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1.
Dunaliella bardawil Ben-Amotz & Avron, a β-carotene-accumulating halotolerant alga, was analyzed for the effect of growth temperatures on its pigment content and on the stereoisomeric composition of β-carotene by the use of advanced liquid chromatography and photodiode array detection. Decreasing culture temperature from 30° to 10°C increased the β-carotene content twofold and the ratio of 9-cis to all-trans β-carotene fourfold, with no significant changes in the other cell pigments. The variation of total β-carotene content by temperature was correlated with the integral irradiance received by the algal culture during a cell division cycle, whereas the 9-cis stereoisomer increased over the amount expected by that integration. The massive accumulation of 9-cisβ-carotene within the β-carotene globules is interpreted as indicating that the oily 9-cis stereoisomer protects against the crystallization of all-trans β-carotene at low temperatures.  相似文献   

2.
Dunaliella bardawil Ben-Amotz & Avron, but not most other Dunaliella species, has a unique property of being able to accumulate, in addition to glycerol, large amounts of β-carotene when cultivated under appropriate conditions. These include high light intensity, a high sodium chloride concentration, nitrate deficiency and extreme temperatures. Under conditions of maximal carotene accumulation D. bardawil contains at least 8% of its dry weight as β-carotene while D. salina grown under similar conditions contains only about 0.3%. Electron micrographs of D. bardawil grown under conditions of high β-carotene accumulation show many β-carotene containing globules located in the interthylakoid spaces of the chloroplast. The same algae grown under conditions where β-carotene does not accumulate, contain few to no β-carotene globules. The β-carotene-rich globules were released from the algae into an aqueous medium by a two-stage osmotic shock technique and further purified by centrifugal ion on 10% sucrose. The isolated purified globules were shown by electron microscopy to be free of significant contamination and composed of membrane-free osmiophilic droplets with an average diameter of 150 nm. Reversed phase high performance liquid chromatography of a total pigment extract of the cells revealed the presence of β-carotene as the major pigment, together with chlorophylls a and b, α-carotene and the xanthophylls lutein, neoxauthin and zeaxanthin. β-Carotene accounted for essentially all the pigment in the purified globules. Analysis of the algal and globule β-carotene fractions by HPLC showed that the β-carotene was composed of approximately equal amounts of all-trans β-carotene and of its 9-cis isomer. Intact D. bardawil cells contained on a dry weight basis about 30% glycerol, 30% protein, 18% lipid, 11% carbohydrate, 9%β-carotene and 1% chlorophyll. The β-carotene globules were composed of practically only neutral lipids, more than half of which was β-carotene. It is suggested that the β-carotene globules may serve to protect D. bardawil against injury by the high intensity irradiation to which this alga is usually exposed in nature.  相似文献   

3.
The quantitative and qualitative effects of light on carotenoid production by Spirulina were studied. Maximum total carotenoid production was measured in cells grown under white light at an irradiance of 432 μmol photon m?2 s?1, the onset of light saturation for this organism as determined by growth rates. A true maximum may exist at irradiances above 1500 μmol photon m?2 s?1 under white light. Individual carotenoids responded differently to light conditions. Under white light, β-carotene and echinenone were most abundant at the lowest and highest irradiance levels tested. Myxoxanthophyll and lutein/zeaxanthin did not change over the same irradiance range. Under red and blue light, we found decreased values of myxoxanthophyll, while β-carotene increased and lutein/zeaxanthin and echinenone showed little change. In general, maximum carotenoid production requires optimization of the culture conditions that favor growth.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Light conditions during fungal growth are well known to cause several physiological adaptations in the conidia produced. In this study, conidia of the entomopathogenic fungi Metarhizium robertsii were produced on: 1) potato dextrose agar (PDA) medium in the dark; 2) PDA medium under white light (4.98 W m?2); 3) PDA medium under blue light (4.8 W m?2); 4) PDA medium under red light (2.8 W m?2); and 5) minimum medium (Czapek medium without sucrose) supplemented with 3 % lactose (MML) in the dark. The conidial production, the speed of conidial germination, and the virulence to the insect Tenebrio molitor (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae) were evaluated. Conidia produced on MML or PDA medium under white or blue light germinated faster than conidia produced on PDA medium in the dark. Conidia produced under red light germinated slower than conidia produced on PDA medium in the dark. Conidia produced on MML were the most virulent, followed by conidia produced on PDA medium under white light. The fungus grown under blue light produced more conidia than the fungus grown in the dark. The quantity of conidia produced for the fungus grown in the dark, under white, and red light was similar. The MML afforded the least conidial production. In conclusion, white light produced conidia that germinated faster and killed the insects faster; in addition, blue light afforded the highest conidial production.  相似文献   

