Diverse CO-Induced Responses in Physiology and Gene Expression among Eukaryotic Phytoplankton.

Front Microbiol

Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Biology and Paleo Environment, Palisades, NY, United States.

Published: December 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Phytoplankton are affected by rising atmospheric CO levels, leading to changes in ocean chemistry and potentially influencing their competitive fitness.
  • The study compared six phytoplankton species’ physiological and gene expression responses to ambient and elevated CO levels, finding that dinoflagellates had slower growth rates and more chlorophyll per cell while other species generally showed increased growth rates.
  • Gene expression analyses revealed diverse metabolic pathway shifts across species, with few conserved genes related to carbon concentrating mechanisms and photorespiration, indicating the need for further research into how different phytoplankton acclimate to elevated CO conditions.

Article Abstract

With rising atmospheric CO, phytoplankton face shifts in ocean chemistry including increased dissolved CO and acidification that will likely influence the relative competitive fitness of different phytoplankton taxa. Here we compared the physiological and gene expression responses of six species of phytoplankton including a diatom, a raphidophyte, two haptophytes, and two dinoflagellates to ambient (~400 ppm) and elevated (~800 ppm) CO. Dinoflagellates had significantly slower growth rates and higher, yet variable, chlorophyll per cell under elevated CO. The other phytoplankton tended to have increased growth rates and/or decreased chlorophyll per cell. Carbon and nitrogen partitioning of cells shifted under elevated CO in some species, indicating potential changes in energy fluxes due to changes in carbon concentrating mechanisms (CCM) or photorespiration. Consistent with these phenotypic changes, gene set enrichment analyses revealed shifts in energy, carbon and nitrogen metabolic pathways, though with limited overlap between species in the genes and pathways involved. Similarly, gene expression responses across species revealed few conserved CO-responsive genes within CCM and photorespiration categories, and a survey of available transcriptomes found high diversity in biophysical CCM and photorespiration expressed gene complements between and within the four phyla represented by these species. The few genes that displayed similar responses to CO across phyla were from understudied gene families, making them targets for further research to uncover the mechanisms of phytoplankton acclimation to elevated CO. These results underscore that eukaryotic phytoplankton have diverse gene complements and gene expression responses to CO perturbations and highlight the value of cross-phyla comparisons for identifying gene families that respond to environmental change.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5742204PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2017.02547DOI Listing

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