Abstract

The cyanobacterium Trichodesmium is an important contributor of new nitrogen (N) to the surface ocean, but its strategies for protecting the nitrogenase enzyme from inhibition by oxygen (O2) remain poorly understood. We present a dynamic physiological model to evaluate hypothesized conditions that would allow Trichodesmium to carry out its two conflicting metabolic processes of N2 fixation and photosynthesis. First, the model indicates that managing cellular O2 to permit N2 fixation requires high rates of respiratory O2 consumption. The energetic cost amounts to ∼80% of daily C fixation, comparable to the observed diminution of the growth rate of Trichodesmium relative to other phytoplankton. Second, by forming a trichome of connected cells, Trichodesmium can segregate N2 fixation from photosynthesis. The transfer of stored C to N-fixing cells fuels the respiratory O2 consumption that protects nitrogenase, while the reciprocal transfer of newly fixed N to C-fixing cells supports cellular growth. Third, despite Trichodesmium lacking the structural barrier found in heterocystous species, the model predicts low diffusivity of cell membranes, a function that may be explained by the presence of Gram-negative membrane, production of extracellular polysaccharide substances (EPS), and "buffer cells" that intervene between N2-fixing and photosynthetic cells. Our results suggest that all three factors-respiratory protection, trichome formation, and diffusion barriers-represent essential strategies that, despite their energetic costs, facilitate the growth of Trichodesmium in the oligotrophic aerobic ocean and permit it to be a major source of new reactive nitrogen.IMPORTANCE Trichodesmium is a major nitrogen-fixing cyanobacterium and exerts a significant influence on the oceanic nitrogen cycle. It is also a widely used model organism in laboratory studies. Since the nitrogen-fixing enzyme nitrogenase is extremely sensitive to oxygen, how these surface-dwelling plankton manage the two conflicting processes of nitrogen fixation and photosynthesis has been a long-standing question. In this study, we developed a simple model of metabolic fluxes of Trichodesmium capturing observed daily cycles of photosynthesis, nitrogen fixation, and boundary layer oxygen concentrations. The model suggests that forming a chain of cells for spatially segregating nitrogen fixation and photosynthesis is essential but not sufficient. It also requires a barrier against oxygen diffusion and high rates of oxygen scavenging by respiration. Finally, the model indicates an extremely short life span of oxygen-enabling cells to instantly create a low-oxygen environment upon deactivation of photosynthesis.

Highlights

  • The cyanobacterium Trichodesmium is an important contributor of new nitrogen (N) to the surface ocean, but its strategies for protecting the nitrogenase enzyme from inhibition by oxygen (O2) remain poorly understood

  • The nitrogenase enzyme contains metal cofactors that are irreversibly disabled in the presence of even trace levels of oxygen (O2) [5, 6]

  • We are interested in the rates of N2 fixation (FNfix; here, “F” indicates fluxes), which we assume depend on O2 and the standing stocks of stored N and C, as represented in equation 1:

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Summary

Introduction

The cyanobacterium Trichodesmium is an important contributor of new nitrogen (N) to the surface ocean, but its strategies for protecting the nitrogenase enzyme from inhibition by oxygen (O2) remain poorly understood. Our results suggest that all three factors—respiratory protection, trichome formation, and diffusion barriers—represent essential strategies that, despite their energetic costs, facilitate the growth of Trichodesmium in the oligotrophic aerobic ocean and permit it to be a major source of new reactive nitrogen. The model suggests that forming a chain of cells for spatially segregating nitrogen fixation and photosynthesis is essential but not sufficient It requires a barrier against oxygen diffusion and high rates of oxygen scavenging by respiration. A major contributor to N2 fixation is the photosynthetic diazotroph Trichodesmium, mainly observed in oligotrophic tropical and subtropical oceans [20,21,22,23] This species forms trichomes, they do not contain heterocysts to protect from O2 invasion [24, 25]. Despite over a century of research on Trichodesmium, there is no unequivocal explanation for how N2 fixation occurs when the cells are photosynthetically active and O2 should be at its highest levels

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