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1.
Cell division in most eukaryotic algae grown on alternating periods of light and dark (LD) is synchronized or phased so that cell division occurs only during a restricted portion of the LD cycle. However, the phase angle of the cell division gate, the time of division relative to the beginning of the light period, is known to be affected by growth conditions such as nutrient status and temperature. In this study, it is shown that the phase angle of cell division in a diatom, Cylindrotheca fusiformis Reimann and Lewin, is affected by the N-limited growth rate; cell division occurred later in the dark period (12:12 h LD cycle) when the growth rate was infradian (D = 0.42 d?1) than when it was ultradian (D = 1.0 d?1). Nitrogen-pulses did not affect the phase angle of the division gate, but could shift the time of peak cell division activity within the division gate. The effects, if any, of N-pulses were dependent upon the growth rate and the time of day that the pulses were administered. These responses indicate that the timing of cell division in this diatom is not determined solely by the zeitgeber from the LD cycle, but rather that a LD cycle control mechanism and a N-mediated control mechanism are both involved and are somewhat interdependent. In addition, an increase in protein was observed immediately after administering a N-pulse to C. fusiformis in the ultradian growth mode indicating that the accumulation of protein can be uncoupled from the cell division cycle.  相似文献   

2.
Species of the widespread marine prokaryote Prochlorococcus exhibited ultradian growth (faster than 1 division per day) both in situ and in culture, even though cell division is strictly phased to the light-dark cycle. Under optimal conditions a second DNA replication and cell division closely followed, but did not overlap with, the first division. The timing of cell cycle events was not affected by light intensity or duration, suggesting control by a light-triggered timer or circadian clock rather than by completion of a light-dependent assimilation phase. This mode of ultradian growth has not been observed previously and poses new questions about the regulation of cellular rhythms in prokaryotes. In addition, it implies that conclusions regarding the lack of nutrient limitation of Prochlorococcus in the open ocean, which were based on the appearance that cells were growing at their maximal rate, need to be reconsidered.  相似文献   

3.
Rhythms of labeling and mitotic indices were studied in the hindlimb epidermis of the anuran tadpole Rana pipiens under different light/dark (LD) cycles and daylengths in order to examine the role of the various parameters of the lighting regimen in setting the periods of the rhythms and the timing of the cell proliferation peaks. Altering the time of, or inverting, the 12 h light period on a 24 h day resulted in phase shifting of basically bimodal circadian rhythms with peaks in the light and dark. Thus the cell proliferation rhythms were entrained to the LD cycle. These rhythms also entrained to noncircadian schedules since they lengthened on a 15L : 15D cycle and shortened on a 9L : 9D cycle, although the bimodal characteristic of a peak in the light and a peak in the dark remained. Studies of 18L: 6D and 6L : 18D cycles in which either the time of onset of light or dark was changed relative to the 12L: 12D control indicated that the onset of dark may regulate the timing of the labeling index peaks while the onset of light may determine the time of occurrence of mitotic index peaks. Control of the timing of labeling and mitotic index peaks by different parameters of the LD cycle suggests a mechanism for cell cycle regulation by the environmental lighting schedule. Analysis of the rhythms on all the cycles studied suggested that labeling index rhythms equal the length of, or twice the length of, the dark period. Mitotic index rhythms equal the daylfength or a multiple of the length of the dark period.  相似文献   

4.
Ultradian Growth in Prochlorococcus spp.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Species of the widespread marine prokaryote Prochlorococcus exhibited ultradian growth (faster than 1 division per day) both in situ and in culture, even though cell division is strictly phased to the light-dark cycle. Under optimal conditions a second DNA replication and cell division closely followed, but did not overlap with, the first division. The timing of cell cycle events was not affected by light intensity or duration, suggesting control by a light-triggered timer or circadian clock rather than by completion of a light-dependent assimilation phase. This mode of ultradian growth has not been observed previously and poses new questions about the regulation of cellular rhythms in prokaryotes. In addition, it implies that conclusions regarding the lack of nutrient limitation of Prochlorococcus in the open ocean, which were based on the appearance that cells were growing at their maximal rate, need to be reconsidered.  相似文献   

