Abstract

Diatoms are major primary producers in polar environments where they can actively grow under extremely variable conditions. Integrative modeling using a genome-scale model (GSM) is a powerful approach to decipher the complex interactions between components of diatom metabolism and can provide insights into metabolic mechanisms underlying their evolutionary success in polar ecosystems. We developed the first GSM for a polar diatom, Fragilariopsis cylindrus, which enabled us to study its metabolic robustness using sensitivity analysis. We find that the predicted growth rate was robust to changes in all model parameters (i.e., cell biochemical composition) except the carbon uptake rate. Constraints on total cellular carbon buffer the effect of changes in the input parameters on reaction fluxes and growth rate. We also show that single reaction deletion of 20% to 32% of active (nonzero flux) reactions and single gene deletion of 44% to 55% of genes associated with active reactions affected the growth rate, as well as the production fluxes of total protein, lipid, carbohydrate, DNA, RNA, and pigments by less than 1%, which was due to the activation of compensatory reactions (e.g., analogous enzymes and alternative pathways) with more highly connected metabolites involved in the reactions that were robust to deletion. Interestingly, including highly divergent alleles unique for F. cylindrus increased its metabolic robustness to cellular perturbations even more. Overall, our results underscore the high robustness of metabolism in F. cylindrus, a feature that likely helps to maintain cell homeostasis under polar conditions.

Highlights

  • Diatoms often dominate in the water column and sea ice of polar habitats, which exhibit large seasonal changes in temperature and light [1,2]

  • We developed the first genome-scale model of the polar diatom Fragilariopsis cylindrus using available physiological and genomic data

  • Our methodology is transferable to genome-scale model (GSM) of other species, with some modifications in the code, and will help to improve the analysis of cellular metabolism in future studies using systems biology approaches

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Summary

Introduction

Diatoms often dominate in the water column and sea ice of polar habitats, which exhibit large seasonal changes in temperature and light [1,2]. They can grow at temperatures near or below the freezing point, as well as under very low irradiance in and under ice, and under high irradiance in summer [3,4]. Polar diatoms generally grow at lower rates than their temperate counterparts, and they exhibit low light saturation parameters for photosynthesis [11]. Our knowledge on the peculiar physiology and metabolism of polar diatoms has made significant progress [3,4], we cannot fully explain their ecological success in cold environments

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