Coccoliths are calcitic particles produced inside the cells of unicellular marine algae known as coccolithophores. They are abundant components of sea-floor carbonates, and the stoichiometry of calcium to other elements in fossil coccoliths is widely used to infer past environmental conditions. Here we study cryo-preserved cells of the dominant coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi using state-of-the-art nanoscale imaging and spectroscopy. We identify a compartment, distinct from the coccolith-producing compartment, filled with high concentrations of a disordered form of calcium. Co-localized with calcium are high concentrations of phosphorus and minor concentrations of other cations. The amounts of calcium stored in this reservoir seem to be dynamic and at a certain stage the compartment is in direct contact with the coccolith-producing vesicle, suggesting an active role in coccolith formation. Our findings provide insights into calcium accumulation in this important calcifying organism.
Coccoliths are calcitic particles produced inside the cells of unicellular marine algae known as coccolithophores. They are abundant components of sea-floor carbonates, and the stoichiometry of calcium to other elements in fossil coccoliths is widely used to infer past environmental conditions. Here we study cryo-preserved cells of the dominant coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi using state-of-the-art nanoscale imaging and spectroscopy. We identify a compartment, distinct from the coccolith-producing compartment, filled with high concentrations of a disordered form of calcium. Co-localized with calcium are high concentrations of phosphorus and minor concentrations of other cations. The amounts of calcium stored in this reservoir seem to be dynamic and at a certain stage the compartment is in direct contact with the coccolith-producing vesicle, suggesting an active role in coccolith formation. Our findings provide insights into calciumaccumulation in this important calcifying organism.
Coccolithophorid algae, a key phytoplankton group in the oceans, form elaborate arrays of
minute calcite crystals known as coccoliths using Ca2+ and
HCO3− from the surrounding seawater1.
This biomineralization process is of immense importance for the global cycle of carbon
and other elements, as coccolithophore calcification sequesters massive deposits of
CaCO3 into sea-floor sediments23. Coccolith deposits are
widely used to infer past environmental conditions as environmental traces become
incorporated into coccolith calcite during its formation45. Despite the
widespread geoscientific importance of coccolithophore calcification, the cellular
pathways that supply coccolith formation with the ‘building blocks' and
control the elemental and isotopiccomposition of the final mineral remain unidentified.
Uncovering these pathways will not only provide a mechanistic framework for interpreting
compositional data but also the necessary foundation to address why and how coccolith
calcification will be affected by the projected ocean acidification and how this process
will adapt to new environmental conditions.In the bloom-forming species Emiliania huxleyi, which is the best studied and
dominant coccolithophore in modern oceans, coccolith formation proceeds inside an
intracellular membrane system termed as ‘coccolith vesicle–reticular
body'6. Coccoliths are formed one at a time, as fast as one per
hour, and require for an average coccolith, 22.5 fmol of Ca2+
to be transferred into the coccolith vesicle7. The prevailing notion for
coccolith calcite formation is that ions are transported through the cell to the site of
calcite formation89. However, the classical, water-based preparation
protocols used so far101112 undermined the possibility of identifying
highly soluble, amorphous Ca phases13 that, alternatively to ions, may be
transported to the mineralization site as was discovered for other biomineral-forming
organisms14.Here we investigated E. huxleyicells spectroscopically and microscopically using
preparation techniques that preserve soluble, amorphous Ca phases. Using a combination
of cryo-soft X-ray tomography and spectroscopy, and cryo-focused ion beam scanning
electron microscopy (FIB-SEM), we visualized and characterized a highly concentrated,
previously unidentified, pool of intracellular calcium and studied its corresponding
ultrastructural environment. We show, using elemental analysis and live-cell staining,
that polyphosphates and other elements, among them the paleomarker element Mg5, are co-localized with calcium, and present data that point to a possible
route how calcium and other elements could be transferred to the site of
mineralization.
