4.6 Review Book Chapter

Production of Extracellular Reactive Oxygen Species by Marine Biota

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DOI: 10.1146/annurev-marine-041320-102550

关键词

superoxide; hydrogen peroxide; microbes; coral; seaweed; NADPH oxidase; NOX

资金

  1. US National Science Foundation [OCE-1355720]
  2. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, a Sloan Research Fellowship
  3. Simons Early Career Investigator in Marine Microbial Ecology and Evolution Award

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Reactive oxygen species (ROS) production plays essential roles in signaling, growth, biological interactions, and physiochemical defense systems in various organisms. Additionally, biological ROS production significantly influences natural fluxes of ROS in the ocean, affecting the fate of carbon, metals, oxygen, and climate-relevant gases.
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are produced ubiquitously across the tree of life. Far from being synonymous with toxicity and harm, biological ROS production is increasingly recognized for its essential functions in signaling, growth, biological interactions, and physiochemical defense systems in a diversity of organisms, spanning microbes to mammals. Part of this shift in thinking can be attributed to the wide phylogenetic distribution of specialized mechanisms for ROS production, such as NADPH oxidases, which decouple intracellular and extracellular ROS pools by directly catalyzing the reduction of oxygen in the surrounding aqueous environment. Furthermore, biological ROS production contributes substantially to natural fluxes of ROS in the ocean, thereby influencing the fate of carbon, metals, oxygen, and climate-relevant gases. Here, we review the taxonomic diversity, mechanisms, and roles of extracellular ROS production in marine bacteria, phytoplankton, seaweeds, and corals, highlighting the ecological and biogeochemical influences of this fundamental and remarkably widespread process.

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