AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how nanostructures in organisms, like diatoms, can manipulate light for communication and photosynthesis.
  • Diatoms, tiny microalgae with silica cell walls, have evolved unique structures to efficiently handle light, enhancing their photosynthetic capabilities.
  • Using various imaging and simulation techniques, the research shows that these structures help optimize light for photosynthesis while protecting against harmful UV radiation.

Article Abstract

Ordered, quasi-ordered, and even disordered nanostructures can be identified as constituent components of several protists, plants and animals, making possible an efficient manipulation of light for intra- and inter- species communication, camouflage, or for the enhancement of primary production. Diatoms are ubiquitous unicellular microalgae inhabiting all the aquatic environments on Earth. They developed, through tens of millions of years of evolution, ultrastructured silica cell walls, the frustules, able to handle optical radiation through multiple diffractive, refractive, and wave-guiding processes, possibly at the basis of their high photosynthetic efficiency. In this study, we employed a range of imaging, spectroscopic and numerical techniques (including transmission imaging, digital holography, photoluminescence spectroscopy, and numerical simulations based on wide-angle beam propagation method) to identify and describe different mechanisms by which Pleurosigma strigosum frustules can modulate optical radiation of different spectral content. Finally, we correlated the optical response of the frustule to the interaction with light in living, individual cells within their aquatic environment following various irradiation treatments. The obtained results demonstrate the favorable transmission of photosynthetic active radiation inside the cell compared to potentially detrimental ultraviolet radiation.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10948915PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-56206-yDOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The study explores how nanostructures in organisms, like diatoms, can manipulate light for communication and photosynthesis.
  • Diatoms, tiny microalgae with silica cell walls, have evolved unique structures to efficiently handle light, enhancing their photosynthetic capabilities.
  • Using various imaging and simulation techniques, the research shows that these structures help optimize light for photosynthesis while protecting against harmful UV radiation.
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C(25) highly branched isoprenoid alkenes from the marine benthic diatom Pleurosigma strigosum.

Phytochemistry

November 2004

Laboratoire de Microbiologie, Géochimie et Ecologie Marines, UMR 6117 CNRS, Centre d'Océanologie de Marseille, OSU, Campus de Luminy, case 901, F-13288 Marseille, France.

The hydrocarbon composition of the marine diatom Pleurosigma strigosum isolated from coastal Mediterranean sediments is described. A suite of five C(25) highly branched isoprenoid (HBI) alkenes with 2-5 double bonds were detected together with n-C(21:4) and n-C(21:5) alkenes and squalene. The analysis by (1)H and (13)C NMR spectroscopy of two isolated HBI alkenes allowed the structural identification of a novel C(25) HBI triene (2,6,10,14-tetramethyl-7-(3-methylpent-4-enyl)-pentadeca-5E,13-diene) and the first identification in diatom cells of 2,6,10,14-tetramethyl-7-(3-methylpent-4-enyl)-pentadec-5E-ene, an HBI previously detected in marine sediments and particulate matter.

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