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1.
ISME Commun ; 3(1): 83, 2023 Aug 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37596349

RESUMO

For decades, marine plankton have been investigated for their capacity to modulate biogeochemical cycles and provide fishery resources. Between the sunlit (epipelagic) layer and the deep dark waters, lies a vast and heterogeneous part of the ocean: the mesopelagic zone. How plankton composition is shaped by environment has been well-explored in the epipelagic but much less in the mesopelagic ocean. Here, we conducted comparative analyses of trans-kingdom community assemblages thriving in the mesopelagic oxygen minimum zone (OMZ), mesopelagic oxic, and their epipelagic counterparts. We identified nine distinct types of intermediate water masses that correlate with variation in mesopelagic community composition. Furthermore, oxygen, NO3- and particle flux together appeared as the main drivers governing these communities. Novel taxonomic signatures emerged from OMZ while a global co-occurrence network analysis showed that about 70% of the abundance of mesopelagic plankton groups is organized into three community modules. One module gathers prokaryotes, pico-eukaryotes and Nucleo-Cytoplasmic Large DNA Viruses (NCLDV) from oxic regions, and the two other modules are enriched in OMZ prokaryotes and OMZ pico-eukaryotes, respectively. We hypothesize that OMZ conditions led to a diversification of ecological niches, and thus communities, due to selective pressure from limited resources. Our study further clarifies the interplay between environmental factors in the mesopelagic oxic and OMZ, and the compositional features of communities.

2.
Sci Data ; 10(1): 324, 2023 06 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37264023

RESUMO

The Tara Pacific expedition (2016-2018) sampled coral ecosystems around 32 islands in the Pacific Ocean and the ocean surface waters at 249 locations, resulting in the collection of nearly 58 000 samples. The expedition was designed to systematically study warm-water coral reefs and included the collection of corals, fish, plankton, and seawater samples for advanced biogeochemical, molecular, and imaging analysis. Here we provide a complete description of the sampling methodology, and we explain how to explore and access the different datasets generated by the expedition. Environmental context data were obtained from taxonomic registries, gazetteers, almanacs, climatologies, operational biogeochemical models, and satellite observations. The quality of the different environmental measures has been validated not only by various quality control steps, but also through a global analysis allowing the comparison with known environmental large-scale structures. Such publicly released datasets open the perspective to address a wide range of scientific questions.


Assuntos
Antozoários , Recifes de Corais , Animais , Ecossistema , Oceano Pacífico , Água do Mar
3.
ISME J ; 17(1): 47-58, 2023 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36163270

RESUMO

Diazotrophs are widespread microorganisms that alleviate nitrogen limitation in 60% of our oceans, thereby regulating marine productivity. Yet, the group-specific contribution of diazotrophs to organic matter export has not been quantified, which so far has impeded an accurate assessment of their impact on the biological carbon pump. Here, we examine the fate of five groups of globally-distributed diazotrophs by using an original combination of mesopelagic particle sampling devices across the subtropical South Pacific Ocean. We demonstrate that cyanobacterial and non-cyanobacterial diazotrophs are exported down to 1000 m depth. Surprisingly, group-specific export turnover rates point to a more efficient export of small unicellular cyanobacterial diazotrophs (UCYN) relative to the larger and filamentous Trichodesmium. Phycoerythrin-containing UCYN-B and UCYN-C-like cells were recurrently found embedded in large (>50 µm) organic aggregates or organized into clusters of tens to hundreds of cells linked by an extracellular matrix, presumably facilitating their export. Beyond the South Pacific, our data are supported by analysis of the Tara Oceans metagenomes collected in other ocean basins, extending the scope of our results globally. We show that, when diazotrophs are found in the euphotic zone, they are also systematically present in mesopelagic waters, suggesting their transport to the deep ocean. We thus conclude that diazotrophs are a significant part of the carbon sequestered in the deep ocean and, therefore, they need to be accounted in regional and global estimates of export.


