4.6 Article

Transitional traits determine the acclimation characteristics of the coccolithophore Chrysotila dentata to ocean warming and acidification

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 6, Pages 1099-1117

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1462-2920.16343

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Ocean warming and acidification have interactive effects on coccolithophore physiology and result in significant biogeochemical changes. In this study, we investigated the long-term effects of different transitional periods on the physiology of the coccolithophore Chrysotila dentata under present and projected ocean conditions. Our results showed that physiological responses of HTHC cells decreased with long-exposure, but the overall physiology of HTHC cells continued to improve with each generation. This suggests that coccolithophore resilience increases over generations under ocean warming and acidifying conditions.
Ocean warming and acidification interactively affect the coccolithophore physiology and drives major biogeochemical changes. While numerous studies investigated coccolithophore under short-term conditions, knowledge on how different transitional periods over long-exposure could influence the element, macromolecular and metabolic changes for its acclimation are largely unknown. We cultured the coccolithophore Chrysotila dentata, (culture generations of 1st, 10th, and 20th) under present (low-temperature low-carbon-dioxide [LTLC]) and projected (high-temperature high-carbon-dioxide [HTHC]) ocean conditions. We examined elemental and macromolecular component changes and sequenced a transcriptome. We found that with long-exposure, most physiological responses in HTHC cells decreased when compared with those in LTLC, however, HTHC cell physiology showed constant elevation between each generation. Specifically, compared to 1st generation, the 20th generation HTHC cells showed increases in quota carbon (Qc:29%), nitrogen (Q(N):101%), and subsequent changes in C:N-ratio (68%). We observed higher lipid accumulation than carbohydrates within HTHC cells under long-exposure, suggesting that lipids were used as an alternative energy source for cellular acclimation. Protein biosynthesis pathways increased their efficiency during long-term HTHC condition, indicating that cells produced more proteins than required to initiate acclimation. Our findings suggest that the coccolithophore resilience increased between the 1st-10th generation to initiate the acclimation process under ocean warming and acidifying conditions.

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