The cyanobacterium Microcystis PCC7806, grown
under continuous light, fermented endogenously stored glycogen to equimolar
amounts
of acetate and ethanol when incubated anaerobically in the dark. In addition,
H2, CO2 and some L-lactate were produced.
This
fermentation pattern differed from that displayed by cells which had
been grown under an alternating light/dark (16/8 h) cycle. Such
cells
produced much more ethanol than acetate, while no lactate was formed.
These differences could not be related to the levels of key
enzymes of fermentation, which were identical in the two cultures. The
cultures grown under continuous light contained twice as much
glycogen as the light/dark-grown cells and the former metabolized it
at
a rate approximately 3 times as fast as the latter culture.
Fermentation in the culture grown under continuous light showed low
carbon recovery (59–80%) and high oxidation/reduction balance
(approximately 1·5). On the basis of calculations of ATP yield it
was
concluded that this culture was capable of growth driven by
fermentation. The increase in structural cell material would account for
the missing carbon and reduction equivalents.