Results
Speciation of intracellular calcium during coccolith formation
Our initial investigation of E. huxleyi for possible amorphous precursor
phases of coccolith calcite involved X-ray absorption near-edge structure
(XANES) spectroscopy. CryogenicXANES is uniquely suited to discriminate calcium
species in mixtures and played a pivotal role in the discovery of soluble
inorganic phases during the formation of crystalline biominerals1516. To follow intracellular Ca during the deposition of fresh
coccolith calcite, we raised ‘calcite-free' E. huxleyicells
(Supplementary Fig. 1),
induced calcite formation by adding Ca2+ to the medium and
cryo-preserved cells at 10-min intervals up to 30 min, which is when
calcite crystals of status nascendi coccoliths are detectable by
cross-polarized light microscopy (Supplementary Fig. 1b). The XANES spectrum of cells before induction
(0 min) had a small shoulder at 4,060 eV, which increased over
time and is indicative for calcite formation (Fig. 1a). We
fitted the spectra of the induced cells using linear combinations of several
reference spectra (Fig. 1b). The differences between the
different linear combinations were minor, even though the best fits were
obtained when using amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC) in addition to
CaCl2 solution and calcite (Fig. 1a; see
Supplementary Fig. 2a,b for
fits with other reference spectra). This suggests that yet unidentified
amorphous Ca phases are a significant fraction of intracellular calcium at all
time points (Fig. 1c).
Figure 1
Speciation of cellular calcium during the early stages of coccolith formation
in E. huxleyi.
(a) Time-resolved evolution of the XANES spectra (black) of cells
induced to form calcite and of the calculated fits (orange) using linear
combinations of three reference standards (coccolith calcite, free calcium
ions and amorphous CaCO3). (b) Ca K-edge XANES spectra of
calcium reference standards and of E. huxleyi cells enclosed by a
sphere of coccoliths (C cells). Free calcium ions were represented by
10 mM CaCl2 solution. The spectrum of amorphous calcium
phosphate is courtesy of Diane Eichert, Elettra synchrotron, Trieste,
Italy47. The spectrum of C cells showed the
characteristic feature of calcite and was used instead of synthetic calcite
for fitting the spectra of induced cells. (c) Relative contribution
of the calcium references to the three component fits shown in a.
X-ray imaging of calcium
To directly observe the putative amorphous Ca phases, we investigated
cryo-preserved E. huxleyicells using synchrotron soft X-ray tomography
and spectromicroscopy. The minimal sample preparation procedure, consisting only
of dissolving extracellular coccoliths and vitrification of cells after de
novo coccolith formation had started, allowed the visualization of the
internal organization of the cells during coccolith production in a yet
unprecedented close-to-native state. Reconstruction of tilt-series images taken
at an X-ray energy of 520 eV yielded three-dimensional (3D) data with a
calculated spatial resolution of 52 nm, half pitch. At this energy,
C-rich and Ca-rich moieties are more absorptive than aqueous solutions and
therefore concentrated organic and inorganic matter appear dark, whereas the
cytosol appears bright1718. The tomograms revealed
intracellular bodies with highly absorbing material, similar to the calcite of
coccoliths, which were always spatially separated from the coccolith in statu
nascendi (Fig. 2a). We probed the Ca content of
these bodies by imaging cells at 342 eV, which is below the Ca
L2,3-edge where calcium is virtually transparent, and at
353.2 eV, which is above the Ca absorption edge19. The
difference images of the two energies revealed a distinct Ca-rich body in
addition to a forming coccolith in the cells (Fig. 2b). To
characterize the Ca phase of the bodies, we acquired spatially resolved Ca
L2,3-edge XANES spectra by sequentially imaging the same field of
view and varying the energy across the Ca L2,3-edge. Averaged spectra
extracted from coccoliths in statu nascendi showed the characteristic
spectrum of calcite (Fig. 2c). For reason explained below,
we also acquired Ca L2,3-edge XANES spectra from synthetic, poorly
crystalline calcium phosphate (Fig. 2c). The averaged
spectra extracted from the Ca-rich bodies lacked significant peaks at the energy
of the calcite crystal field peaks (at 347.9 and 351.3 eV) or the
hydroxyapatitecrystal field peaks (at 348.1 and 351.5 eV), suggesting
that the body contains an amorphous calcium phase19202122.
On the basis of the absorbance intensity at the Ca edge, which is proportional
to the Ca content in the beam path and the volume of the Ca-rich body, the
average calciumconcentration in the body was determined to be
∼13.4±2.3 M.
