Abstract

Primary production by Prochlorococcus, the smallest known free-living photosynthetic organism in terms of both physical and genomic size, is thought to have a significant role in global carbon cycles. Despite its small size and low growth rate, Prochlorococcus numerically dominates the phytoplankton community in the nutrient-poor oligotrophic ocean, the largest biome of the Earth's surface. How nutrient limitation, and nitrogen limitation in particular, affects the fate and flux of carbon fixed by Prochlorococcus is currently unknown. To address this gap in knowledge, we compared the bulk rates of photosynthesis and organic carbon release, the concentrations of intracellular metabolites, and the rates of assimilated carbon into the metabolite pools between replete and N-limited chemostat cultures. Total photosynthesis of our N-limited cultures was less than half of those observed in replete cultures, and nitrogen limitation also appears to cause a larger proportion of total fixed carbon to be released to the environment. Our data suggest this occurs in concert with the maintenance of large slow-moving pools of metabolites, including nitrogen-rich molecules such as glutamate. Additionally, we report field data suggesting metabolisms of Prochlorococcus are comparable to results we observe in our laboratory studies. Accounting for these observations, potential metabolic mechanisms utilized by Prochlorococcus are discussed as we build upon our understanding of nutrient-limited photosynthesis and carbon metabolism. IMPORTANCE Photosynthetic microbes are the predominant sources of organic carbon in the sunlit regions of the ocean. During photosynthesis, nitrogen and carbon metabolism are coordinated to synthesize nitrogen-containing organics such as amino acids and nucleic acids. In large regions of the ocean, nitrogen is thought to limit the growth of phytoplankton. The impact of nitrogen limitation on the synthesis of organic carbon is not well understood, especially for the most abundant photosynthetic organism in the nitrogen-limited regions of the ocean, Prochlorococcus. This study compares the carbon metabolism of nitrogen-replete and nitrogen-limited Prochlorococcus spp. to determine how nitrogen availability influences inorganic carbon assimilation into an organic form. Metabolomics and physiological data revealed that cells under nitrogen limitation have reduced metabolic flux and total carbon fixation rates while maintaining elevated metabolite pool levels and releasing a larger proportion of total fixed carbon to the environment.

Highlights

  • Primary production by Prochlorococcus, the smallest known free-living photosynthetic organism in terms of both physical and genomic size, is thought to have a significant role in global carbon cycles

  • Prochlorococcus VOL29 was grown in both ammonia-limited continuous culture and nutrient-replete batch culture to compare carbon metabolism under nitrogenlimited and -replete conditions

  • In N-replete cultures, the rate of photosynthetic carbon fixation was higher at noon, dropping over 50% by 16:00 (Fig. 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

Primary production by Prochlorococcus, the smallest known free-living photosynthetic organism in terms of both physical and genomic size, is thought to have a significant role in global carbon cycles. Total photosynthesis of our N-limited cultures was less than half of those observed in replete cultures, and nitrogen limitation appears to cause a larger proportion of total fixed carbon to be released to the environment Our data suggest this occurs in concert with the maintenance of large slow-moving pools of metabolites, including nitrogen-rich molecules such as glutamate. The signal upregulates nitrogen assimilation by modulating the activity of three cyanobacterial regulators, namely, NtcA, PipX, and PII [7,8,9,10] This occurs as nitrogen limitation restricts the NH4ϩ assimilatory reactions catalyzed by glutamine synthetase (GS) and glutamine-oxoglutarate amidotransferase (GOGAT), leading to increased intracellular concentrations of 2OG. Arginine and aspartate formed under N replete conditions, along with their roles in protein biosynthesis, can serve as precursors for nitrogen storage metabolites (e.g., polyamines)

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