biofilms [90,178]. Biofilms are the most successful form of life on the planet earth and the oldest fossilized phototrophic biofilms date back approximately 3.5 billion years ago [96,179,180].
The morphology of biofilms shows various degrees of porosity in the form of mushroom-like macrocolonies surrounded by water-filled voids. They can be smooth and flat, rough, fluffy, or filamentous. However, all morphologies immobilize biofilm cells and permit very diverse habitats of microorganisms on a small scale [181]. The material properties of the surfaces such as surface charge, hydrophobicity, roughness, topography, and stiffness affect adhesion and biofilm formation [182–184].
Biofilm initiation depends on the motility of Synechocystis in the first place, followed by physicochemical and electrostatic interactions between the surface and the microorganism’s envelope, and microorganism cells together [173,185,186]. Focusing on the dynamics at the cell scale, the balance between nucleation-division and diffusion-aggregation processes controls the emergence of microcolonies. For example, motility can either favor bacterial aggregation by enabling cell-cell encounters, but also can prevent localized aggregates by enhancing dispersion. The growth of microcolonies of Synechocystis on soft and different hard surfaces was studied by Vourc’h et al. [176]. The results showed that soft surfaces promote higher amounts of motile bacteria pm than the hard ones, and the number of cell clusters at long times was a decreasing function of pm. Therefore, it was proposed that motility allows the bacteria to escape from clusters while non-motile ones are trapped [176]. This study highlighted that for an adequate description of the biofilm formation of Synechosystis it is necessary to account for subpopulations of variable dynamics among a given cell strain. A kinetic model that emphasizes specific interactions between cells, complemented by extensive numerical simulations considering various amounts of cell motility, described adequately the experimental results of this study [176], the high proportion of motile cells enhances dispersion rather than aggregation.
Photosynthetic metabolisms, in general, convert chemical energy to mechanical energy for overcoming the frictional forces between cells and their environment in biofilms [54]. In Synechocystis, pili are essential to initiate biofilm formation and adhesion to both biotic and abiotic surfaces. Pili provides intercellular interactions through aggregation and twitching motility in the secondary structure of the biofilm [186].
To hold the biofilm together, microorganisms, such as Synechosystis produce extra-cellular polymeric substances (EPS). EPS forms around 90% of the dry mass of biofilms and is composed of mostly polysaccharides, which are complex polymeric carbohydrates, proteins, nucleic acids, and lipids [173,181]. The extracellular polysaccharides generated by cyanobacteria are unique compared to other bacteria and contain sulfate groups. The sulfated extracellular polysaccharides in Synechocystis known as “synechan” and the whole set of genes that regulated synechan biosynthesis and its transcriptional regulation have been recently identified. Synechan is responsible for the buoyancy and floating of cyanobacteria cells. In addition, many sulfated polysaccharides have antiviral, antitumor, or anti-inflammatory characteristics that can be used for human health [187]. EPS provides also the cohesion of biofilms together, immobilizes biofilm cells, mediates the adhesion of the biofilms to the surfaces, creates a three-dimensional polymer network, and provides an external digestive system [181,188]. On water surface or sewage treatment effluents, the produced EPS by Synechocystis species protects the cell death induced by TiO2 nanoparticles [189]. In the bloom-forming cyanobacteria and the presence of proper nutrients and light intensity, the high photosynthetic activity of cells leads to O2 supersaturation, which nucleates into bubbles. These bubbles trapped within the EPS, migrate the biomass upward and aggregate on the surface [190]. In cyanobacteria, the produced EPS improves the soil water-holding capacity, which prevents erosion [191].
In Synechocystis species, in addition to EPS, the S-layer (surface layers of bacterial cell walls), as well as pili, assist to attach the biofilms to surfaces [178,192]. However, the presence of an S-layer may be more important for the initial attachment of cell-glass binding than in cell-cell binding, which can be influenced by the pH and ionic strength of the growth medium [178]. Synechocystis biofilm formation could be induced or altered by stress responses such as pH, salinity, nutrient level, and osmolarity of the culture. It has been observed that the Synechocystis biofilm was initiated for strains subjected to poor nutrient conditions due to the precipitation with calcium in hard water [178]. Previous research showed that the rate of produced EPS in different strains of Synechocystis species (PCC 6803 and PCC 6714) is similar and is related to the stage of growth. The EPS extracted from the above two strains constituted of a minimum of 11–12 mono-oses (number of carbons in open-chain monosaccharides with the suffixes “-ose”) with the ability to form various types of polymers, 15–20% (w/w) uronic derivatives, 10–15% (w/w) osamies, and 7–8% molar ratio sulfate residues. Around 20–40% of the total weight of EPS is made of proteins [193].
