PHOSPHATE UPTAKE UNDER NITRATE LIMITATION BY SCENEDESMUS SP. AND ITS ECOLOGICAL IMPLICATIONS1 |
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Authors: | G-Yull Rhee |
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Abstract: | Under nitrogen limitation the phosphate content of Scenedesmus sp. shows little variation regardless of growth rate and the N/P atomic ratio of the medium. P uptake therefore can be calculated as the product of P content and N-dependent growth rate. The maximum rate of P uptake in N limitation is lower by a factor of about 8 than the rate in P limitation. As reported earlier, P uptake by this alga under P limitation is described by the kinetics resembling non-competitive enzyme inhibition, with one or several intracellular P fractions as inhibitors. These fractions include surplus P (water extractable) and inorganic polyphosphate fractions A (acid soluble) and B, C, and D (acid insoluble). In N limitation, the ratios of fractions A, B, C, and D are quite different from the ratios of P limitation at comparable growth rates. The concentrations of polyphosphate fraction A in N-limited cells are much, higher than the levels in P-limited cells, and this fraction becomes more predominant at low growth rates in N limitation. This fraction, if introduced as the inhibitor into the noncompetitive scheme, explains the uptake kinetics in both N- and P-limited cells and the low maximum uptake rate in N limitation. This finding may have two significant ecological implications: (1) A nutrient imbalance which brings about changes in the internal, level or the metabolism, of fraction A would affect P uptake. (2) Nitrogen sufficiency would cause a competitive advantage in P uptake. This advantage would be shared by N2 fixers and algae with low optimum N/P ratios. In Scenedesmus sp. P limitation switches to N limitation and vice versa when the cell N/P atomic ratio is about 30. |
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