Acclimation ofEmiliania huxleyi(1516) to nutrient limitation involves precise modification of the proteome to scavenge alternative sources of N and P
Autor: | Metodi V. Metodiev, Richard J. Geider, Boyd A. McKew, Christine A. Raines, Gergana Metodieva |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2015 |
Předmět: |
biology
Phosphorus fungi chemistry.chemical_element Phosphate biology.organism_classification Microbiology Phosphorus metabolism chemistry.chemical_compound Nutrient chemistry Biochemistry Botany Proteome Ammonium 14. Life underwater Nitrogen cycle Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics Emiliania huxleyi |
Zdroj: | Environmental Microbiology. 17:4050-4062 |
ISSN: | 1462-2912 |
DOI: | 10.1111/1462-2920.12957 |
Popis: | Limitation of marine primary production by the availability of nitrogen or phosphorus is common. Emiliania huxleyi, a ubiquitous phytoplankter that plays key roles in primary production, calcium carbonate precipitation and production of dimethyl sulfide, often blooms in mid-latitude at the beginning of summer when inorganic nutrient concentrations are low. To understand physiological mechanisms that allow such blooms, we examined how the proteome of E. huxleyi (strain 1516) responds to N and P limitation. We observed modest changes in much of the proteome despite large physiological changes (e.g. cellular biomass, C, N and P) associated with nutrient limitation of growth rate. Acclimation to nutrient limitation did however involve significant increases in the abundance of transporters for ammonium and nitrate under N limitation and for phosphate under P limitation. More notable were large increases in proteins involved in the acquisition of organic forms of N and P, including urea and amino acid/polyamine transporters and numerous C-N hydrolases under N limitation and a large upregulation of alkaline phosphatase under P limitation. This highly targeted reorganization of the proteome towards scavenging organic forms of macronutrients gives unique insight into the molecular mechanisms that underpin how E. huxleyi has found its niche to bloom in surface waters depleted of inorganic nutrients. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |