25 research outputs found
Immunochemical localization of nitrogenase in marine Trichodesmium aggregates: Relationship to N2 fixation potential
Colonial aggregation among nonheterocystous filaments of the planktonic marine cyanobacterium Trichodesmium is known to enhance N2 fixation, mediated by the O2-sensitive enzyme complex nitrogenase. Expression of nitrogenase appears linked to the formation of O2-depleted microzones with aggregated bacterium-associated colonies. While this implies a mechanism by which nonheterocystous N2 fixation can take place in an oxygenated water column, both the location and regulation of the N2-fixing apparatus remain unknown. We used an antinitrogenase polyclonal antibody together with postsection immunocolloidal gold staining and transmission electron microscopy to show that (i) virtually all Trichodesmium cells with a colony possessed nitrogenase, (ii) nitrogenase showed no clear intracellular localization, and (iii) certain associated bacteria contained nitrogenase. Our findings emphasize the critical role coloniality plays in regulating nitrogenase expression in nature. We interpret the potential for a large share of Trichodesmium cells to fix N2 as an opportunistic response to the dynamic nature of the sea state; during quiescent conditions, aggregation and consequent expression of nitrogenase can proceed rapidly
Extreme hydrochemical conditions in natural microcosms entombed within Antarctic ice
Cryoconite holes are near-vertical tubes that form in the surface of glaciers
when solar-heated debris melts into the ice. Those that form in the McMurdo
Dry Valleys of Antarctica are distinctive, in that they have ice lids and are
closed to the atmosphere for periods of years to decades. Photoautotrophs
and heterotrophs grow within this closed environment, perturbing the poorly
buffered water chemistry, yet maintaining the potential for photosynthesis.
Microbial excretion and decomposition of organic matter produces dissolved
organic carbon (DOC): dissolved inorganic carbon ratios of ?1 : 2. Much of
the dissolved nitrogen pool (80–100%) exists as dissolved organic nitrogen
(DON). The DON:DOC ratio is ?1 : 11 (mol/mol), typical of organic particulate
material at the Earth’s surface. The combination of photoautotrophy,
heterotrophy and weak chemical buffering within these microcosms promotes
values of pH, pCO2, O2 saturation and percentage total dissolved nitrogen as
DON that reach 10·99, 10?7·6 atm, 160% and 100% respectively, which are
a unique combination among the surface waters on Earth. These ice-sealed
cryoconite holes could be important analogues of refugia on Snowball Earth
and other icy planets
Exploring subglacial Antarctic lake environments
No abstract availabl