Laboratory-cultured Synechococcus (WH8102 and WH5701) growth (vivo fluorescence) on dissolved organic phosphorus (DOP) from experiments between 2018-2023
Laboratory-cultured Synechococcus (WH8102 and WH5701) growth (vivo fluorescence) on dissolved organic phosphorus (DOP) from experiments between 2018-2023
Date
2024-07-15
Authors
Duhamel, Solange
Diaz, Julia
Djaoudi, Kahina
Waggoner, Emily
Diaz, Julia
Djaoudi, Kahina
Waggoner, Emily
Linked Authors
Alternative Title
Citable URI
Date Created
2024-06-03
Location
DOI
10.26008/1912/bco-dmo.929212.1
Related Materials
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Keywords
dissolved organic phosphorus
synechococcus
polyphosphate
phosphoester
phosphorus
phosphonates
synechococcus
polyphosphate
phosphoester
phosphorus
phosphonates
Abstract
Laboratory culture Synechococcus (WH8102 and WH5701) growth on dissolved organic phosphorus (DOP). These data were collected as part of a study of "Dissolved organic Phosphorus bond-class utilization by Synechococcus" (Waggoner et al. 2024).
Study Abstract:
Dissolved organic phosphorus (DOP) contains compounds with phosphoester (P-O-C), phosphoanhydride (P-O-P), and phosphorus-carbon (P-C) bonds. Despite DOP’s importance as a nutritional source for marine microorganisms, the bioavailability of each bond-class to the widespread cyanobacterium Synechococcus remains largely unknown. This study evaluates bond-class specific DOP utilization by cultures of an open ocean and a coastal ocean Synechococcus strain. Both strains exhibited comparable growth rates when provided phosphate, short-chain and long-chain polyphosphate (P-O-P), adenosine 5’-triphosphate (P-O-C and P-O-P), and glucose-6-phosphate (P-O-C) as the phosphorus source. However, growth rates on phosphomonoester adenosine 5’-monophosphate (P-O-C) and phosphodiester bis(4-methylumbelliferyl) phosphate (C-O-P-O-C) varied between strains, and neither strain grew on selected phosphonates. Consistent with the growth measurements, both strains preferentially hydrolyzed 3-polyphosphate, followed by adenosine 5’-triphosphate, and then adenosine 5’-monophosphate. The strains’ exoproteome contained phosphorus hydrolases, which combined with enhanced cell-free hydrolysis of 3-polyphosphate and adenosine 5’-triphosphate under phosphate deficiency, suggests active mineralization of short-chain polyphosphate by Synechococcus’ exoproteins. Synechococcus alkaline phosphatases presented broad substrate specificities, including activity towards short-chain polyphosphate, with varying affinities between the two strains. Collectively, these findings underscore the potentially significant role of compounds with phosphoanhydride bonds in Synechococcus phosphorus nutrition, thereby expanding our understanding of microbially-mediated DOP cycling in marine ecosystems.
For a complete list of measurements, refer to the full dataset description in the supplemental file 'Dataset_description.pdf'. The most current version of this dataset is available at: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/929212
Description
Dataset: Synechococcus Growth on DOP Experiments - IVF
Embargo Date
Citation
Duhamel, S., Diaz, J., Djaoudi, K., & Waggoner, E. (2024). Laboratory-cultured Synechococcus (WH8102 and WH5701) growth (vivo fluorescence) on dissolved organic phosphorus (DOP) from experiments between 2018-2023 (Version 1) [Data set]. Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO). https://doi.org/10.26008/1912/BCO-DMO.929212.1