4.6 Article

Electron & Biomass Dynamics of Cyanothece Under Interacting Nitrogen & Carbon Limitations

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2021.617802

Keywords

Cyanothece; Crocosphaera subtropica; photosynthesis; light limitation; carbon limitation; nitrogen fixation

Categories

Funding

  1. LEFE-INSU funding program
  2. Institute of Microbiology of the CAS [CZ.02.2.69/0.0/0.0/16_027/0007990]
  3. National Research, Development and Innovation Office of Hungary, NKFIH [K 128950]
  4. Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic [CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16-026/0008413]
  5. Czech Science Foundation (GA CR) [19-00973S]
  6. ILES (Illuminating Lake Ecosystem) through Leibniz Competition [SAW-2015-IGB-1]
  7. FAPESP [2017/12450-1]
  8. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) [304122/2017-3]
  9. Czech science foundation [GACR 2017627S]

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Marine diazotrophs play key roles in biogeochemical fluxes, but their growth efficiency can be hindered by carbon and nitrogen limitations. The unicellular diazotrophic cyanobacterium Cyanothece faces a double burden of ATP-demanding nitrogen acquisition and metabolic losses when grown in obligate diazotrophy.
Marine diazotrophs are a diverse group with key roles in biogeochemical fluxes linked to primary productivity. The unicellular, diazotrophic cyanobacterium Cyanothece is widely found in coastal, subtropical oceans. We analyze the consequences of diazotrophy on growth efficiency, compared to NO3--supported growth in Cyanothece, to understand how cells cope with N-2-fixation when they also have to face carbon limitation, which may transiently affect populations in coastal environments or during blooms of phytoplankton communities. When grown in obligate diazotrophy, cells face the double burden of a more ATP-demanding N-acquisition mode and additional metabolic losses imposed by the transient storage of reducing potential as carbohydrate, compared to a hypothetical N-2 assimilation directly driven by photosynthetic electron transport. Further, this energetic burden imposed by N-2-fixation could not be alleviated, despite the high irradiance level within the cultures, because photosynthesis was limited by the availability of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), and possibly by a constrained capacity for carbon storage. DIC limitation exacerbates the costs on growth imposed by nitrogen fixation. Therefore, the competitive efficiency of diazotrophs could be hindered in areas with insufficient renewal of dissolved gases and/or with intense phytoplankton biomass that both decrease available light energy and draw the DIC level down.

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