6.
Although the spectral quality of light in the ocean varies considerably with depth, the effect of light quality on different physiological processes in marine phytoplankton remains largely unknown. In cases where experiments are performed under full spectral irradiance, the meaning of these experiments in situ is thus unclear. In this study, we determined whether variations in spectral quality affected the sinking rates of marine diatoms. Semicontinuous batch cultures of Thalassiosira weissflogii (Gru.) Fryxell et Hasle and Ditylum brightwellii (t. West) Grunow in Van Huerk were grown under continuous red, white, or blue light. For T. weissflogii, sinking rates (SETCOL method) were twice as high (~0.2 m·d?1)for cells grown under red light as for cells grown under white or blue light (~0.08 m·d?1), but there were no significant differences in carbohydrate content (~105 fg·μm?3) or silica content (~ 17 fg·μ?3) to account for the difference in sinking rates. Thalassiosira weissflogii grown under blue light was significantly smaller (495 μm3) than cells grown under red light (661 μm3), which could contribute to its reduced sinking rate. However, cells grown under white light were similar in size to those grown under red light but had sinking rates not different from those of cells grown under blue light, indicating the involvement of factors other than size. There were no significant differences in sinking rate (~0.054 m·d?1) or silica content (~20 fg·μm?3) in D. brightwellii grown under red, white, or blue light, but cells grown under red light were significantly (20%) larger and contained significantly (20%) more carbohydrate per μm3 than cells grown under white or blue light. Spectral quality had no consistent effect on sinking rate, biochemical composition (carbohydrate or silica content), or cell volume in the two diatoms studied. The similarity in sinking rate of cells grown under white light compared to those grown under blue light supports the ecological validity of sinking rate studies done under white light.  相似文献   

7.
The kinetics of population growth and death were investigated in Anabaena flos-aquae (Lyngb.) Bréb grown at light intensities ranging from limitation to photoinhibition (5 W·m−2 to 160 W·m−2) in a nutrient-replete turbidostat. Steady-state growth rate (μ, or dilution rate, D) increased with light intensity from 0.44·day−1 at a light intensity of 5 W·m−2 to 0.99·day−1 at 20 W·m−2 and started to decrease above about 22 W·m−2, reaching 0.56·day−1 at 160 W·m−2. The Haldane function of enzyme inhibition fit the growth data poorly, largely because of the unusually narrow range of saturation intensity. However, it produced a good fit (P < 0.001) for growth under photoinhibition. Anabaena flos-aquae died at different specific death rates (γ) below and above the saturation intensity. When calculated as the slope of a vx−1 and D−1 plot, where vx and D are cell viability (or live cell fraction) and dilution rate, respectively; γ was 0.047·day−1 in the range of light limitation and 0.103·day−1 under photoinhibition. Live vegetative cells and heterocysts, either in numbers or as a percentage of the total cells, showed a peak at the saturation intensity and decreased at lower and higher intensities. The ratio of live heterocysts to live vegetative cells increased with intensity when light was limiting but decreased when light was supersaturating. In cells growing at the same growth rate, the ratio was significantly lower under light inhibition than under subsaturation and the cell N:C ratio was also lower under inhibition. The steady-state rate of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) production increased with light intensity. However, its production as a percentage of the total C fixation was lowest at the optimum intensity and increased as the irradiance decreased or increased. The rate and percentage was significantly higher under photoinhibition than limitation in cells growing at the same growth rate. About 22% of the total fixed carbon was released as DOC at the highest light intensity. No correlation was found between the number of dead cells and DOC.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of diurnal variations in light intensity on the biomass characteristics and the efficiency of daily growth of Skeletonema costatum (Grev.) Cleve were evaluated. The relative importance of changes in carbon specific rates of respiration and organic release to the efficiency of growth was determined. Light intensity was either constant at 130 μE · m?2 · s?1 during the light period or fluctuated throughout the light period from 500 to 10 μE · m?2 · s?1 at rates of either 1 or 12 cycles · day?1. Total daily light was equivalent for all light regimes at 5.6 E · m?2 · day?1.Daily rates of growth remained comparable at ≈ 1 · day?1 under constant and fluctuating light regimes. Cell size as daily mean carbon · cell?1, nitrogen · cell?1 and cellular volume was decreased under diurnally varying light whereas daily mean chlorophyll a · cell?1 was unaffected.Rates of respiration, organic release and gross production were elevated several fold under diurnally varying light in comparison to constant light. Net growth efficiency decreased from 0.69 under constant light to values of 0.50 and 0.38 under 1 and 12 cycles · day?1, respectively. Decreased efficiency of growth under diurnally fluctuating light resulted mostly from greater respiratory activity while organic release remained < 10% of gross production. Increased rates of gross production reflected enhancement in the efficiency of carbon fixation with fluctuating light.  相似文献   