5.
Cell cycle dependent photosynthesis in the marine dinoflagellate Amphidinium carteri was studied under constant illumination and light/dark (L/D) photocycles to distinguish intrinsic cell cycle control from environmental influences. Cells were grown in constant light and on a 14:10 L:D cycle at light intensities that would yield a population growth rate of 1 doubling per day. In the former case division was asynchronous, and cells were separated according to cell cycle stage using centrifugal elutriation. Cells grown on the L:D cycle were synchronized, with division restricted to the dark period. Cell cycle stage distributions were quantified by flow cytometry. Various cell age groups from the two populations were compared as to their photosynthetic response (photosynthetic rate versus irradiance) to determine whether or not the response was modulated primarily by cell cycle constraints or the periodic L/D cycle. Cell cycle variation in photosynthetic capacity was found to be determined solely by the L/D cycle; it was not present in cells grown in constant light.  相似文献   

6.
Cell division patterns in Thalassiosira weissflogii (Grun.), Hymenomonas carterae (Braarud and Fagerl), and Amphidinium carteri (Hulburl) grown in cyclostat culture were analyzed as functions of the periodic supply of light and the limiting nutrient (ammonium) and of combinations of these two factors. In all three species, division patterns were phased by light/dark cycles in N–limited as well as N–replte conditions, and also to ammonium pulses in N–limited growth in continuous light. Both the degree and timing of the cell cycle phasing varied among species. When both stimuli were present, the influence of the photocycle overrode the N–pulse stimulus in H. carterae and A. carteri. while in T. weissflogii, division was always phased by the timing of the N–pulse regardless of the phase angle between the photocycle and the pulse.  相似文献   

7.
The cell‐cycle progression of Enteromorpha compressa (L.) Nees (=Ulva compressa L.) was diurnally regulated by gating the G1/S transition. When the gate was open, the cells were able to divide if they had attained a sufficient size. However, the cells were not able to divide while the gate was closed, even if the cells had attained sufficient size. The diurnal rhythm of cell division immediately disappeared when the thalli were transferred to continuous light or darkness. When the thalli were transferred to a shifted photoperiod, the rhythm of cell division immediately and accurately synchronized with the shifted photoperiod. These data support a gating‐system model regulated by light:dark (L:D) cycles rather than an endogenous circadian clock. A dark phase of 6 h or longer was essential for gate closing, and a light phase of 14 h was required to renew cell division after a dark phase of >6 h.  相似文献   

8.
Diel patterns of photosynthesis and cell division were examined in Thalassiosira weissflogii Grun. (clone Actin) grown in nitrogen-limited cyclostat culture. Ammonia (NH4+) was either supplied continuously or as a daily pulse to cultures grown in constant light or in a light: dark cycle. When either nitrogen or light was supplied periodically, both cell division and photosynthetic capacity were periodic. When both nitrogen and light were supplied periodically, cell division was coupled to the N-pulse whereas periodicities of photosynthetic capacity were modified but remained coupled to the light-dark cycle. Diel oscillations in photosynthesis were i) largely independent of cellular pigmentation and ii) similar for light-limiting and saturating irradiances. Periodicity in photosynthetic capacity also persisted following transfer of non-dividing batch cultures to constant light. Results suggest that photosynthesis but not cell division was coupled to a circadian clock in T. weissflogii. A circadian rhythm of photosynthesis may optimize carbon assimilation in phytoplankton exposed to intermittent nutrient supply by ensuring that maximum photosynthetic capacity occurs during the day.  相似文献   

9.
Synchronized populations of the chlorococcal alga Scenedesmus armatus (Chod.) Chod. were grown under five irradiance levels. During the cell cycles of these populations, reproductive processes such as DNA replication, nuclear division, protoplast fission, and daughter cell release and growth processes such as RNA and protein accumulation were followed. The amount of RNA and proteins increased stepwise with a short time interval between individual steps during which the rate of RNA and protein accumulation decreased. At each of the steps, the amount of RNA and protein approximately doubled and the number of steps increased with irradiance. At the end of each of the growth steps, a commitment to trigger the sequence of reproductive events (DNA replication, nuclear division, protoplast fission) was attained. After attaining the commitment point, the cells were able to trigger and terminate the whole reproductive sequence without any further growth, that is, even in the dark when the external supply of energy was cut off. With increasing irradiance, the number of commitment points attained during one cell cycle increased from one to four. Consequently, one to four sequences of the reproductive steps were triggered, and each of them ended by doubling the reproductive structures, which resulted in the formation of 2, 4, 8, or 16 daughter cells. The length of the precommitment periods shortened with increasing irradiance as the result of an increasing rate in growth. The length of postcommitment periods showed light independence and remained constant at the range of irradiances at which the number of growth steps and, consequently, the number of sequences of reproductive events did not change. At higher irradiances, the number of sequences of reproductive events increased, which caused a prolongation of postcommitment periods. The length of the cell cycle varied as a result of this distinct effect of irradiance on pre- and postcommitment periods.  相似文献   