Assuntos
Cianobactérias , Fixação de Nitrogênio , Nitrogênio , Carbono , Água do Mar/microbiologia , Cianobactérias/genética , Oceano Pacífico
4.
Elife ; 112022 08 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35920817

RESUMO

Biogeographical studies have traditionally focused on readily visible organisms, but recent technological advances are enabling analyses of the large-scale distribution of microscopic organisms, whose biogeographical patterns have long been debated. Here we assessed the global structure of plankton geography and its relation to the biological, chemical, and physical context of the ocean (the 'seascape') by analyzing metagenomes of plankton communities sampled across oceans during the Tara Oceans expedition, in light of environmental data and ocean current transport. Using a consistent approach across organismal sizes that provides unprecedented resolution to measure changes in genomic composition between communities, we report a pan-ocean, size-dependent plankton biogeography overlying regional heterogeneity. We found robust evidence for a basin-scale impact of transport by ocean currents on plankton biogeography, and on a characteristic timescale of community dynamics going beyond simple seasonality or life history transitions of plankton.


Oceans are brimming with life invisible to our eyes, a myriad of species of bacteria, viruses and other microscopic organisms essential for the health of the planet. These 'marine plankton' are unable to swim against currents and should therefore be constantly on the move, yet previous studies have suggested that distinct species of plankton may in fact inhabit different oceanic regions. However, proving this theory has been challenging; collecting plankton is logistically difficult, and it is often impossible to distinguish between species simply by examining them under a microscope. However, within the last decade, a research schooner called Tara has travelled the globe to gather thousands of plankton samples. At the same time, advances in genomics have made it possible to identify species based only on fragments of their DNA sequence. To understand the hidden geography of plankton communities in Earth's oceans, Richter et al. pored over DNA from the Tara Oceans expedition. This revealed that, despite being unable to resist the flow of water, various planktonic species which live close to the surface manage to occupy distinct, stable provinces shaped by currents. Different sizes of plankton are distributed in different sized provinces, with the smallest organisms tending to inhabit the smallest areas. Comparing DNA similarities and speeds of currents at the ocean surface revealed how these might stretch and mix plankton communities. Plankton play a critical role in the health of the ocean and the chemical cycles of planet Earth. These results could allow deeper investigation by marine modellers, ecologists, and evolutionary biologists. Meanwhile, work is already underway to investigate how climate change might impact this hidden geography.


Assuntos
Ecossistema , Plâncton , Genômica , Geografia , Oceanos e Mares , Plâncton/genética
5.
Cell ; 179(5): 1084-1097.e21, 2019 11 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31730851

RESUMO

The ocean is home to myriad small planktonic organisms that underpin the functioning of marine ecosystems. However, their spatial patterns of diversity and the underlying drivers remain poorly known, precluding projections of their responses to global changes. Here we investigate the latitudinal gradients and global predictors of plankton diversity across archaea, bacteria, eukaryotes, and major virus clades using both molecular and imaging data from Tara Oceans. We show a decline of diversity for most planktonic groups toward the poles, mainly driven by decreasing ocean temperatures. Projections into the future suggest that severe warming of the surface ocean by the end of the 21st century could lead to tropicalization of the diversity of most planktonic groups in temperate and polar regions. These changes may have multiple consequences for marine ecosystem functioning and services and are expected to be particularly significant in key areas for carbon sequestration, fisheries, and marine conservation. VIDEO ABSTRACT.


Assuntos
Biodiversidade , Plâncton/fisiologia , Água do Mar/microbiologia , Geografia , Modelos Teóricos , Oceanos e Mares , Filogenia
6.
Cell ; 179(5): 1068-1083.e21, 2019 Nov 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31730850

RESUMO

Ocean microbial communities strongly influence the biogeochemistry, food webs, and climate of our planet. Despite recent advances in understanding their taxonomic and genomic compositions, little is known about how their transcriptomes vary globally. Here, we present a dataset of 187 metatranscriptomes and 370 metagenomes from 126 globally distributed sampling stations and establish a resource of 47 million genes to study community-level transcriptomes across depth layers from pole-to-pole. We examine gene expression changes and community turnover as the underlying mechanisms shaping community transcriptomes along these axes of environmental variation and show how their individual contributions differ for multiple biogeochemically relevant processes. Furthermore, we find the relative contribution of gene expression changes to be significantly lower in polar than in non-polar waters and hypothesize that in polar regions, alterations in community activity in response to ocean warming will be driven more strongly by changes in organismal composition than by gene regulatory mechanisms. VIDEO ABSTRACT.