9.
A computerized oxygen electrode Astern was used to make rapid and accurate measurements of photosynthetic light and dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) response cures with a macroalga. Ulva rotundata Blid. was grown in an outdoor, continuous flow system in seawater under sunlight or 9% of sunlight at Beaufort, North Carolina. The light compensation points in the shade- and sun-grown plants, measured in seawater, were at photon flux densities (PFDs) of 16 and 27 μmol. Photons·m?2·s?1, respectively but the quantum yield of O2 evolution was not significantly different. Rates of photosynthesis in seawater per unit area of thallus under saturating light and rates of dark respiration were about 1.5-fold higher in sun- than in shade-grown plants. The concentration of DIC in seawater (approximately 2 mM) limited photosynthesis at absorbed PFDs above 60–70 μmol photons·m?2·s?1 Addition of 20 mM inorganic carbon had no effect on quantum yield but caused about a 1.5-fold increase in the light-saturated photosynthetic rate in both shade- and sun-grown Ulva. The effect of DIC supplementation was greatest in plants grown in October and least in plants grown in June. The light- and DIC-saturated rate of photosynthesis in seawater was similar to the maximum rate obtained by exposing Ulva to 10% CO2, in the gas phase. The carbon isotope values (δ13C, reflecting the 13C/12C ratio compared to a standard) of Ulva grown in the same seawater supply were dependent on light and agitation. Samples from Beaufort Inlet were more negative (δ13C value, ?20.03‰) than those grown in bright light with agitation (δ13C value, ?17.78‰ outdoors; ?17.23‰ indoors), which may indicate DIC supply limited carbon uptake in seawater.  相似文献   

10.
Growth and pigment concentrations of the, estuarine dinoflagellate, Prorocentrum mariae-lebouriae (Parke and Ballantine) comb. nov., were measured in cultures grown in white, blue, green and red radiation at three different irradiances. White irradiances (400–800 nm) were 13.4, 4.0 and 1.8 W · m?2 with photon flux densities of 58.7 ± 3.5, 17.4 ± 0.6 and 7.8 ± 0.3 μM quanta · m?2· s?1, respectively. All other spectral qualities had the same photon flux densities. Concentrations of chlorophyll a and chlorophyll c were inversely related to irradiance. A decrease of 7- to 8-fold in photon flux density resulted in a 2-fold increase in chlorophyll a and c and a 1.6- to 2.4-fold increase in both peridinin and total carotenoid concentrations. Cells grown in green light contained 22 to 32% more peridinin per cell and exhibited 10 to 16% higher peridinin to chlorophyll a ratios than cells grown in white light. Growth decreased as a function of irradiance in white, green and red light grown cells but was the same at all blue light irradiances. Maximum growth rates occurred at 8 μM quanta · m?2· s?1 in blue light, while in red and white light maximum growth rates occurred at considerably higher photon flux densities (24 to 32 μM quanta · m?2· s?1). The fastest growth rates occurred in blue and red radiation. White radiation producing maximum growth was only as effective as red and blue light when the photon flux density in either the red or blue portion of the white light spectrum was equivalent to that of a red or of blue light treatment which produced maximum growth rates. These differences in growth and pigmentation indicate that P. mariae-lebouriae responds to the spectral quality under which it is grown.  相似文献   

