4.7 Article

Transcriptomic analysis reveals distinct mechanisms of adaptation of a polar picophytoplankter under ocean acidification conditions

Journal

MARINE ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 182, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marenvres.2022.105782

Keywords

Ocean acidification; Transcriptomics; Picochlorophyte

Funding

  1. Ministry of Higher Education, Malaysia [IOES-2014H]
  2. NTUT-UM Joint Research Program [NTUT-UM-110-01]
  3. University of Malaya (UM) [RP026B-18SUS]
  4. Ministry of Higher Education Malaysia-University of Malaya Top-University Grant [TU001C-2018]

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Human emissions of carbon dioxide are causing irreversible changes in oceans and impacting marine phytoplankton. This study found that picochlorophytes, a group of small green algae, can thrive and adapt to high CO2 levels, involving gene regulation and redistribution of metabolites.
Human emissions of carbon dioxide are causing irreversible changes in our oceans and impacting marine phytoplankton, including a group of small green algae known as picochlorophytes. Picochlorophytes grown in natural phytoplankton communities under future predicted levels of carbon dioxide have been demonstrated to thrive, along with redistribution of the cellular metabolome that enhances growth rate and photosynthesis. Here, using next-generation sequencing technology, we measured levels of transcripts in a picochlorophyte Chlorella, isolated from the sub-Antarctic and acclimated under high and current ambient CO2 levels, to better understand the molecular mechanisms involved with its ability to acclimate to elevated CO2. Compared to other phyto-plankton taxa that induce broad transcriptomic responses involving multiple parts of their cellular metabolism, the changes observed in Chlorella focused on activating gene regulation involved in different sets of pathways such as light harvesting complex binding proteins, amino acid synthesis and RNA modification, while carbon metabolism was largely unaffected. Triggering a specific set of genes could be a unique strategy of small green phytoplankton under high CO2 in polar oceans.

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