Assuntos
Regulação da Expressão Gênica , Metagenoma , Oceanos e Mares , Transcriptoma/genética , Geografia , Microbiota/genética , Anotação de Sequência Molecular , RNA Mensageiro/genética , RNA Mensageiro/metabolismo , Água do Mar/microbiologia , Temperatura
7.
Cell ; 177(5): 1109-1123.e14, 2019 05 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31031001

RESUMO

Microbes drive most ecosystems and are modulated by viruses that impact their lifespan, gene flow, and metabolic outputs. However, ecosystem-level impacts of viral community diversity remain difficult to assess due to classification issues and few reference genomes. Here, we establish an ∼12-fold expanded global ocean DNA virome dataset of 195,728 viral populations, now including the Arctic Ocean, and validate that these populations form discrete genotypic clusters. Meta-community analyses revealed five ecological zones throughout the global ocean, including two distinct Arctic regions. Across the zones, local and global patterns and drivers in viral community diversity were established for both macrodiversity (inter-population diversity) and microdiversity (intra-population genetic variation). These patterns sometimes, but not always, paralleled those from macro-organisms and revealed temperate and tropical surface waters and the Arctic as biodiversity hotspots and mechanistic hypotheses to explain them. Such further understanding of ocean viruses is critical for broader inclusion in ecosystem models.


Assuntos
Organismos Aquáticos/genética , Biodiversidade , Vírus de DNA/genética , DNA Viral/genética , Metagenoma , Microbiologia da Água
8.
Nat Commun ; 9(1): 373, 2018 01 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29371626

RESUMO

While our knowledge about the roles of microbes and viruses in the ocean has increased tremendously due to recent advances in genomics and metagenomics, research on marine microbial eukaryotes and zooplankton has benefited much less from these new technologies because of their larger genomes, their enormous diversity, and largely unexplored physiologies. Here, we use a metatranscriptomics approach to capture expressed genes in open ocean Tara Oceans stations across four organismal size fractions. The individual sequence reads cluster into 116 million unigenes representing the largest reference collection of eukaryotic transcripts from any single biome. The catalog is used to unveil functions expressed by eukaryotic marine plankton, and to assess their functional biogeography. Almost half of the sequences have no similarity with known proteins, and a great number belong to new gene families with a restricted distribution in the ocean. Overall, the resource provides the foundations for exploring the roles of marine eukaryotes in ocean ecology and biogeochemistry.


Assuntos
Organismos Aquáticos , Eucariotos/genética , Células Eucarióticas/metabolismo , Metagenoma , Filogenia , Zooplâncton/genética , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Animais , Atlas como Assunto , Bactérias/classificação , Bactérias/genética , Biodiversidade , Ecossistema , Eucariotos/classificação , Células Eucarióticas/citologia , Metagenômica/métodos , Oceanos e Mares , Fitoplâncton/classificação , Fitoplâncton/genética , Água do Mar , Vírus/classificação , Vírus/genética , Zooplâncton/classificação
9.
Nat Commun ; 9(1): 310, 2018 01 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29358710

RESUMO

Single-celled eukaryotes (protists) are critical players in global biogeochemical cycling of nutrients and energy in the oceans. While their roles as primary producers and grazers are well appreciated, other aspects of their life histories remain obscure due to challenges in culturing and sequencing their natural diversity. Here, we exploit single-cell genomics and metagenomics data from the circumglobal Tara Oceans expedition to analyze the genome content and apparent oceanic distribution of seven prevalent lineages of uncultured heterotrophic stramenopiles. Based on the available data, each sequenced genome or genotype appears to have a specific oceanic distribution, principally correlated with water temperature and depth. The genome content provides hypotheses for specialization in terms of cell motility, food spectra, and trophic stages, including the potential impact on their lifestyles of horizontal gene transfer from prokaryotes. Our results support the idea that prominent heterotrophic marine protists perform diverse functions in ocean ecology.

