Information on interaction of C and N at the cellular level is lacking for ecologically relevant phytoplankton species. We examined the effects of NO3- availability on C and N fluxes in the widely distributed marine coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi. Cells were cultured at replete (∼ 280 μM) and ambient (∼ 10 μM) NO3-, the latter representing a typical surface water nitrate concentration of the North Atlantic Ocean during spring. While growth rates and C to N ratios were not altered by the NO3- availability, organic C and N as well as inorganic C quotas were reduced under ambient NO3-. Growth at ambient NO3- caused a higher proportion of fixed C to be allocated to lipids relative to carbohydrates and especially to proteins. Ambient NO3--grown cells showed lower Vmax of nitrate reductase (NR) and nitrite reductase (NiR) (ambient/replete: VmaxNR = 0.64/1.09 fmol min-1 cell-1; VmaxNiR = 0.3/0.56 fmol min-1 cell-1), whereas they had higher Vmax of glutamine synthetase (GS) and glutamate synthase (GOGAT) (ambient/replete: VmaxGS = 0.57/0.38 fmol min-1 cell-1; VmaxGOG = 3.91/2.87 fmol min-1 cell-1). In these cells, photosynthetic O2 evolution and HCO3- uptake rates were lower as compared to replete NO3--grown cells (ambient/replete: VmaxO2 = 6.5/12.9 fmol min-1 cell-1; VmaxHCO3- = 2.8/8.1 fmol min-1 cell-1). The CO2 uptake and the maximum light use efficiency of photosynthesis (α) were unaffected by the concentration of NO3-. The affinities of NR for NO3-, of NiR for NO2-, of GS for Glu, and of the inorganic carbon uptake system for HCO3- were higher under ambient NO3- (ambient/replete: KmNR = 0.074/0.099 mM; KmNiR = 1.69/3.14 mM; KmGS = 1.62/3.81 mM; KmHCO3- = 195/524 μM). Our data suggest that a concerted regulation of the intracellular CO2 and NO3- concentrations is required to maintain balanced C and N metabolic fluxes resulting in a constant C to N ratio.

Carbon and nitrogen fluxes in the marine coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi grown under different nitrate concentrations / Kaffes, N.; Thoms, S.; Trimborn, S.; Rost, B.; Langer, G.; Richter, K. -U.; Köhler, A.; Norici, A.; Giordano, M.. - In: JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MARINE BIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY. - ISSN 0022-0981. - STAMPA. - 393:(2010), pp. 1-8.

Carbon and nitrogen fluxes in the marine coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi grown under different nitrate concentrations.

NORICI A.;GIORDANO M.
2010-01-01

Abstract

Information on interaction of C and N at the cellular level is lacking for ecologically relevant phytoplankton species. We examined the effects of NO3- availability on C and N fluxes in the widely distributed marine coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi. Cells were cultured at replete (∼ 280 μM) and ambient (∼ 10 μM) NO3-, the latter representing a typical surface water nitrate concentration of the North Atlantic Ocean during spring. While growth rates and C to N ratios were not altered by the NO3- availability, organic C and N as well as inorganic C quotas were reduced under ambient NO3-. Growth at ambient NO3- caused a higher proportion of fixed C to be allocated to lipids relative to carbohydrates and especially to proteins. Ambient NO3--grown cells showed lower Vmax of nitrate reductase (NR) and nitrite reductase (NiR) (ambient/replete: VmaxNR = 0.64/1.09 fmol min-1 cell-1; VmaxNiR = 0.3/0.56 fmol min-1 cell-1), whereas they had higher Vmax of glutamine synthetase (GS) and glutamate synthase (GOGAT) (ambient/replete: VmaxGS = 0.57/0.38 fmol min-1 cell-1; VmaxGOG = 3.91/2.87 fmol min-1 cell-1). In these cells, photosynthetic O2 evolution and HCO3- uptake rates were lower as compared to replete NO3--grown cells (ambient/replete: VmaxO2 = 6.5/12.9 fmol min-1 cell-1; VmaxHCO3- = 2.8/8.1 fmol min-1 cell-1). The CO2 uptake and the maximum light use efficiency of photosynthesis (α) were unaffected by the concentration of NO3-. The affinities of NR for NO3-, of NiR for NO2-, of GS for Glu, and of the inorganic carbon uptake system for HCO3- were higher under ambient NO3- (ambient/replete: KmNR = 0.074/0.099 mM; KmNiR = 1.69/3.14 mM; KmGS = 1.62/3.81 mM; KmHCO3- = 195/524 μM). Our data suggest that a concerted regulation of the intracellular CO2 and NO3- concentrations is required to maintain balanced C and N metabolic fluxes resulting in a constant C to N ratio.
2010
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11566/29681
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