10.
11.
The effect of a 12:12-h light:dark (LD) cycle on the phasing of several cell parameters was explored in a variety of marine picophytoplanktonic strains. These included the photosynthetic prokaryotes Prochlorococcus (strains MED 4, PCC 9511, and SS 120) and Synechococcus (strains ALMO 03, ROS 04, WH 7803, and WH 8103) and five picoeukaryotes (Bathycoccus prasinos Eikrem et Throndsen, Bolidomonas pacifica Guillou et Chrétiennot-Dinet, Micromonas pusilla Manton et Parke, Pelagomonas calceolata Andersen et Saunders, and Pycnococcus provasolii Guillard et al.). Flow cytometric analysis was used to determine the relationship between cell light scatter, pigment fluorescence, DNA (when possible), and the LD cycle in these organisms. As expected, growth and division were tightly coupled to the LD cycle for all of these strains. For both Prochlorococcus and picoeukaryotes, chl and intracellular carbon increased throughout the light period as estimated by chl fluorescence and light scatter, respectively. In response to cell division, these parameters decreased regularly during the early part of the dark period, a decrease that either continued throughout the dark period or stopped for the second half of the dark period. For Synechococcus, the decrease of chl and scatter occurred earlier (in the middle of the light period), and for some strains these cellular parameters remained constant throughout the dark period. The timing of division was very similar for all picoeukaryotes and occurred just before the subjective dusk, whereas it was more variable between the different Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus strains. The burst of division for Prochlorococcus SS 120 and PCC 9511 was recorded at the subjective dusk, whereas the MED 4 strain divided later at night. Synechococcus ALMO 03, ROS 04, and WH 7803, which have a low phycourobilin to phycoerythrobilin (PUB:PEB) ratio, divided earlier, and their division was restricted to the light period. In contrast, the high PUB:PEB Synechococcus strain WH 8103 divided preferentially at night. There was a weak linear relationship between the FALSmax:FALSmin ratio and growth rate calculated from cell counts (r = 0.83, n = 11, P < 0.05). Because of the significance of picoplanktonic populations in marine systems, these results should help to interpret diel variations in oceanic optical properties in regions where picoplankton dominates.  相似文献   

12.
We investigated the relationship between daily growth rates and diel variation of carbon (C) metabolism and C to nitrogen (N) ratio under P‐ and N‐limitation in the green algae Chlorella autotrophica. To do this, continuous cultures of C. autotrophica were maintained in a cyclostat culture system under 14:10 light:dark cycle over a series of P‐ and N‐limited growth rates. Cell abundance, together with cell size, as reflected by side scatter signal from flow cytometric analysis demonstrated a synchronized diel pattern with cell division occurring at night. Under either type of nutrient limitation, the cellular C:N ratio increased through the light period and decreased through the dark period over all growth rates, indicating a higher diel variation of C metabolism than that of N. Daily average cellular C:N ratios were higher at lower dilution rates under both types of nutrient limitation but cell enlargement was only observed at lower dilution rates under P‐limitation. Carbon specific growth rates during the dark period positively correlated with cellular daily growth rates (dilution rates), with net loss of C during night at the lowest growth rates under N‐limitation. Under P‐limitation, dark C specific growth rates were close to zero at low dilution rates but also exhibited an increasing trend at high dilution rates. In general, diel variations of cellular C:N were low when dark C specific growth rates were high. This result indicated that the fast growing cells performed dark C assimilation at high rates, hence diminished the uncoupling of C and N metabolism at night.  相似文献   

