24 research outputs found
Importance of acidic phosphatase activity in P supply and Gonyostomum semen Ehrenbergh (Raphidophyta) occurrence in a Hungarian peat bog, Keleméri Kis-Mohos (Ne Hungary)
Phosphatase enzymes are capable of releasing phosphate through cleavage of phosphoester bonds. The
seasonal importance of this process was examined by using a model substrate paranitrophenylphosphate
and the Michaelis-Menten equation to estimate the release rate of PO4-P from phosphomonoesters. The
seasonal occurrence of phosphomonoesters and acid phosphatase activity was used to estimate the velocity
of phosphate release from these compounds. Filter fractionation of phosphatase activity demonstrated
that most activity (>60%) was in size fractions less than 0.45 ÎĽm. The release rates were highest in
May and June (15 to 25 nmol L–1 min–1) during the Gonyostomum semen (Raphidophyta) bloom and
decreased to less than 2 nmol L–1 min–1 in two weeks and remained low throughout the summer and the
fall. Fractionation of 32P-H3PO4 labelled dissolved organic phosphorus showed this fraction to vary considerably
through the year. Potential phosphate release declined through the summer and into the fall.
Significance of the co-occurrence of phosphomonoesters and acid phosphatase activity maxima and
Gonyostomum semen (Raphidophyta) bloom is discussed