Figure 2
Cryo-X-ray imaging reveals concentrated calcium pools in E. huxleyi
cells.
(a) Two-dimensional slices from a reconstructed X-ray tomogram with
(top) an immature coccolith marked by the arrowhead and a calcium-rich body
marked by the arrow, and (bottom) with 3D segmentation of the calcium-rich
bodies (red) and intracellular coccoliths (blue). (b) X-ray images
recorded at an energy below the Ca L2,3-egde (342 eV), at
the edge energy (353.2 eV) and the grey value difference between both
images. (c) Averaged XANES spectra of the Ca L2,3-edge.
For each spectrum, data from the relevant pixels of four cells were
averaged; the inset shows the exact locations in one of these cells. Notice
the difference in the position of the crystal field peak (vertical lines)
between coccolith calcite and synthetic calcium phosphate. Figure is
accompanied by Supplementary Movie
1.
3D ultrastructure of calcifying cells
To elucidate the ultrastructural environment of the Ca-rich body at higher
resolution, we imaged cryo-fixed cells by serial FIB milling and block face SEM
at cryo-condition using a Zeiss Auriga60 FIB-SEM23. In the energy
selective backscattered (EsB) electron images, the Ca-rich bodies and coccoliths
in statu nascendi were easily identifiable due to their calcite-like
contrast (Fig. 3b,d). Image analysis, using coccolith
calcite (calciumconcentration is 27 M) and culture medium (calciumconcentration is 10 mM) as Ca reference concentrations, yielded a
concentration of 10 M Ca for the body, which is in range of the
concentration determined from our X-ray tomography data set. In the in-lens
secondary electron images, membrane-bound compartments were clearly visible
(Fig. 3a,c). Most interestingly, a membrane was found
in close proximity with the Ca-rich body, visible as thin dark line (Fig. 3c,e). Manual segmentation of this membrane in the
image stacks revealed it to encompass the Ca-rich body, forming a compartment
(Fig. 3f). Careful inspection of all images in the
stacks found no connection between this compartment and the coccolith
vesicle–reticular body system or any other visible endomembrane system.
Noteworthy, the compartment was always larger than the enclosed Ca-rich body and
the largest compartment had a volume of 1.5 μm3. If
the largest compartment would be filled entirely with calcium at a concentration
of 10 M, as in the Ca-rich body, it would store 15 fmol Ca, which
is about two-third of the Ca required for a full coccolith.
Figure 3
Cryo-FIB-SEM imaging of vitrified E. huxleyi reveals coccolith calcite
and calcium-rich bodies in separate compartments.
(a–d) Two slices from the same cell acquired with in-lens
secondary electron detector (a,c) and energy selective
backscattered electron detector (b,c) showing a
cross-sectioned coccolith in statu nascendi (blue), the Ca-rich body
(red), the coccolith vesicle (CV)–reticular body system (RB), the
nucleus (N) and the chloroplast (Chl). Additional organelles are visible in
the secondary electron images as is shown in Supplementary Fig. 3. (e)
Oversampled and contrast-enhanced magnification of the area framed in
c, illustrating the membrane that encloses the Ca-rich body
(arrows). (f) 3D reconstruction of an E. huxleyi cell from a
cryo-FIB-SEM image series, showing the nucleus (violet), chloroplast (dark
green), plasma membrane (light green), a coccolith in statu nascendi
(blue), Ca-rich bodies (red) and the membranes encompassing Ca-rich bodies
(orange). Figure is accompanied by Supplementary Video 2.
Compositional characterization of the Ca-rich body
We investigated the thin sections of high-pressure frozen, cryo-substituted and
resin-embedded E. huxleyicells using high-angle annular dark-field
scanning transmission electron microscopy (HAADF-STEM) and analysed the
elemental composition by energy-dispersive X-ray (EDX) spectroscopy and electron
energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) at positions of interest. HAADF-STEM is suited
for the imaging of the non-stained thin sections, as the image contrast is
related to the atomic number of the elements in the beam path24.