Occasionally, some biofilms have shown vertically laminated multilayered regions ranging from millimeters to several centimeters, known as microbial mats or phototrophic mats [96,194]. These types of niches are dominated by the various groups of cyanobacteria, colorless sulfur bacteria, purple bacteria, and sulfur-reducing bacteria [195,196]. Mats are boosted by the photosynthetic behavior of cyanobacteria as they provide nutrients for other microorganisms as well as physical strength [195].
The undesired development of biofilms in the wrong place and at the wrong time is known as biofouling, which has resulted in a considerable economic loss due to material decay, blockage of flow-through membranes, and cleaning procedures on medical devices, water purification systems, ship hulls, pipelines and reservoirs, and desalination plants [180,197,198]. The biofouling organisms present a higher tolerance against biocides, and disinfectants [180]. However, it has been observed that the antibacterial, antialgal, anti-fungal, cytotoxic, immunosuppressive, and enzyme inhibiting activities of cyanobacteria metabolites have the ability to prevent biofouling [199].
2.3. Synechocystis in Suspensions
In many natural or industrial (photobioreactor) situations, Synechosystis cells are suspended in a fluid medium; the suspension is often called “active” or “living” fluid, in which cells act as microstructural elements of the fluid and convert the chemical energy of nutrients into mechanical energy for driving the flow. Therefore, active fluids can develop complex spontaneous motions in the absence of external pressure or velocity gradients. In active fluids flow, there may exist a reciprocal interaction between the cell and the carrying fluid. Fluid mechanics, in conjunction with the microorganism motility, governs the dynamics of active fluids. On the one hand, cell motility can modify the physical and rheological properties of the active fluid; and on the other hand, flow shear can affect cell growth and cell motility. In addition, concentrated populations of cells can modify the influence of the environment that acts on the cell, e.g., by shading from the light or depleting of nutrients. Recent experimental results [200] reveal that shear flow affects the growth rate, doubling per day, biomass yield, pigments and lipid production, and rheological properties of Synechocystis sp. CPCC 534 suspensions. The results showed a significant increase in biomass, doubling per day, yield production, and the total amount of chlorophyll-a and carotenoid due to the induced shear flow in comparison with the non-sheared suspension [200]. Meanwhile, shear showed a negative impact on lipid production and cell size [200]. In addition, it is shown the mixing method by which shear has been imposed on the flow can directly impact the growth and pigment production of Synechocystis sp. [201,202]. The growth and pigment production were higher in cultures that were grown under turbulent mixing compared to orbitally shaking [201]. In addition, the growth and pigment production presented an improvement in an agitated photobioreactor (turbulent mixing) and airlift bubble column photobioreactor compared to the stationary culture [202]. The highest level of cellular pigments were detected in the early stages of cultural growth when the cells were preparing for the rapid growth phase [202].
The rheological behavior of active fluids, in terms of the viscosity of Synechosystis cell suspensions, which experienced various shear rates during growth, was also studied [200]. It was observed that the suspension viscosity, normalized at a constant bio-volume fraction of Synechosystis, showed Newtonian behavior (viscosity independent from shear stress) at all cell concentrations. This behavior was observed for both pre-shared and non-shared samples, implying that the shear history does not have an influence on the rheological behavior of Synechosystis suspensions [200]. Concerning the effect of cell motility on viscosity, the experiments showed no significant difference between the viscosity of live-cell and dead-cell suspensions [200]. This behavior was attributed to the low and twitching nature of the Synechocystis motility, in contrast to the high motility of swimmers such as Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. However, Synechocystis concentration showed a noticeable increase in the viscosity of cell suspensions. It was observed that the viscosity is a linearly increasing function of the cell volume fraction, as is for passive rigid particles; and a correlation was proposed for this variation. However, the viscosity increase in Synechsystis suspensions was smaller than the one observed in suspensions of rigid spherical particles of similar size [200]. The smaller observed increase in viscosity with cell volume fraction was attributed to the fact that the elastic soft suspended particles (Synechocystis cells) can deform; thus, some of the energy of the flow is dissipated in deforming the cells. This decreases the amount of energy dissipated by hydrodynamic interactions compared to rigid particles, so the viscosity is less than it would be for rigid particles. Another (or concomitant) cause can be the effect of the shape dynamics of soft elastic particles as is discussed in Gao et al. [203].
