Abstract

Phaeodactylum tricomutum Bohlin (strain TFX-1) was grown under light-, nitrogen-, and phosphorus-limited conditions in continuous or semicontinuous cultures under a 12L-12D light regime. The C, N, and P contents were determined at each steady state, as was the partitioning of cellular organic carbon into protein, lipids, polysaccharides, and metabolic intermediates. All determinations were made at the beginning and again at the end of the light period. The rates of nutrient assimilation and of synthesis of biochemical constituents during the light and dark periods were calculated from the above data, and the periodicities of these processes characterized. The elemental composition of the cells was different under each limitation. In particular, phosphorus limitation severely restricted the ability of the cell to store nitrogen in non-protein forms. Biochemical composition and the diel periodicity of cellular processes also differed between limitations. Nutrient uptake was most strongly periodic under light limitation. Protein synthesis showed increased periodicity under nitrogen limitation, relative to the other limitations, while the periodicity of lipid synthesis was reduced under phosphate limitation. Polysaccharide was synthesized at high rates during the light period and consumed in the dark under all limitations.

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