11.
The content and composition of pigments were examined in the third leaf of Zea mays L. plants grown under controlled environment at near-optimal temperature (24°C) or sub-optimal temperature (14°C) at a light intensity of either 200 or 600 μmol m?2 s?1. Compared to leaves grown at 24°C, leaves grown at 14°C showed a large reduction in the chlorophyll (Chl) content, a marked decrease in the Chl a/b ratio, and a large increase in the ratio of total carotenoids/Chl a+b. Leaves grown at 14°C showed a much lower content of β-carotene than leaves grown at 24°C, while the content of the carotenoids of the xanthophyll cycle (violaxanthin [V] + antheraxanthin [A] + zeaxanthin [Z]) was markedly higher in the former leaves as compared to the latter leaves; neoxanthin and lutein were affected by the growth temperature to a much lesser extent. The xanthophylls/β-carotene ratio was about three times higher in leaves grown at 14°C as compared to leaves grown at 24°C. On a chlorophyll basis, the two types of leaves hardly differed in their level of β-carotene, while the levels of the xanthophylls (including lutein and neoxanthin) were higher in 14°C-grown leaves as compared to 24°C-grown leaves. In leaves grown at 14°C, 40 and 56% of the V+A+Z pool was in the form of zeaxanthin at low light intensity and high light intensity, respectively. Only trace amounts of zeaxanthin, if any, were present in leaves grown at 24°C. The changes in the pigment composition induced by growth at sub-optimal temperature were more pronounced at a light intensity of 600 as compared to 200 μmol m?2 s?1. In the given range, the light intensity slightly affected the composition of pigments in leaves grown at 24°C. The physiological significance of the modifications to the pigment composition induced by growth at sub-optimal temperature is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Anacystis nidulans was grown in white light of two different intensities, 7 and 50 W ·m?2. The in vivo pigmentations of the two cultures were compared. The ratio phycocyanin/chlorophyll a was 0.96 for cells grown at 7 W · m?2 and 0.37 for cells grown at 50 W · m?2. Phycocyanin-free photosynthetic lamellae (PSI-particles) were prepared, using French press treatment and fractionated centrifugation. Algae grown in the irradiance of 50 W · m?2 showed a chlorophyll a/P700 ratio of 260, while algae grown at 7 W · m?2 had a value of 140. Corresponding PSI-particles showed values of 122 and 109 respectively. Light-induced absorption difference spectra measured between 400–450nm indicated different ratios between cytochrome f and P700 in the two algal cultures. Enhancement studies of photosynthetic oxygen evolution were carried out. When a background beam of 691 nm was superimposed upon a signal beam of 625 nm, good enhancement was observed for both cultures. With the wavelengths 675 and 691 nm together a pronounced enhancement could be detected only in algae grown at the higher light level. Absorption spectra recorded on whole cells at 77°K revealed a small shift of the main red chlorophyll a absorption peak caused by light intensity. It is proposed that the reduction of the phycocyanin/chlorophyll a ratio in high light-grown cells is accompanied by an increased energy distribution by chlorophyll a into PSII.  相似文献   

13.
Photosynthetic characteristics of Dunaliella salina with high (red form) and low β-carotene (green form) concentrations were studied. D. salina growing in brine saltworks exhibited a high level of β-carotene (15 pg cell−1). The rate of oxygen evolution as a function of irradiance was higher in the red than in the green form (on chlorophyll basis). Photosynthetic inhibition of the green form was observed above 500 μmol m−2 s−1. The red form appeared more resistant to high irradiance and no inhibition in O2 evolution was observed up 2000 μmol m−2 s−1. However, when these results are expressed on a cell number basis the rate of oxygen evolution was significantly higher in the green form. Carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity (total, soluble, membrane bound) was found in red and green forms. CA was higher in the red form on a chlorophyll basis, but lower if expressed on a protein basis. The light dependent rate of oxygen evolution and photoinhibition depends on the concentration of β-carotene in D. salina cells.  相似文献   

14.
Abstract. The β-dimethylsulphoniopropionate (DMSP) concentrations of 5 Antarctic green algae grown at 2, 30 and 55 μmol photons m?2 s?1 were determined during a period of one year, cultivated under fluctuating daylengths mimicking the conditions of the natural habitat at King George Island. Antarctica. The intracellular DMSP content of all species decreased simultaneously with decreasing daylengths and vice versa. Additionally, the DMSP level was affected by the light intensity: the higher the photon fluence rate the greater the algal DMSP concentration. Under conditions of darkness, there was a degradation of the DMSP pool in members of the Acrosiphoniales, while the DMSP content in members of the Ulvales did not change. The results indicate a light-dependent DMSP accumulation in algae. Therefore, they may help to explain the seasonal variability of DMSP and its cleavage product dimethylsulphide (DMS) in coastal waters.  相似文献   