Calcium appears therefore brighter than biomolecules. We observed electron-dense
Ca-rich bodies in the thin sections collected in ethylene glycol (Fig. 4a) but not in the sections collected in water. The dissolution
of the bodies in water was accompanied by the dissolution of the coccolith
calcite crystals, leaving an impression in the embedding resin. The same has
been noticed previously by others12. The use of water for
collecting the thin sections may therefore be the reason why the Ca-rich body
was not observed in previous cytological studies in which occasionally a
spacious intracellular compartment was observed but designated as
chrysolaminarin vesicle10 or vacuole25 due to its
highly electron transparent content, which most likely dissolved during sample
preparation and could have been the Ca-rich body. When imaging the body at high
magnification, no lattice fringes were observed, supporting our X-ray
spectroscopy conclusion that the Ca in the body is in an amorphous phase (Fig. 4b). The carbon K-edge EELS spectra of the Ca-rich body
was distinct from both coccolith calcite and the embedding resin, suggesting
that the body does not contain significant amounts of calcium carbonate (Fig. 4c). Interestingly, the spectrum of the body showed a
small peak at 288.2 eV, which has been previously associated with amidecarbonyl bonds and suggests the presence of proteins26. To our
surprise, the EDX analysis revealed the Ca-rich bodies to contain very high
amounts of P in addition to Ca and minor amounts of other elements (Fig. 4d). Among these elements was magnesium, an important
trace element in coccolith calcite, whose amount relative to calcium is used to
infer past climaticconditions5. The excess of P over Ca in the
Ca-rich body (Supplementary Table
1) suggests that Ca is bound by phosphate-rich macromolecules. Because
the amount of P exceeds the amount of carbon, the most plausible candidates are
not phosphorylated biomolecules but rather polyphosphates, which have been
proposed to play a role in CaCO3 biomineralization27
and were discovered already in the non-calcifying relative of E. huxleyi,
Pavlova ennorea sp. nov.28. In E. huxleyipolyphosphates may be synthesized by the enzyme polyphosphate polymerase (JGI
ID406855)29.
Figure 4
Ultrastructural and elemental microanalysis of the calcium-rich body.
(a) HAADF-STEM image of a thin-sectioned cell showing the nucleus (N),
the chloroplast (Chl), the coccolith vesicle (CV)–reticular body
system (RB) (encircled by the white line), coccolith calcite (blue
arrowhead) and the Ca-rich body (red arrow). Additional organelles that are
visible in the HAADF-STEM images are shown in Supplementary Fig. 4. (b)
High-resolution images and corresponding Fourier-transformed image of
coccolith calcite and the Ca-rich body. (c) STEM-EELS spectra
measured at the carbon K-edge on the Ca-rich body, coccolith calcite and
embedding resin. (d) STEM-EDX spectra of the Ca-rich body and
coccolith calcite.
We tested our polyphosphate hypothesis by live-cell confocal fluorescence
microscopy using the fluorescent dye 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI),
which has been widely used to stain polyphosphates30, and the
membrane-permeable calcium stain calcein-AM. The co-localized fluorescence
signals from both the dyes in a compartment distinct from the nucleus and the
coccolith vesicle–reticular body system (Fig. 5) are
consistent with our EDX results that strongly suggest that polyphosphate is
complexing Ca in the Ca-rich compartment.
Figure 5
Confocal fluorescence microscopy images of live E. huxleyi.
Cells were dual-stained with DAPI and the membrane-permeable calcium stain
calcein-AM. The emitted fluorescence in the wavelength window between 420
and 450 nm originates from DAPI–DNA and
DAPI–polyphosphate complexes, whereas the emission between 500 and
550 nm originates from DAPI bound to polyphosphate. The red channel
shows the auto-fluorescence of chlorophyll.
