4.8 Article

Trophic flexibility of marine diplonemids-switching from osmotrophy to bacterivory

Journal

ISME JOURNAL
Volume 16, Issue 5, Pages 1409-1419

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41396-022-01192-0

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Czech Science Foundation [18-23787S]
  2. ERD project ERDF/ESF project [16_025/0007417]
  3. ERC [CZ LL1601]
  4. ERD [16_019/0000759]
  5. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation

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Diplonemids are a common group of heterotrophic planktonic microeukaryotes in the world ocean, and they play an important role in marine ecosystems. Research has shown that they can switch dietary patterns and distinguish between food quality and edibility. They possess an opportunistic lifestyle that gives them an advantage in food-limited marine environments.
Diplonemids are one of the most abundant groups of heterotrophic planktonic microeukaryotes in the world ocean and, thus, are likely to play an essential role in marine ecosystems. So far, only few species have been introduced into a culture, allowing basic studies of diplonemid genetics, morphology, ultrastructure, metabolism, as well as endosymbionts. However, it remains unclear whether these heterotrophic flagellates are parasitic or free-living and what are their predominant dietary patterns and preferred food items. Here we show that cultured diplonemids, maintained in an organic-rich medium as osmotrophs, can gradually switch to bacterivory as a sole food resource, supporting positive growth of their population, even when fed with a low biovolume of bacteria. We further observed remarkable differences in species-specific feeding patterns, size-selective grazing preferences, and distinct feeding strategies. Diplonemids can discriminate between low-quality food items and inedible particles, such as latex beads, even after their ingestion, by discharging them in the form of large waste vacuoles. We also detected digestion-related endogenous autofluorescence emitted by lysosomes and the activity of a melanin-like material. We present the first evidence that these omnipresent protists possess an opportunistic lifestyle that provides a considerable advantage in the generally food resource-limited marine environments.

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