15.
Optimum light, temperature, and pH conditions for growth, photosynthetic, and respiratory activities of Peridinium cinctum fa. westii (Lemm.) Lef were investigated by using axenic clones in batch cultures. The results are discussed and compared with data from Lake Kinneret (Israel) where it produces heavy blooms in spring. Highest biomass development and growth rates occurred at ca. 23° C and ≥50 μE· m?2·s1 of fluorescent light with energy peaks at 440–575 and 665 nm. Photosynthetic oxygen release was more efficient in filtered light of blue (BG 12) and red (RG 2) than in green (VG 9) qualities. Photosynthetic oxygen production occurred at temperatures ranging from 5° to 32° C in white fluorescent light from 10 to 105 μE·m?2·s?1 with a gross maximum value of 1500 × 10?12 g·cell?1·h?1 at the highest irradiance. The average respiration amounted to ca. 12% of the gross production and reached a maximum value of ca. 270·10?12 g·cell?1·h?1 at 31° C. A comparison of photosynthetic and respiratory Q10-values showed that in the upper temperature range the increase in gross production was only a third of the corresponding increase in respiration, although the gross production was at maximum. Short intermittent periods of dark (>7 min) before high light exposures from a halogen lamp greatly increased oxygen production. Depending on the physiological status of the alga, light saturation values were reached at 500–1000 μE·m?2·s?1 of halogen light with compensation points at 20–40 μE·m?2·s?1 and Ik-values at 100–200 μE·m?2·s?1. The corresponding values in fluorescent light in which it was cultured and adapted, were 25 to 75% lower indicating the ability of the alga to efficiently utilize varying light conditions, if the adaptation time is sufficient. Carbon fixation was most efficient at ca. pH 7, but the growth rates and biomass development were highest at pH 8.3.  相似文献   

16.
We describe a procedure for the selection of β-carotenerich mutants of the halotolerant alga Dunaliella bardawil Ben-Amotz & Avron. Under normal growth conditions the isolated mutants had a several-fold higher content of β-carotene than the wild type. Under carotene-induction conditions, the mutants also possessed a higher β-carotene content than the wild type. Both the production rate of phytoene and the conversion rate of phytoene to lycopene and β-carotene were accelerated in the mutants. Cycloheximide, which (in the wild type) inhibits the inductive synthesis of the proteins required for β-carotene production, had a much smaller effect on β-carotene biosynthesis in the mutants. We suggest that the mutants are affected in the regulatory path, which controls the induction of high β-carotene production in Dunaliella.  相似文献   

17.
Ben-Amotz A  Lers A  Avron M 《Plant physiology》1988,86(4):1286-1291
Dunaliella bardawil, a halotolerant green alga, was previously shown to accumulate high concentrations of β-carotene when grown outdoors under defined conditions. The β-carotene of algae cultivated under high light intensity in media containing a high salt concentration is composed of approximately 50% all-trans β-carotene and 40% 9-cis β-carotene. We show here that the 9-cis to all-trans ratio is proportional to the integral light intensity to which the algae are exposed during a division cycle. In cells grown under a continuous white light of 2000 microeinsteins per square meter per second, the ratio reached a value of around 1.5, while in cells grown under a light intensity of 50 microeinsteins per square meter per second, the ratio was around 0.2. As previously shown, algae treated with the herbicide norflurazon accumulate phytoene in place of β-carotene. Electron micrographs showed that the phytoene is accumulated in many distinct globules located in the interthylakoid spaces of the chloroplast. Here too, two isomers are present, apparently all-trans and 9-cis phytoene, and their ratio is dependent upon the integral light intensity to which the algae are exposed during a division cycle. In the presence of norflurazon, Dunaliella bardawil grown under a light intensity of 2000 microeinsteins per square meter per second contained about 8% phytoene with a 9-cis to all-trans ratio of about 1.0. This ratio decreased to about 0.1 when the light intensity was reduced to 50 microeinsteins per square meter per second. These data suggest that the isomerization reaction which leads to the production of the 9-cis isomer occurs early in the path of carotene biosynthesis, at or before the formation of all-trans phytoene. The presence of the 9-cis isomer of β-carotene and the dependence of its preponderance on light intensity seem to be a common feature of many plant parts. Thus carrots which are exposed to minimal light contain no 9-cis isomer while sun-exposed leaves, fruits, and flowers contain 20 to 50% of the 9-cis isomer.  相似文献   

