Quantum requirements for growth and fatty acid biosynthesis in the marine diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum (Bacillariophyceae) in nitrogen replete and limited conditions |
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Authors: | Miguel J. Frada Elizabeth H. Burrows Kevin D. Wyman Paul G. Falkowski |
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Affiliation: | 1. Environmental Biophysics and Molecular Ecology Program, Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences, Rutgers University, , New Brunswick, New Jersey, 08901 USA;2. Department of Chemistry & Chemical Biology, Rutgers University, , Piscataway, New Jersey, 08854 USA |
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Abstract: | We determined the quantum requirements for growth (1/?μ) and fatty acid (FA) biosynthesis (1/?FA) in the marine diatom, Phaeodactylum tricornutum, grown in nutrient replete conditions with nitrate or ammonium as nitrogen sources, and under nitrogen limitation, achieved by transferring cells into nitrogen free medium or by inhibiting nitrate assimilation with tungstate. A treatment in which tungstate was supplemented to cells grown with ammonium was also included. In nutrient replete conditions, cells grew exponentially and possessed virtually identical 1/?μ of 40–44 mol photons · mol C?1. In parallel, 1/?FA varied between 380 and 409 mol photons · mol C?1 in the presence of nitrate, but declined to 348 mol photons · mol C?1 with ammonium and to 250 mol photons · mol C?1 with ammonium plus tungstate, indicating an increase in the efficiency of FA biosynthesis relative to cells grown on nitrate of 8% and 35%, respectively. While the molecular mechanism for this effect remains poorly understood, the results unambiguously reveal that cells grown on ammonium are able to direct more reductant to lipids. This analysis suggests that when cells are grown with a reduced nitrogen source, fatty acid biosynthesis can effectively become a sink for excess absorbed light, compensating for the absence of energetically demanding nitrate assimilation reactions. Our data further suggest that optimal lipid production efficiency is achieved when cells are in exponential growth, when nitrate assimilation is inhibited, and ammonium is the sole nitrogen source. |
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Keywords: | biofuels diatoms lipid biosynthesis nitrate reductase quantum requirements tungstate |
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