There is growing evidence that dissolved phosphorus can regulate planktonic production in the oceans' subtropical gyres, yet there is little quantitative information about the biochemical fate of phosphorus in planktonic communities. We observed in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre (NPSG) that the synthesis of membrane lipids accounted for 18-28% of the phosphate (PO4(3-)) taken up by the total planktonic community. Paradoxically, Prochlorococcus, the cyanobacterium that dominates NPSG phytoplankton, primarily synthesizes sulfoquinovosyldiacylglycerol (SQDG), a lipid that contains sulfur and sugar instead of phosphate. In axenic cultures of Prochlorococcus, it was observed that <1% of the total PO4(3-) uptake was incorporated into membrane lipids. Liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry of planktonic lipids in the NPSG confirmed that SQDG was the dominant membrane lipid. Furthermore, the analyses of SQDG synthesis genes from the Sargasso Sea environmental genome showed that the use of sulfolipids in subtropical gyres was confined primarily to picocyanobacteria; no sequences related to known heterotrophic bacterial SQDG lineages were found. This biochemical adaptation by Prochlorococcus must be a significant benefit to these organisms, which compete against phospholipid-rich heterotrophic bacteria for PO4(3-). Thus, evolution of this "sulfur-for-phosphorus" strategy set the stage for the success of picocyanobacteria in oligotrophic environments and may have been a major event in Earth's early history when the relative availability of sulfate and PO4(3-) were significantly different from today's ocean.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0600540103 | DOI Listing |
Harmful Algae
September 2024
Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 7# Donghu South Road, Wuhan 430072, PR China. Electronic address:
Despite significant reductions in phosphorus (P) loads, lakes still experience cyanobacterial blooms. Little is known regarding cellular P regulation in response to P deficiency in widely distributed bloom causing species such as Microcystis. In this study, we investigated changes in P containing and non-P lipids contents and their ratios concomitantly with the determinations of expression levels of genes encoding these lipids in cultural and field Microcystis samples.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
June 2006
Department of Marine Chemistry and Geochemistry, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, MS #4, Woods Hole, MA 02543, USA.
There is growing evidence that dissolved phosphorus can regulate planktonic production in the oceans' subtropical gyres, yet there is little quantitative information about the biochemical fate of phosphorus in planktonic communities. We observed in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre (NPSG) that the synthesis of membrane lipids accounted for 18-28% of the phosphate (PO4(3-)) taken up by the total planktonic community. Paradoxically, Prochlorococcus, the cyanobacterium that dominates NPSG phytoplankton, primarily synthesizes sulfoquinovosyldiacylglycerol (SQDG), a lipid that contains sulfur and sugar instead of phosphate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Biol Chem
January 2006
Departamento de Microbiología, Medicina Preventiva y Salud Pública, Universidad de Zaragoza, C/Domingo Miral sin numero, 50009 Zaragoza, Spain.
Two-component regulatory signal transduction systems are important elements of the adaptative response of prokaryotes to a variety of environmental stimuli. Disruption of PhoP-PhoR in Mycobacterium tuberculosis dramatically attenuates virulence, implying that this system directly and/or indirectly coordinates the expression of important virulence factors whose identity remains to be established. Interestingly, in knockingout the PhoP-PhoR two-component system in M.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInfect Immun
June 2000
Department of Host Defense, Osaka City University Graduate School of Medicine, Abeno-ku, Osaka 545-8585, Japan.
Trehalose 6,6'-dimycolate (TDM) is a cell surface molecule of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. TDM induced a loss of body weight and prominent granulomas in the liver and lungs by the intravenous injection of TDM into rabbits. TDM also induced atrophy of the thymus and spleen due to apoptosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurochem Res
December 1981
The activity of arylsulfatase A and 2'3'-cyclic nucleotide 3'-phosphohydrolase was studied in the brain of trout in parallel to the structural differentiation of tissue from early larval stages into adulthood. Whereas in the optic tectum, phosphodiesterase activity could not be detected before the second month after hatching in brainstem, the enzyme had already reached 80% of adult level. In tectum it was from the fourth to the seventh month that this enzyme dramatically increased, thereby reaching about the adult level.
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