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Metabolic profiling identifies trehalose as an abundant and diurnally fluctuating metabolite in the microalga Ostreococcus tauri
Authors:Matthias Hirth  Silvia Liverani  Sebastian Mahlow  François-Yves Bouget  Georg Pohnert  Severin Sasso
Affiliation:1.Institute of General Botany and Plant Physiology,Friedrich Schiller University,Jena,Germany;2.Department of Mathematics,Brunel University London,Uxbridge,UK;3.Sorbonne Universités, UPMC Univ Paris 06 & Centre National pour la Recherche Scientifique CNRS, UMR 7621, Laboratoire d’Océanographie Microbienne,Observatoire Océanologique,Banyuls-sur-Mer,France;4.Institute for Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry,Friedrich Schiller University,Jena,Germany;5.Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology,Jena,Germany
Abstract:

Introduction

The picoeukaryotic alga Ostreococcus tauri (Chlorophyta) belongs to the widespread group of marine prasinophytes. Despite its ecological importance, little is known about the metabolism of this alga.

Objectives

In this work, changes in the metabolome were quantified when O. tauri was grown under alternating cycles of 12 h light and 12 h darkness.

Methods

Algal metabolism was analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Using fluorescence-activated cell sorting, the bacteria associated with O. tauri were depleted to below 0.1% of total cells at the time of metabolic profiling.

Results

Of 111 metabolites quantified over light–dark cycles, 20 (18%) showed clear diurnal variations. The strongest fluctuations were found for trehalose. With an intracellular concentration of 1.6 mM in the dark, this disaccharide was six times more abundant at night than during the day. This fluctuation pattern of trehalose may be a consequence of starch degradation or of the synchronized cell cycle. On the other hand, maltose (and also sucrose) was below the detection limit (~10 μM). Accumulation of glycine in the light is in agreement with the presence of a classical glycolate pathway of photorespiration. We also provide evidence for the presence of fatty acid methyl and ethyl esters in O. tauri.

Conclusions

This study shows how the metabolism of O. tauri adapts to day and night and gives new insights into the configuration of the carbon metabolism. In addition, several less common metabolites were identified.
Keywords:
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