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VERTICAL MIGRATION BY RHIZOSOLENIA SPP. (BACILLARIOPHYCEAE): IMPLICATIONS FOR FE ACQUISITION
Authors:R Michael L McKay  Tracy A Villareal  Julie La Roche
Institution:Department of Biological Sciences, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, Ohio 43403;Marine Science Institute, The University of Texas at Austin, Port Aransas, Texas 78373;Department of Marine Microbiology, Institut für Meereskunde, Kiel D-24105, Germany
Abstract:Available data support a mechanism of buoyancy-mediated vertical migration by large-sized diatoms of Rhizosolenia spp. as a means to access "new" nitrogen from deep waters. To assess whether phytoplankton simultaneously satisfy their Fe requirements by this mechanism, field samples collected during summer 1996 at stations located along a transect through the central North Pacific gyre were assayed for the presence of flavodoxin and ferredoxin via Western blot analysis. All samples, regardless of their buoyancy status and the station from which they were collected, had accumulated flavodoxin but not ferredoxin. To understand better the significance of the field results, cultures of Rhizosolenia formosa H. Peragallo were grown in the laboratory with varying levels of total Fe (200 nM–10,000 nM). Fe had little effect on the physiological and photochemical parameters measured for each treatment. Growth rates did not exceed 0.17 d 1 and values of Fv/Fm ranged from 0.48 to 0.62. In addition, R. formosa accumulated only flavodoxin at each level of Fe addition. From these results, it appears that for some rhizosolenids, flavodoxin is constitutively expressed. The underlying basis for the constitutive nature of this flavodoxin is unclear at present, although it is likely that it is ultimately related to chronic Fe deficit incurred in natural waters.
Keywords:diatom  ferredoxin  flavodoxin  iron              Rhizosolenia            vertical migration
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