10.
Nature ; 537(7622): 689-693, 2016 09 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27654921

RESUMO

Ocean microbes drive biogeochemical cycling on a global scale. However, this cycling is constrained by viruses that affect community composition, metabolic activity, and evolutionary trajectories. Owing to challenges with the sampling and cultivation of viruses, genome-level viral diversity remains poorly described and grossly understudied, with less than 1% of observed surface-ocean viruses known. Here we assemble complete genomes and large genomic fragments from both surface- and deep-ocean viruses sampled during the Tara Oceans and Malaspina research expeditions, and analyse the resulting 'global ocean virome' dataset to present a global map of abundant, double-stranded DNA viruses complete with genomic and ecological contexts. A total of 15,222 epipelagic and mesopelagic viral populations were identified, comprising 867 viral clusters (defined as approximately genus-level groups). This roughly triples the number of known ocean viral populations and doubles the number of candidate bacterial and archaeal virus genera, providing a near-complete sampling of epipelagic communities at both the population and viral-cluster level. We found that 38 of the 867 viral clusters were locally or globally abundant, together accounting for nearly half of the viral populations in any global ocean virome sample. While two-thirds of these clusters represent newly described viruses lacking any cultivated representative, most could be computationally linked to dominant, ecologically relevant microbial hosts. Moreover, we identified 243 viral-encoded auxiliary metabolic genes, of which only 95 were previously known. Deeper analyses of four of these auxiliary metabolic genes (dsrC, soxYZ, P-II (also known as glnB) and amoC) revealed that abundant viruses may directly manipulate sulfur and nitrogen cycling throughout the epipelagic ocean. This viral catalog and functional analyses provide a necessary foundation for the meaningful integration of viruses into ecosystem models where they act as key players in nutrient cycling and trophic networks.


Assuntos
Ecossistema , Genoma Viral , Metagenômica , Água do Mar/virologia , Vírus/genética , Vírus/isolamento & purificação , DNA Viral/análise , Conjuntos de Dados como Assunto , Ecologia , Expedições , Genes Virais , Mapeamento Geográfico , Metagenoma , Ciclo do Nitrogênio , Oceanos e Mares , Enxofre/metabolismo , Vírus/metabolismo
11.
Nature ; 532(7600): 465-470, 2016 Apr 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26863193

RESUMO

The biological carbon pump is the process by which CO2 is transformed to organic carbon via photosynthesis, exported through sinking particles, and finally sequestered in the deep ocean. While the intensity of the pump correlates with plankton community composition, the underlying ecosystem structure driving the process remains largely uncharacterized. Here we use environmental and metagenomic data gathered during the Tara Oceans expedition to improve our understanding of carbon export in the oligotrophic ocean. We show that specific plankton communities, from the surface and deep chlorophyll maximum, correlate with carbon export at 150 m and highlight unexpected taxa such as Radiolaria and alveolate parasites, as well as Synechococcus and their phages, as lineages most strongly associated with carbon export in the subtropical, nutrient-depleted, oligotrophic ocean. Additionally, we show that the relative abundance of a few bacterial and viral genes can predict a significant fraction of the variability in carbon export in these regions.


Assuntos
Organismos Aquáticos/metabolismo , Carbono/metabolismo , Ecossistema , Plâncton/metabolismo , Água do Mar/química , Organismos Aquáticos/genética , Organismos Aquáticos/isolamento & purificação , Clorofila/metabolismo , Dinoflagellida/genética , Dinoflagellida/isolamento & purificação , Dinoflagellida/metabolismo , Expedições , Genes Bacterianos , Genes Virais , Geografia , Oceanos e Mares , Fotossíntese , Plâncton/genética , Plâncton/isolamento & purificação , Água do Mar/microbiologia , Água do Mar/parasitologia , Synechococcus/genética , Synechococcus/isolamento & purificação , Synechococcus/metabolismo , Synechococcus/virologia
12.
Environ Microbiol ; 18(2): 609-26, 2016 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26337598

RESUMO

Dinoflagellates (Alveolata) are one of the ecologically most important groups of modern phytoplankton. Their biological complexity makes assessment of their global diversity and community structure difficult. We used massive V9 18S rDNA sequencing from 106 size-fractionated plankton communities collected across the world's surface oceans during the Tara Oceans expedition (2009-2012) to assess patterns of pelagic dinoflagellate diversity and community structuring over global taxonomic and ecological scales. Our data and analyses suggest that dinoflagellate diversity has been largely underestimated, representing overall ∼ 1/2 of protistan rDNA metabarcode richness assigned at ≥ 90% to a reference sequence in the world's surface oceans. Dinoflagellate metabarcode diversity and abundance display regular patterns across the global scale, with different order-level taxonomic compositions across organismal size fractions. While the pico to nano-planktonic communities are composed of an extreme diversity of metabarcodes assigned to Gymnodiniales or are simply undetermined, most micro-dinoflagellate metabarcodes relate to the well-referenced Gonyaulacales and Peridiniales orders, and a lower abundance and diversity of essentially symbiotic Peridiniales is unveiled in the meso-plankton. Our analyses could help future development of biogeochemical models of pelagic systems integrating the separation of dinoflagellates into functional groups according to plankton size classes.


