Premium
Expression of a xanthine permease and phosphate transporter in cultures and field populations of the harmful alga A ureococcus anophagefferens : tracking nutritional deficiency during brown tides
Author(s) -
Wurch Louie L.,
Gobler Christopher J.,
Dyhrman Sonya T.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
environmental microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.954
H-Index - 188
eISSN - 1462-2920
pISSN - 1462-2912
DOI - 10.1111/1462-2920.12374
Subject(s) - biology , phosphorus deficiency , phosphate , xanthine , phosphorus , biochemistry , nutrient , enzyme , ecology , chemistry , organic chemistry
Summary Targeted gene expression using quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (qRT‐PCR) was employed to track patterns in the expression of genes indicative of nitrogen or phosphorus deficiency in the brown tide‐forming alga A ureococcus anophagefferens . During culture experiments, a xanthine/uracil/vitamin C permease ( XUV ) was upregulated ∼20‐fold under nitrogen‐deficient conditions relative to a nitrogen‐replete control and rapidly returned to nitrogen‐replete levels after nitrogen‐deficient cells were resupplied with nitrate or ammonium. It was not responsive to phosphorus deficiency. Expression of an inorganic phosphate transporter ( PTA 3 ) was enriched ∼10‐fold under phosphorus‐deficient conditions relative to a phosphorus‐replete control, and this signal was rapidly lost upon phosphate resupply. PTA 3 was not upregulated by nitrogen deficiency. Natural A . anophagefferens populations from a dense brown tide that occurred in L ong I sland, NY , in 2009 were assayed for XUV and PTA 3 expression and compared with nutrient concentrations over the peak of a bloom. Patterns in XUV expression were consistent with nitrogen‐replete growth, never reaching the values observed in N ‐deficient cultures. PTA 3 expression was highest prior to peak bloom stages, reaching expression levels within the range of P ‐deficient cultures. These data highlight the value of molecular‐level assessments of nutrient deficiency and suggest that phosphorus deficiency could play a role in the dynamics of destructive A . anophagefferens blooms.