14 research outputs found
Inorganic carbon physiology underpins macroalgal responses to elevated CO2
Beneficial effects of CO2 on photosynthetic organisms will be a key driver of ecosystem change under ocean acidification. Predicting the responses of macroalgal species to ocean acidification is complex, but we demonstrate that the response of assemblages to elevated CO2 are correlated with inorganic carbon physiology. We assessed abundance patterns and a proxy for CO2:HCO3- use (\u3b413C values) of macroalgae along a gradient of CO2 at a volcanic seep, and examined how shifts in species abundance at other Mediterranean seeps are related to macroalgal inorganic carbon physiology. Five macroalgal species capable of using both HCO3- and CO2 had greater CO2 use as concentrations increased. These species (and one unable to use HCO3-) increased in abundance with elevated CO2 whereas obligate calcifying species, and non-calcareous macroalgae whose CO2 use did not increase consistently with concentration, declined in abundance. Physiological groupings provide a mechanistic understanding that will aid us in determining which species will benefit from ocean acidification and why
Diatom acclimation to elevated CO 2 via cAMP signalling and coordinated gene expression
© 2015 Macmillan Publishers Limited. Diatoms are responsible for â 1/440% of marine primary productivity, fuelling the oceanic carbon cycle and contributing to natural carbon sequestration in the deep ocean. Diatoms rely on energetically expensive carbon concentrating mechanisms (CCMs) to fix carbon efficiently at modern levels of CO 2 (refs). How diatoms may respond over the short and long term to rising atmospheric CO 2 remains an open question. Here we use nitrate-limited chemostats to show that the model diatom Thalassiosira pseudonana rapidly responds to increasing CO 2 by differentially expressing gene clusters that regulate transcription and chromosome folding, and subsequently reduces transcription of photosynthesis and respiration gene clusters under steady-state elevated CO 2. These results suggest that exposure to elevated CO 2 first causes a shift in regulation, and then a metabolic rearrangement. Genes in one CO 2 -responsive cluster included CCM and photorespiration genes that share a putative cAMP-responsive cis-regulatory sequence, implying these genes are co-regulated in response to CO 2, with cAMP as an intermediate messenger. We verified cAMP-induced downregulation of CCM gene-CA3 in nutrient-replete diatom cultures by inhibiting the hydrolysis of cAMP. These results indicate an important role for cAMP in downregulating CCM and photorespiration genes under elevated CO 2 and provide insights into mechanisms of diatom acclimation in response to climate change
Response of marine bacterioplankton pH homeostasis gene expression to elevated CO2
7 páginas, 3 figurasHuman-induced ocean acidification impacts marine life. Marine
bacteria are major drivers of biogeochemical nutrient cycles
and energy fluxes1; hence, understanding their performance
under projected climate change scenarios is crucial for
assessing ecosystem functioning. Whereas genetic and physiological
responses of phytoplankton to ocean acidification
are being disentangled2–4, corresponding functional responses
of bacterioplankton to pH reduction from elevated CO2 are
essentially unknown. Here we show, from metatranscriptome
analyses of a phytoplankton bloom mesocosmexperiment, that
marine bacteria responded to lowered pH by enhancing the
expression of genes encoding proton pumps, such as respiration
complexes, proteorhodopsin and membrane transporters.
Moreover, taxonomic transcript analysis showed that distinct
bacterial groups expressed di erent pH homeostasis genes in
response to elevated CO2. These responses were substantial
for numerous pH homeostasis genes under low-chlorophyll
conditions (chlorophyll a<2.5 g l1); however, the changes in
gene expression under high-chlorophyll conditions (chlorophyll
a>20 g l1) were low. Given that proton expulsion through
pH homeostasis mechanisms is energetically costly, these
findings suggest that bacterioplankton adaptation to ocean
acidification could have long-term e ects on the economy of
ocean ecosystems.This research was financially supported by grants
from the Göran Gustafsson Foundation for Research in Natural Sciences and Medicine,
the Swedish Research Council VR, the Swedish Research Council FORMAS strong
research programme EcoChange, and the BONUS BLUEPRINT project, which has
received funding from BONUS, the joint Baltic Sea research and development
programme (Art 185), funded jointly from the European Union's Seventh Programme for
research, technological development and demonstration and from the Swedish Research
Council FORMAS to J.Pinhassi. The research was also financially supported by the
SpanishMinistry of Science and Innovation project DOREMI (CTM2012-34294) to C.M.
and J.M.Gasol, and by project CTM2013-48292-C3-3-R to J.M.Gasol.Peer reviewe