Variability of the Ca-rich body
The relatively low degree of synchronization between the cells of the same
culture enabled the observation of variation in the appearance of the Ca-rich
body. In the cryo-FIB-SEM images of some cells, a second phase with contrast
intermediate between the cytoplasm and the Ca-rich body was observed, which is
most likely also Ca but at a concentration lower than in the body (Fig. 6a–c). Assigning this second phase to be a more
diluted, Ca pool is supported by a similar observation that was made in the
cryo-soft-X-ray images, where some Ca-rich bodies were surrounded by a scattered
cloud of low concentrations of calcium (Fig. 2a). Using
coccolith calcite and culture medium as Ca reference concentrations, we
calculated the average Ca concentration for several ‘clouds' to be
between 1 and 2 M. In accordance with these observations, we also saw in
thin-sectioned cells a large compartment filled with diluted concentrations of
Ca and P (Fig. 6d). The membranes delimiting the low
concentrated Ca pools were seen in close contact with the coccolith
vesicle–reticular body system (Fig. 6c,d). This
configuration may allow the direct transfer of Ca and other trace elements found
in coccolith calcite from the storage compartment into the coccolith
vesicle.
Figure 6
Cells without Ca-rich body contained a compartment filled with diluted
concentrations of calcium and phosphorus.
(a–e) Slices from cryo-FIB-SEM image series of
high-pressure frozen E. huxleyi cells imaged in secondary electron
mode (a,c,e) and backscattered electron mode
(b,d), showing coccolith calcite (blue arrowhead), the
dense Ca–P-rich body (red arrow) and a pool of diluted concentrations
of Ca (orange arrow, framed orange in e) in close contact. The white
line in e frames the coccolith vesicle–reticular body system.
(f) HAADF-STEM image of a thin-sectioned cell showing the nucleus
(N), the chloroplast (Chl), coccolith calcite (blue arrowhead), the
coccolith vesicle–reticular body system (framed white) and the
vacuole-like compartment containing Ca and P (framed orange). (g) EDX
spectra taken from inside the compartment framed orange in f and of
cytosol. The epoxy resin contributes to the C peak and therefore the C
signal does not represent in vivo concentrations.
Discussion
Our results show that E. huxleyicells concentrate large amounts of Ca into a
dense disordered phase in a vacuole-like compartment. Such a major internal store
must be a dominant player in the cellular Ca budget and will have a pivotal role in
the subcellular partitioning and allocation of Ca. The Ca phase stored in the
here-discovered compartment is likely not a direct precursor phase of coccolith
calcite, as (i) the Ca-rich body was never seen in direct contact with status
nascendi coccoliths, (ii) Ca and P were not detectable in the lumen of the
coccolith vesicle–reticular body system and the coccolith calcite is virtually
free of P, and (iii) the calcein stain was never observed in the coccolith
vesicle–reticular body system or coccolith calcite, ruling out the possibility
of bulk transport from the Ca reservoir to the coccolith vesicle. The latter
observation is in contrast to the situation in many other calcifying organisms where
exogenously applied calcein becomes incorporated in the mineralized material143132. Considering all the above-reported observations, the most
plausible Ca transfer scenario is that Ca ions are released from their complex with
polyphosphate, likely by enzymatic degradation of the polyphosphate and/or
acidification of the compartment, and these are transported by Ca transporter and/or
passive diffusion into the coccolith vesicle–reticular body system (Fig. 7). The large membrane surface of the reticular body has
been suggested to accommodate large numbers of calcium transporters33. The direct contact between the membranes of both compartment systems (Fig. 6c,d), and in particular between the Ca store and the
reticular body, may be advantageous as it may enable direct transfer of Ca and so
bypass the cytosol where a high concentration of calcium ions could be toxic.
Figure 7
Conceptual model of the coccolith calcium pathway.
Ca accumulation and calcite precipitation are spatially and temporally
separated. Calcium uptake into cells involves Ca transporter. The Ca ions
are concentrated by polyphosphates into a disordered phase in a compartment
distinct from the coccolith vesicle–reticular body system. The
disordered Ca phase is a dynamic reservoir, concentrating and dispatching Ca
ions. The released Ca ions are possibly transferred into the coccolith
vesicle–reticular body system by Ca transporter and/or passive
diffusion driven by a high-concentration gradient in free Ca ions. Inside
the coccolith vesicle the calcium is precipitated as calcite.