3. Summary
Cyanobacteria, also known as “blue-green algae”, are one of the oldest photosynthetic prokaryotes on planet earth, with the ability to live and flourish in a diverse range of environments from hot springs to underneath of ice pack in frozen lacks, and under the surfaces of rocks in deserts. Based on morphology, cyanobacteria can be categorized as unicellular, colonial, or multicellular filamentous; their cell size can vary from 1 to 100 µm in diameter. To protect the cell from unpredictable and often hostile environments, the cells are covered in a complex multilayered structure of peptidoglycan and lipopolysaccharide outer membrane. In colonial form, mucous matrix (mucilage) may be secreted during the colony growth to bind the cells together.
Cyanobacteria, like higher plants, are capable of converting light energy into chemical energy and generate O2. For this purpose, they use different types of pigments including chlorophyll-a (green pigment), phycobilins such as phycocyanin (PC) and phycoerythrin (PE), as well as carotenoids. In addition to oxygen and chemical energy, and as a result of the interaction of microorganisms with their environment, cyanobacteria can produce a wide variety of secondary metabolites with unique biological activities. Toxins are one of them. In the aquatic ecosystem, cyanobacteria overgrowth, with the ability to produce toxins, can be triggered by high temperature and abundant nutrients and, therefore, lead to the formation of harmful algal blooms (HABs). HABs have adverse effects on the aquatic ecosystem, public health, drinking water, recreation, and the tourism industry.
Cyanobacteria also have positive impacts on the environment and economy. Some cyanobacteria can be used in applications such as feedstock for biofuel production, bioremediation agents to eliminate toxic wastes from contaminated sites including soil, water, wastewater, and sediments, bio-fertilizers to improve soil fertility in agriculture, supplement for animal and aquacultural feed, as well as human nutrition, and also in the pharmaceutical, food, and cosmetic industries.
There are still many open questions regarding different physioecological characteristics of cyanobacteria that require further investigation, such as mechanistic details of photo-synthetic and respiratory electron transport, important metabolic reactions, biofilm signal transduction pathway, the impact of climate change and global warming on ecological and biogeochemical qualities of cyanobacteria, dominant species and the mechanisms that maintain their dominance, HABs formation, toxins production and activation mechanisms, and more.
Among different cyanobacteria, a unicellular, spherical, non-nitrogen-fixing cyanobacterium, Synechocystis sp., occupies a special place in phycology. Its entire genome, as the first photosynthetic microorganism, was sequenced in 1996. Synechocystis sp. has been used as a model organism to study many biological and dynamical aspects of cells, from photosynthesis to biofilm formation.
Synechocystis sp. is a small, 0.7–8 µm prokaryotic microorganism, whose outer surface is covered with complex multi-protein apparatus known as type IV pili. The type IV pili are engaged in motility, adhesion, biofilm formation, aggregation, DNA uptake, and natural competence or secretion. Twitching and gliding movements are both identified in Synechocystis sp. Twitching occurs at a moist solid surface, while gliding is relocation at interfaces such as solid-liquid, solid–air, and solid-solid. Synechocystis sp. moves on a random-walk shaped trajectory composed of two phases; a “run” phase with high motility and a “tumble” phase with low motility. Environmental stressors such as light can increase the probability of a “run” state. Direction, intensity, and wavelength of light and the presence of favorable chemicals and nutrient gradients can directly impact the migration and movement of Synechocystis sp. cells.
Motility of Synechocystis is the first factor for biofilm initiation and formation on both biotic and abiotic surfaces, followed by physicochemical and electrostatic interactions between the surface and the microorganism’s envelope, and microorganism cells together. The physical and rheological properties of the suspension of Synechocystis sp. can be affected by cell motility and concentration. The viscosity of Synechocystis with various cell concentrations at a constant bio-volume fraction revealed a Newtonian behavior while the viscosity is a linearly increasing function of the cell volume fraction.
Funding: This research was funded by the HP’s fund for Western Research Chair in Urban Sustainability & Resilience. HP also acknowledges the financial support of NSERC (RGPIN-2019-05156) which partially funded MMA.
Conflicts of Interest: The authors declare no conflict of interest.