CO2 Limitation (co2 + limitation)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Effects of increased temperature and nutrient enrichment on the stoichiometry of primary producers and consumers in temperate shallow lakes

FRESHWATER BIOLOGY, Issue 7 2008
M. VENTURA
Summary 1. We studied the effects of increased water temperatures (0,4.5 °C) and nutrient enrichment on the stoichiometric composition of different primary producers (macrophytes, epiphytes, seston and sediment biofilm) and invertebrate consumers in 24 mesocosm ecosystems created to mimic shallow pond environments. The nutrient ratios of primary producers were used as indicative of relative nitrogen (N) or phosphorus (P) limitation. We further used carbon stable isotopic composition (,13C) of the different primary producers to elucidate differences in the degree of CO2 limitation. 2. Epiphytes were the only primary producer with significantly higher ,13C in the enriched mesocosms. No temperature effects were observed in ,13C composition of any primary producer. Independently of the treatment effects, the four primary producers had different ,13C signatures indicative of differences in CO2 limitation. Seston had signatures indicating negligible or low CO2 limitation, followed by epiphytes and sediment biofilm, with moderate CO2 limitation, while macrophytes showed the strongest CO2 limitation. CO2 together with biomass of epiphytes were the key variables explaining between 50 and 70% of the variability in ,13C of the different primary producers, suggesting that epiphytes play an important role in carbon flow of temperate shallow lakes. 3. The ratio of carbon to chlorophyll a decreased with increasing temperature and enrichment in both epiphytes and seston. The effects of temperature were mainly attributed to changes in algal Chl a content, while the decrease with enrichment was probably a result of a higher proportion of algae in the seston and epiphytes. 4. Macrophytes, epiphytes and seston decreased their C : N with enrichment, probably as an adaptation to the different N availability levels. The C : N of epiphytes and Elodea canadensis decreased with increasing temperature in the control mesocosms. Sediment biofilm was the only primary producer with lower C : P and N : P with enrichment, probably as a result of higher P accumulation in the sediment. 5. Independently of nutrient level and increased temperature effects the four primary producers had significantly different stoichiometric compositions. Macrophytes had higher C : N and C : P and, together with epiphytes, also the highest N : P. Seston had no N or P limitation, while macrophytes and epiphytes may have been P limited in a few mesocosms. Sediment biofilm indicated strong N deficiency. 6. Consumers had strongly homeostatic stoichiometric compositions in comparison to primary producers, with weak or no significant treatment effects in any of the groups (insects, leeches, molluscs and crustaceans). Among consumers, predators had significantly higher N content and lower C : N than grazers. [source]


Mechanism of low CO2 -induced activation of the cmp bicarbonate transporter operon by a LysR family protein in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus strain PCC 7942

MOLECULAR MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 1 2008
Takashi Nishimura
Summary The cmp operon of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus strain PCC 7942, encoding the subunits of the ABC-type bicarbonate transporter, is activated under CO2 -limited growth conditions in a manner dependent on CmpR, a LysR family transcription factor of CbbR subfamily. The 0.7 kb long regulatory region of the operon carried a single promoter, which responded to CO2 limitation. Using the luxAB reporter system, three cis -acting elements involved in the low-CO2 activation of transcription, each consisting of a pair of LysR recognition signatures overlapping at their ends, were identified in the regulatory region. CmpR was shown to bind to the regulatory region, yielding several DNA,protein complexes in gel shift assays. Addition of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (> 1 mM) or 2-phosphoglycolate (> 10 ,M) enhanced the binding of CmpR in a concentration-dependent manner, promoting formation of large DNA,protein complexes. Given the involvement of O2 in adaptive responses of cyanobacteria to low-CO2 conditions, our results suggest that 2-phosphoglycolate, which is produced by oxygenation by ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate under CO2 -limited conditions, acts as the co-inducer in the activation of the cmp operon by CmpR. [source]


CO2 limitation induces specific redox-dependent protein phosphorylation in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii

PROTEINS: STRUCTURE, FUNCTION AND BIOINFORMATICS, Issue 9 2006
Maria V. Turkina
Abstract Acclimation of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii to limiting environmental CO2 induced specific protein phosphorylation at the surface of photosynthetic thylakoid membranes. Four phosphopeptides were identified and sequenced by nanospray quadrupole TOF MS from the cells acclimating to limiting CO2. One phosphopeptide originated from a protein that has not been annotated. We found that this unknown expressed protein (UEP) was encoded in the genome of C.,reinhardtii. Three other phosphorylated peptides belonged to Lci5 protein encoded by the low-CO2 -inducible gene,5 (lci5). The phosphorylation sites were mapped in the tandem repeats of Lci5 ensuring phosphorylation of four serine and three threonine residues in the protein. Immunoblotting with Lci5-specific antibodies revealed that Lci5 was localized in chloroplast and confined to the stromal side of the thylakoid membranes. Phosphorylation of Lci5 and UEP occurred strictly at limiting CO2; it required reduction of electron carriers in the thylakoid membrane, but was not induced by light. Both proteins were phosphorylated in the low-CO2 -exposed algal mutant deficient in the light-activated protein kinase,Stt7. Phosphorylation of previously unknown basic proteins UEP and Lci5 by specific redox-dependent protein kinase(s) in the photosynthetic membranes reveals the early response of green algae to limitation in the environmental inorganic carbon. [source]