13.
Two morphotypes of Emiliania huxleyi (Lohmann 1902) Hay et al. 1967, types A and B, known to be unequally distributed in the oceans, were grown in dilution cultures at a range of photon flux densities (PFDs) (1.5–155 μmol photons·m?2·s?1) and two temperatures (10° and 15° C). Calcite carbon and organic carbon content of the cells as well as instantaneous growth rate, cell size, chlorophyll fluorescence, and light-scatter properties clearly depended on growth conditions and differed considerably for the two morphotypes. The ratio between calcite carbon and organic carbon production showed an optimum of 0.65 in E. huxleyi type A cells at PFD = 17.5. The ratio increased slightly with a temperature increase from 10° to 15°C but remained < 1.0 at both temperatures in light-limited cells. In contrast, calcite carbon production exceeded organic carbon production (ratio: 1.4–2.2) in phosphate-deprived cultures. Emiliania huxleyi type B generally showed a higher calcite carbon/organic carbon ratio than E. huxleyi type A, but the relation with PFD was similar. The content of calcite carbon and organic carbon as well as the instantaneous growth rate, cell size, chlorophyll fluorescence, and light-scatter properties showed large diel variations that were closely related to the division cycle. Our results show the importance of mapping the structure of any sampled cell population with respect to the phase in the cell division cycle, as this largely determines the outcome of not only “per cell” measurements but also short time (less than 24 h) flux measurements. For instance, dark production of calcite by E. huxleyi was negatively affected by cell division. Slowly growing (phosphate-stressed) cultures produced calcite in the light and in the dark. In contrast, rapidly growing cultures at 10°C produced calcite only in the light, whereas in the dark there was a significant loss of calcite due to dissolution.  相似文献   

14.
15.
The goal of this study was to investigate the time response of two major carbon (C) reserves, respectively neutral lipids (NL) and total carbohydrate (TC), in the Haptophyte Isochrysis sp. growing in nitrogen (N)‐sufficient or N‐starved conditions and under light:dark (L:D) cycles. Experiments were carried out in a cyclostat culture system that allowed the following of the dynamics of the main cell compounds at both hourly and daily time scales. Under N‐sufficient conditions, the L:D cycles cause the population to be synchronized, with most of the cells dividing at the beginning of the dark period. The C‐specific growth rate was maximal around midday and negative during the dark period due to respiration processes. NL and TC both accumulated during the day and consumed during the night. We showed that NL and TC are highly dynamic compounds, as more than three quarters of NL and TC accumulated during the light period were consumed during the dark period. In contrast to NL, phospholipid and glycolipid to C ratios remained quite stable during the light/dark cycles. The major effect of N starvation on the NL and TC dynamics was to uncouple their diel variations from the L:D cycle, in two different ways depending on their respective role during short‐term acclimation. Whereas the TC per cell ratio increased rapidly to reach a stable value in response to N starvation, NL per cell continued to oscillate, but with a pattern out of phase with the L:D cycle.  相似文献   

16.
The optimal temperature and illumination photoperiod requirements for the phototrophic growth of a novel microplantlet suspension culture derived from the macrophytic marine red alga Agardhiella subulata were determined. The optimal growth temperature was 24 degrees C. The effects of illumination light-dark (LD) photoperiod (hour of light:hours of darkness within a 24 h cycle) on biomass production was studied within a bubble-column photobioreactor. The 4.5 cm diameter photobioreactor was maintained at near-saturation conditions with respect to light flux (38 mciromol photons m(-2) s(-1)), nutrient medium delivery (20% nutrient replacement per day), and CO(2) delivery (0.35 mmol CO(2) L(-1) h(-1)) so that the cumulative effects of photodamage on the cell density versus time curve at photoperiods approaching continuous light could be observed. Biomass production was maximized at 16:8 LD, where biomass densities exceeding 3.6 g dry cell mass L(-1) were achieved after 60 days in culture. Biomass production was proportional to photoperiod at low fractional photoperiods (< or =10:14 LD), but high fractional photoperiods approaching continuous light (> or = 20:4 LD) shut down biomass production. Biomass production versus time profiles under resource-saturated cultivation conditions were adequately described by a cumulative photodamage growth model, which coupled reversible photodamage processes to the specific growth rate. Under light-saturated growth conditions, the rate constant for photodamage was kd = 1.17 +/- 0.28 day(-1) (+/-1.0 SE), and the rate constant for photodamage repair was kr = 5.12 +/- 0.95 day(-1) (+/-1.0 SE) at 24 degrees C.  相似文献   