Assuntos
Código de Barras de DNA Taxonômico , Dinoflagellida/classificação , Dinoflagellida/genética , Fitoplâncton/classificação , Fitoplâncton/genética , RNA Ribossômico 18S/genética , Sequência de Bases , Biodiversidade , DNA Ribossômico/genética , Ecologia , Oceanos e Mares
13.
Sci Data ; 2: 150023, 2015.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26029378

RESUMO

The Tara Oceans expedition (2009-2013) sampled contrasting ecosystems of the world oceans, collecting environmental data and plankton, from viruses to metazoans, for later analysis using modern sequencing and state-of-the-art imaging technologies. It surveyed 210 ecosystems in 20 biogeographic provinces, collecting over 35,000 samples of seawater and plankton. The interpretation of such an extensive collection of samples in their ecological context requires means to explore, assess and access raw and validated data sets. To address this challenge, the Tara Oceans Consortium offers open science resources, including the use of open access archives for nucleotides (ENA) and for environmental, biogeochemical, taxonomic and morphological data (PANGAEA), and the development of on line discovery tools and collaborative annotation tools for sequences and images. Here, we present an overview of Tara Oceans Data, and we provide detailed registries (data sets) of all campaigns (from port-to-port), stations and sampling events.


Assuntos
Ecossistema , Expedições , Oceanos e Mares , Disseminação de Informação , Plâncton , Água do Mar , Vírus
14.
Science ; 348(6237): 1261359, 2015 May 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25999513

RESUMO

Microbes are dominant drivers of biogeochemical processes, yet drawing a global picture of functional diversity, microbial community structure, and their ecological determinants remains a grand challenge. We analyzed 7.2 terabases of metagenomic data from 243 Tara Oceans samples from 68 locations in epipelagic and mesopelagic waters across the globe to generate an ocean microbial reference gene catalog with >40 million nonredundant, mostly novel sequences from viruses, prokaryotes, and picoeukaryotes. Using 139 prokaryote-enriched samples, containing >35,000 species, we show vertical stratification with epipelagic community composition mostly driven by temperature rather than other environmental factors or geography. We identify ocean microbial core functionality and reveal that >73% of its abundance is shared with the human gut microbiome despite the physicochemical differences between these two ecosystems.


Assuntos
Microbiota/genética , Plâncton/classificação , Água do Mar/microbiologia , Bases de Dados Genéticas , Ecossistema , Trato Gastrointestinal/microbiologia , Variação Genética , Humanos , Metagenoma , Oceanos e Mares , Plâncton/genética , Plâncton/isolamento & purificação
15.
Science ; 348(6237): 1261447, 2015 May 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25999514

RESUMO

Agulhas rings provide the principal route for ocean waters to circulate from the Indo-Pacific to the Atlantic basin. Their influence on global ocean circulation is well known, but their role in plankton transport is largely unexplored. We show that, although the coarse taxonomic structure of plankton communities is continuous across the Agulhas choke point, South Atlantic plankton diversity is altered compared with Indian Ocean source populations. Modeling and in situ sampling of a young Agulhas ring indicate that strong vertical mixing drives complex nitrogen cycling, shaping community metabolism and biogeochemical signatures as the ring and associated plankton transit westward. The peculiar local environment inside Agulhas rings may provide a selective mechanism contributing to the limited dispersal of Indian Ocean plankton populations into the Atlantic.


Assuntos
Plâncton/fisiologia , Água do Mar , Oceano Atlântico , DNA Ribossômico/genética , Variação Genética , Oceano Índico , Metagenômica , Nitritos/metabolismo , Nitrogênio/metabolismo , Plâncton/genética , Plâncton/metabolismo , Seleção Genética
16.
Science ; 348(6237): 1261498, 2015 May 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25999515

RESUMO

Viruses influence ecosystems by modulating microbial population size, diversity, metabolic outputs, and gene flow. Here, we use quantitative double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) viral-fraction metagenomes (viromes) and whole viral community morphological data sets from 43 Tara Oceans expedition samples to assess viral community patterns and structure in the upper ocean. Protein cluster cataloging defined pelagic upper-ocean viral community pan and core gene sets and suggested that this sequence space is well-sampled. Analyses of viral protein clusters, populations, and morphology revealed biogeographic patterns whereby viral communities were passively transported on oceanic currents and locally structured by environmental conditions that affect host community structure. Together, these investigations establish a global ocean dsDNA viromic data set with analyses supporting the seed-bank hypothesis to explain how oceanic viral communities maintain high local diversity.


