Abstract

In aquatic environments, phytoplankton represent a major source of reactive oxygen species (ROS) such as superoxide and hydrogen peroxide. Many phytoplankton taxa also produce extracellular ROS under optimal growth conditions in culture. However, the physiological purpose of extracellular ROS production by phytoplankton and its wider significance to ecosystem-scale trophic interactions and biogeochemistry remain unclear. Here, we review the rates, taxonomic diversity, subcellular mechanisms and functions of extracellular superoxide and hydrogen peroxide production by phytoplankton with a view towards future research directions. Model eukaryotic phytoplankton and cyanobacteria produce extracellular superoxide and hydrogen peroxide at cell-normalized rates that span several orders of magnitude, both within and between taxa. The potential ecophysiological roles of extracellular ROS production are versatile and appear to be shared among diverse phytoplankton species, including ichthyotoxicity, allelopathy, growth promotion, and iron acquisition. Whereas extracellular hydrogen peroxide likely arises from a combination of intracellular and cell surface production mechanisms, extracellular superoxide is predominantly generated by specialized systems for transplasma membrane electron transport. Future insights into the molecular-level basis of extracellular ROS production, combined with existing high-sensitivity geochemical techniques for the direct quantification of ROS dynamics, will help unveil the ecophysiological and biogeochemical significance of phytoplankton-derived ROS in natural aquatic systems.

Highlights

  • Reactive oxygen species (ROS) include intermediates in the four-electron reduction of oxygen to water: superoxide, hydrogen peroxide and hydroxyl radical

  • Extracellular ROS production by the harmful bloomforming phytoplankton species Chattonella marina has been implicated in its toxicity (Kim and Oda, 2010), growth (Oda et al, 1995) and iron acquisition (Garg et al, 2007; Liu et al, 2007), while many other phytoplankton generate extracellular ROS under non-stressful conditions for reasons that remain mysterious

  • Extracellular ROS production has been quantified on a per-cell basis in at least 21 eukaryotic phytoplankton species, and the majority of these are capable of forming harmful algal blooms (HABs) (Yang et al, 1995; Kim et al, 1999a; Marshall et al, 2005a; Mooney et al, 2011; Cho et al, 2017)

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Summary

Introduction

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) include intermediates in the four-electron reduction of oxygen to water: superoxide, hydrogen peroxide and hydroxyl radical. We review the rates, mechanisms and ecophysiological roles of extracellular ROS production by phytoplankton, with a focus on marine taxa and the ROS superoxide and hydrogen peroxide.

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