Abstract

Marine diatoms, the most successful photoautotrophs in the ocean, efficiently sequester a significant part of atmospheric CO2 to the ocean interior through their participation in the biological carbon pump. However, it is poorly understood how marine diatoms fix such a considerable amount of CO2, which is vital information toward modeling their response to future CO2 levels. The Tara Oceans expeditions generated molecular data coupled with in situ biogeochemical measurements across the main ocean regions, and thus provides a framework to compare diatom genetic and transcriptional flexibility under natural CO2 variability. The current study investigates the interlink between the environmental variability of CO2 and other physicochemical parameters with the gene and transcript copy numbers of five key enzymes of diatom CO2 concentration mechanisms (CCMs): Rubisco activase and carbonic anhydrase (CA) as part of the physical pathway, together with phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, and malic enzyme as part of the potential C4 biochemical pathway. Toward this aim, we mined >200 metagenomes and >220 metatranscriptomes generated from samples of the surface layer of 66 globally distributed sampling sites and corresponding to the four main size fractions in which diatoms can be found: 0.8–5 μm, 5–20 μm, 20–180 μm, and 180–2,000 μm. Our analyses revealed that the transcripts for the enzymes of the putative C4 biochemical CCM did not in general display co-occurring profiles. The transcripts for CAs were the most abundant, with an order of magnitude higher values than the other enzymes, thus implying the importance of physical CCMs in diatom natural communities. Among the different classes of this enzyme, the most prevalent was the recently characterized iota class. Consequently, very little information is available from natural diatom assemblages about the distribution of this class. Biogeographic distributions for all the enzymes show different abundance hotspots according to the size fraction, pointing to the influence of cell size and aggregation in CCMs. Environmental correlations showed a complex pattern of responses to CO2 levels, total phytoplankton biomass, temperature, and nutrient concentrations. In conclusion, we propose that biophysical CCMs are prevalent in natural diatom communities.

Highlights

  • Diatoms are among the most successful and diversified eukaryotic photoautotrophs in the present day ocean (Armbrust, 2009; Malviya et al, 2016; Pierella Karlusich et al, 2020)

  • To investigate the diversity and environmental distribution of concentration mechanisms (CCMs) in natural populations of diatoms, we searched for sequences coding for CbbX, carbonic anhydrase (CA), PEPC, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK), and malic enzyme (ME) in the eukaryotic unigene catalog of Tara Oceans (Carradec et al, 2018) using profile hidden Markov models and sequence similarity networks

  • We found differences between size fractions, probably related with differential needs for maintaining CCMs according to cell sizes and/or aggregation forms: while CbbX gene and transcript abundance increases when moving toward the bigger size fractions, the opposite is observed for the other enzymes (Figure 3A and Supplementary Figure 3)

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Summary

Introduction

Diatoms are among the most successful and diversified eukaryotic photoautotrophs in the present day ocean (Armbrust, 2009; Malviya et al, 2016; Pierella Karlusich et al, 2020). Their fast growth rates in high-nutrient environments and comparatively large sizes make them important contributors to organic carbon production. Diatoms are main contributors to marine food chains and in sequestering atmospheric CO2 to the ocean interior through gravitational sinking of particles (biological carbon pump) (Figure 1A), and have high biogeochemical significance (Tréguer et al, 2018; Boyd et al, 2019). In order to do this, a clear understanding of diatom carbon metabolism is required

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