18.
CO2 exchange were measured on pea seedlings (Pisum sativum L. var. Bördi) cultivated from seeds imbibed either in water (C-plants) or in gibberellic acid (GA3) at the concentration of 25 g/1 (GA-plants), and then grown under 17 W/m2 blue light (B-plants) or 11 W/m2 red light (R-plants).When measured under the same light conditions as during growth the net photosynthesis (APS) rate in B-plants was about twice higher than that in R-plants. Dark respiration (DR) rate was 70% higher in B- than in R-plants. Red light retarded the development of photosynthetic activity, but GA3 suppressed this effect. The hormone enhanced net photosynthesis and dark respiration to the same extent.When measured under saturating white light net photosynthesis rate of C-plants was also two times higher in B-plants than in R-plants. Growth conditions had only a slight effect on the APS of GA-plants under white light. APS rates of GA-plants grown under red light were higher under white light than those of C-plants, but lower than those of plants grown under blue light.We assume that blue light induced formation of plants that were adapted to higher light intensity: red light had an opposite effect, whereas gibberellic acid induced formation of plants that were adapted to medium light intensity.  相似文献   

19.
Anacystis nidulans grown under high and low light, 100 and 10 μE m?2 s?1, respectively, was analyzed with respect to chlorophyll/P700, phycobiliproteins/P700, chlorophyll/cell, and oxygen evolution parameters. The photosynthetic unit sizes of this cyanobacterium, measured as the ratio of total chromophores (chlorophyll and bilin) to P700, were shown to be similar to those of higher plants and green algae. High light grown cells possessed a photosynthetic unit consisting of a core of 157 ± 6 chlorophyll a molecules per P700 associated with a light harvesting system of 95 ± 3.5 biliprotein chromophores. Low light grown cells had substantially more biliprotein chromophores per P700 (125 ± 3.1) than high light cells, but showed no significant difference in the numbers of chlorophyll a molecules per P700 (149 ± 4). Analyses of aqueous biliprotein extracts indicate that low light grown cells produce proportionately more phycocyanin relative to allophycocyanin than high light cells. Calculations of the molecular weight of biliproteins per P700 suggest that there is less than one phycobilisome per reaction center I under both growth conditions. Differences in chlorophyll/cell ratios and oxygen evolution characteristics were also observed. High light cells contain 6.3 × 10?12 mg chlorophyll cell?1, while low light grown cells contain 12.8 × 10?12 mg chlorophyll cell?1. Photosynthetic oxygen evolution rate vs. light intensity curves indicate that high light grown cells reach maximal levels of oxygen evolution at higher light intensity than low light grown cells. Maximal rates of oxygen evolution were 16.6 μmol oxygen min?1 (mg chlorophyll)?1 for high and 8.4 μmol oxygen min?1 (mg chlorophyll)?1 for low light cells. Maximal oxygen evolution rates per cell were equivalent for both cell types, although the amount of P700 per cell was lower in high light cells. High light grown cells are therefore capable of producing more oxygen per reaction center I than low light grown cells.  相似文献   

20.
Eight species of marine phytoplankton commonly used in aquaculture were grown under a range of photon flux densities (PEDs) and analyzed for their fatty acid (FA) composition. Fatty and composition changed considerably at different PFDs although no consistent correlation between the relative proportion of a single FA and μ or chl a · cell?1 was apparent. Within an individual species the percentage of certain fatty acids covaried with PFDs, growth rate and/or chl a · cell?1. The light conditions which produced the greatest proportion of the essential fatty acids was species specific. Eicosapentaenoic acid. 20:5ω3 increased from 6.1% to 15.5% of the total fatty acids of Chaetoceros simplex Ostenfield grown at PFDs which decreased from 225 μE · m?2· s?1 to 6 μE · m?2· s?1, respectively. Most species had their greatest proportion of 20: 5ω3 at low levels of irradiance. Conversely, docosahexaenoic acid, 22:6ω3, decreased from 9.7% to 3.6% of the total fatty acids in Pavlova lutheri Droop as PFD decreased. The percentage of 22:6ω3 generally decreased with decreasing irradiances. In all diatoms the percentage of 16:0 was significantly correlated with PFD, and in three of five diatoms, with growth rate (μ). Results suggest that fatty acid composition is a highly dynamic component of cellular physiology, which responds significantly to variation in PFD.  相似文献   

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