Assuntos
Ecossistema , Plâncton/classificação , Água do Mar/virologia , Vírus/classificação , Biodiversidade , DNA Viral/genética , Fenômenos Ecológicos e Ambientais , Metagenoma/genética , Microbiota/genética , Oceanos e Mares , Plâncton/genética , Proteínas Virais/genética , Vírus/genética
17.
Science ; 348(6237): 1261605, 2015 May 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25999516

RESUMO

Marine plankton support global biological and geochemical processes. Surveys of their biodiversity have hitherto been geographically restricted and have not accounted for the full range of plankton size. We assessed eukaryotic diversity from 334 size-fractionated photic-zone plankton communities collected across tropical and temperate oceans during the circumglobal Tara Oceans expedition. We analyzed 18S ribosomal DNA sequences across the intermediate plankton-size spectrum from the smallest unicellular eukaryotes (protists, >0.8 micrometers) to small animals of a few millimeters. Eukaryotic ribosomal diversity saturated at ~150,000 operational taxonomic units, about one-third of which could not be assigned to known eukaryotic groups. Diversity emerged at all taxonomic levels, both within the groups comprising the ~11,200 cataloged morphospecies of eukaryotic plankton and among twice as many other deep-branching lineages of unappreciated importance in plankton ecology studies. Most eukaryotic plankton biodiversity belonged to heterotrophic protistan groups, particularly those known to be parasites or symbiotic hosts.


Assuntos
Biodiversidade , Eucariotos/classificação , Plâncton/classificação , Animais , Código de Barras de DNA Taxonômico , DNA Ribossômico/genética , Eucariotos/genética , Oceanos e Mares , Filogenia , Plâncton/genética , Ribossomos/genética , Análise de Sequência de DNA , Luz Solar
18.
Science ; 348(6237): 1262073, 2015 May 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25999517

RESUMO

Species interaction networks are shaped by abiotic and biotic factors. Here, as part of the Tara Oceans project, we studied the photic zone interactome using environmental factors and organismal abundance profiles and found that environmental factors are incomplete predictors of community structure. We found associations across plankton functional types and phylogenetic groups to be nonrandomly distributed on the network and driven by both local and global patterns. We identified interactions among grazers, primary producers, viruses, and (mainly parasitic) symbionts and validated network-generated hypotheses using microscopy to confirm symbiotic relationships. We have thus provided a resource to support further research on ocean food webs and integrating biological components into ocean models.


Assuntos
Cadeia Alimentar , Plâncton/classificação , Plâncton/fisiologia , Simbiose , Animais , Especificidade de Hospedeiro , Oceanos e Mares , Filogenia , Platelmintos/classificação , Platelmintos/fisiologia , Luz Solar , Vírus/classificação
19.
Protist ; 160(3): 397-411, 2009 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19375387

RESUMO

The ecophysiology of the photoprotective xanthophyll cycle (XC) was compared in six chlorophyll c-containing pico- and nano-phytoplankton species. Different accessory pigment combinations and ecological properties characterize the six studied species, Bolidomonas mediterranea, Pelagomonas calceolata, Phaeocystis cordata, Phaeocystis sp. (strain RCC186), Mesopedinella arctica and Ochromonas sp. The first experimental set consisted in the study of the activity of the xanthophyll cycle and non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) during two gradual light increases, with photon flux density (PFD) ranging from 40 to 400 micromol photons m(-2)s(-1). Pigments, absorption spectra, flow cytometry measurements for cell counts and chlorophyll a autofluorescence and Electron Transport Rate (ETR) vs. light curves were determined at different times during the experiment. The second set of experiments consisted in using two inhibitors: carotenogenesis inhibitor (norflurazon) and de-epoxidation step (occurring in the xanthophyll cycle) inhibitor (dithiotreitol) during high-light shift, to compare the functioning of the xanthophyll cycle among the different species. Results highlighted a large diversity in the xanthophyll cycle functioning, possibly related to the ecological traits of the species. In view of the results, three groups of species have been identified as (i) high light-adapted, (ii) low light-adapted and (iii) variable light-adapted species.


Assuntos
Eucariotos/metabolismo , Eucariotos/efeitos da radiação , Luz , Pigmentos Biológicos/biossíntese , Microbiologia da Água , Xantofilas/biossíntese , Adaptação Fisiológica , Estresse Fisiológico
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