Flexible B(12) ecophysiology of Phaeocystis antarctica due to a fusion B(12)-independent methionine synthase with widespread homologues
Flexible B(12) ecophysiology of Phaeocystis antarctica due to a fusion B(12)-independent methionine synthase with widespread homologues
Date
2024-02-02
Authors
Rao, Deepa
Fussy, Zoltan
Brisbin, Margaret M.
McIlvin, Matthew R.
Moran, Dawn M.
Allen, Andrew E.
Follows, Michael J.
Saito, Mak A.
Fussy, Zoltan
Brisbin, Margaret M.
McIlvin, Matthew R.
Moran, Dawn M.
Allen, Andrew E.
Follows, Michael J.
Saito, Mak A.
Linked Authors
Alternative Title
Citable URI
As Published
Date Created
Location
DOI
10.1073/pnas.2204075121
Related Materials
Replaces
Replaced By
Keywords
Phaeocystis antarctica
Iron
Proteogenomics
Methionine synthase
B12
Iron
Proteogenomics
Methionine synthase
B12
Abstract
Coastal Antarctic marine ecosystems are significant in carbon cycling because of their intense seasonal phytoplankton blooms. Southern Ocean algae are primarily limited by light and iron (Fe) and can be co-limited by cobalamin (vitamin B12). Micronutrient limitation controls productivity and shapes the composition of blooms which are typically dominated by either diatoms or the haptophyte Phaeocystis antarctica. However, the vitamin requirements and ecophysiology of the keystone species P. antarctica remain poorly characterized. Using cultures, physiological analysis, and comparative omics, we examined the response of P. antarctica to a matrix of Fe-B12 conditions. We show that P. antarctica is not auxotrophic for B12, as previously suggested, and identify mechanisms underlying its B12 response in cultures of predominantly solitary and colonial cells. A combination of proteomics and proteogenomics reveals a B12-independent methionine synthase fusion protein (MetE-fusion) that is expressed under vitamin limitation and interreplaced with the B12-dependent isoform under replete conditions. Database searches return homologues of the MetE-fusion protein in multiple Phaeocystis species and in a wide range of marine microbes, including other photosynthetic eukaryotes with polymorphic life cycles as well as bacterioplankton. Furthermore, we find MetE-fusion homologues expressed in metaproteomic and metatranscriptomic field samples in polar and more geographically widespread regions. As climate change impacts micronutrient availability in the coastal Southern Ocean, our finding that P. antarctica has a flexible B12 metabolism has implications for its relative fitness compared to B12-auxotrophic diatoms and for the detection of B12-stress in a more diverse set of marine microbes.
Description
© The Author(s), 2024. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Rao, D., Füssy, Z., Brisbin, M. M., McIlvin, M. R., Moran, D. M., Allen, A. E., Follows, M. J., & Saito, M. A. (2024). Flexible B(12) ecophysiology of Phaeocystis antarctica due to a fusion B(12)-independent methionine synthase with widespread homologues. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 121(6), e2204075121, https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2204075121.
Embargo Date
Citation
Rao, D., Füssy, Z., Brisbin, M. M., McIlvin, M. R., Moran, D. M., Allen, A. E., Follows, M. J., & Saito, M. A. (2024). Flexible B(12) ecophysiology of Phaeocystis antarctica due to a fusion B(12)-independent methionine synthase with widespread homologues. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 121(6), e2204075121.