4.8 Article

Active reconfiguration of cytoplasmic lipid droplets governs migration of nutrient-limited phytoplankton

Journal

SCIENCE ADVANCES
Volume 8, Issue 44, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abn6005

Keywords

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Funding

  1. ATTRACT Investigator Grant [A17/MS/11572821/MBRACE]
  2. PRIDE Doctoral Training Unit [PRIDE19/14063202/ACTIVE]
  3. AFR Grant of the Luxembourg National Research Fund [13563560]
  4. Human Frontier Science Program Cross Disciplinary Fellowship [LT000368/2019-C]
  5. Swiss National Science Foundation Early Postdoc Mobility [P2GEP3_184481]
  6. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [P2GEP3_184481] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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In this study, the researchers discovered that bloom-forming raphidophytes use cytoplasmic lipid droplets (LDs) to regulate their vertical migration and restore swimming traits through active reconfiguration of LD size and coordinates. This finding expands our understanding of microbial strategies in nutrient-limited oceans.
Nutrient availability, along with light and temperature, drives marine primary production. The ability to migrate vertically, a critical trait of motile phytoplankton, allows species to optimize nutrient uptake, storage, and growth. However, this traditional view discounts the possibility that migration in nutrient-limited waters may be actively modulated by the emergence of energy-storing organelles. Here, we report that bloom-forming raphidophytes harness energy-storing cytoplasmic lipid droplets (LDs) to biomechanically regulate vertical migration in nutrient-limited settings. LDs grow and translocate directionally within the cytoplasm, steering strain-specific shifts in the speed, trajectory, and stability of swimming cells. Nutrient reincorporation restores their swimming traits, mediated by an active reconfiguration of LD size and coordinates. A mathematical model of cell mechanics establishes the mechanistic coupling between intracellular changes and emergent migratory behavior. Amenable to the associated photophysiology, LD-governed behavioral shift highlights an exquisite microbial strategy toward niche expansion and resource optimization in nutrient-limited oceans.

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