17.
The timing and control of replication of an F'lac plasmid was investigated in two substrains of Escherichia coli B/r lac/F'lac growing at a variety of rates. The cellular content of covalently closed circular F'lac deoxyribonucleic acid and the cellular mass at the time of F'lac replication both increased as a function of growth rate. The timing of plasmid replication during the division cycle was determined by measuring the inducibility of beta-galactosidase in cells of different ages in exponentially growing cultures. At all growth rates, the rate of induced beta-galactosidase synthesis increased in a step-wise fashion during the division cycle, indicating that the F'lac plasmid replicated at a discrete time in the cycle. At growth rates greater than one doubling per h, the cell age at F'lac replication was indistinguishable from the cell age at chromosomal lac+ replication in an isogenic F- parent. The ratio of plasmids to chromosomal origins decreased from about 0.7 to 0.4 between growth rates of 1.0 to 2.5 doublings per h. These observations are all consistent with replication of F'lac at about the same time in the division cycle as replication of the homologous chromosomal region at these growth rates. This similarity in timing of replication of homologous deoxyribonucleic acid regions was not evident in slower-growing cells.  相似文献   

18.
S Demers  K Davis  T L Cucci 《Cytometry》1989,10(5):644-652
Individual particle analysis using a flow cytometer (FCM) was made on natural phytoplankton communities in oligotrophic waters. Our objective was to develop an assay to yield information on the nutrient history of individual cells using FCM. Results from nutrient assays showed that both biovolume and total red fluorescence are affected by the nutrient conditions in the incubator. The light effect was measured by changes in the chlorophyll content of the cells, and after the 12 h incubation the cells seemed well adapted to the light conditions. The estimated kinetic constant for the chlorophyll synthesis averaged 1.5 x 1.0(-2) h-1, whereas the growth rate calculated from the changes in the cell numbers changed from 0.14 to greater than 2.5 doubling per day. The smallest size fraction presented the highest growth rate (greater than 2.5 doublings per day). The relationship between the total red fluorescence as estimated with the FCM and the biovolume revealed that the cells from the 2 m samples at the beginning of the experiment were probably nutrient limited. Important changes in the size of the cells under nutrient limitation were also observed. The FCM data suggest that the FCM is a valuable tool for estimating the relative growth response and nutritional state of natural phytoplankton populations.  相似文献   

19.
Jürgen Voigt  Petra Münzner 《Planta》1987,172(4):463-472
Cultures of the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardii can be synchronized by light/dark cycling not only under photoautotrophic but also under mixotrophic growth conditions. We observed that cultures synchronized in the presence of acetate continue to divide synchronously for one cell-cycle period when transferred to heterotrophic growth conditions. This finding enabled us to investigate the differential effects of light on cell growth and cell division. When cells were exposed to continuous light at the beginning of the growth period they entered the division phase earlier than dark-grown cells as a consequence of an increased growth rate. Illumination at the end of the growth period, however, caused a considerable delay in cell division and an extended growth period. The light-induced delay in cell division was also observed in the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU), an inhibitor of photosystem II. This finding demonstrates that cell division is directly influenced by a light/dard-responsive cell-cycle switch rather than by light/dark-dependent changes in energy metabolism. The importance of this light/dark control to the regulation of the Chlamydomonas cell cycle was investigated in comparison with other control mechanisms (size control, time control). We found that the light/dard-responsive cell-cycle switch regulates the transition from G1-to S-phase. This control mechanism is effective in cells which have attained the commitment to at least one round of DNA replication and division but have not attained the maximal cell mass which initiates cell division in the light.Abbreviations dCTP deoxycytidine 5-triphosphate - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea  相似文献   

20.
The elemental composition and the cell cycle stages of the marine diatom Thalassiosira pseudonana Hasle and Heimdal were studied in continuous cultures over a range of different light‐ (E), nitrogen‐ (N), and phosphorus‐ (P) limited growth rates. In all growth conditions investigated, the decrease in the growth rate was linked with a higher relative contribution of the G2+M phase. The other phases of the cell cycle, G1 and S, showed different patterns, depending on the type of limitation. All experiments showed a highly significant increase in the amount of biogenic silica per cell and per cell surface with decreasing growth rates. At low growth rates, the G2+M elongation allowed an increase of the silicification of the cells. This pattern could be explained by the major uptake of silicon during the G2+M phase and by the independence of this process on the requirements of the other elements. This was illustrated by the elemental ratios Si/C and Si/N that increased from 2‐ to 6‐fold, depending of the type of limitation, whereas the C/N ratio decreased by 10% (E limitation) or increased by 50% (P limitation). The variations of the ratios clearly demonstrate the uncoupling of the Si metabolism compared with the C and N metabolisms. This uncoupling enabled us to explain that in any of the growth condition investigated, the silicification of the cells increased at low growth rates, whereas carbon and nitrogen cellular content are differently regulated, depending of the growth conditions.  相似文献   

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