Ca–P-rich intracellular compartments have been reported also in multicellular
CaCO3 mineralizing organisms3435, but experimental
challenges and the inherent complexity of these organisms have so far limited
mechanistic investigation into their role in the mineral formation pathway. As
simple unicellular organisms, E. huxleyi and other coccolithophores are
attractive models for investigations on the cellular calcium budget and its use in
CaCO3 biomineralization. The here-discovered component of the
intracellular Ca pathway in E. huxleyi offers a new entry point into
investigating the mechanistic details underlying coccolith formation and the
incorporation of trace metals into coccolith calcite. The challenge ahead is to
decipher the biochemical and mineralogical mechanisms underlying the formation of
the Ca–P-rich phase and the reorganization of this phase in relation to the
formation of calcite. Interestingly, the here-described Ca–P-rich compartment
shares several characteristics with acidocalcisomes of non-calcifying organisms36. This makes it tempting to speculate that both the compartments are
evolutionary linked. Further studies are, however, required to address this
hypothesis.E. huxleyi is known to thrive in waterscontaining low amounts of P, where
other phytoplankton cannot survive37. The high P content of the
Ca-rich body points to link between phosphate metabolism and calcification in E.
huxleyi and may suggest that calcification is of functional significance for
the ecological success of E. huxleyi.Our findings for E. huxleyi raise the question how widespread this Ca pathway
is in coccolithophores. Earlier studies revealed that in the species
Pleurochrysis carterae, a significant amount of the calcium for synthesis
of a coccolith is transported through the endomembrane system by acidicpolysaccharide–Ca complexes termed coccolithosomes38. However,
coccolithosomes have never been observed outside the genus Pleurochrysis,
demonstrating that different Ca transport pathways evolved in coccolithophores.The insights emerging from our study may bring the widespread interpretation of
coccolith composition as proxy for seawaterchemistry5 into a
mechanistic framework and help understanding why and how calcification in
coccolithophores will be affected by future climaticchanges439,
which in turn is key for developing predictive models of the future of calcification
and the corresponding impact on climate.
Methods
Algal cultivation and induction of coccolith formation
Emiliania huxleyi strain AWI1516 (Alfred Wegner Institute), which produces
coccoliths, was grown in artificial seawater medium Aquil, prepared according to
the recipe of the National Center for Marine Algae and Microbiota, at
18 °C and a 12/12-h light/dark cycle. The concentration of nitrate in
the medium was 0.2 mM and of phosphate 10 μM. The standard
medium contained 10 mM CaCl2. Cells devoid of extracellular
coccoliths were obtained by adding 1/50 volume of 0.5 M EDTA pH 8.0 to
cultures and subsequent washing with fresh medium. This treatment dissolved
extracellular calcite, but the calcite of coccoliths in statu nascendi
(intracellular) remained undissolved. Cultures virtually free of coccolith
calcite were obtained by repeated cultivation of EDTA-decalcified cells in
modified artificial seawater medium, which contained 100 μM
CaCl2. At 100 μM Ca2+, cells
continued to divide, whereas coccolith formation was ceased (Supplementary Fig. 1). Calcite induction
experiments were performed on calcite-free, logarithmic phase cells, 2 h
after the start of the light phase. Coccolith formation was induced by the
addition of CaCl2 to a final concentration of 10 mM. Algal
cell density was measured using a Beckman Coulter Z2 particle counter.
Light microscopy
Light microscopy was performed on an Olympus BX-51 light microscope equipped with
differential interference contrast and cross-polarization optics. Confocal
fluorescence microscopy was performed using an inverted laser scanning
microscope (SP5, Leica, Germany) equipped with a × 63 water immersion
objective (HCX PL APO CS, × 63.0, numerical aperture 1.20, Leica).
Calcein-AM and chlorophyll were excited using the 488-nm line of an argon ion
laser and fluorescence was recorded by photomultiplier detectors between 500 and
550 nm, and 600 and 650 nm, respectively. DAPI was imaged by
two-photon excitation provided by a pulsed Ti:S laser tuned at
740 nm. The fluorescence from DAPI was recorded by photomultiplier
detectors between 420–450 nm and 500–550 nm. Emission
in the window 500–550 nm has been associated with
DAPI–polyphosphatecomplexes27. Staining with DAPI and
calcein-AM was achieved by incubating the cultures overnight with 7 and
5 μM, respectively.
Synchrotron-based XANES
The ACC standard was prepared by adding 1/25 volume of 1 M
CaCl2 solution to 40 mM Na2CO3
solution at room temperature. The precipitates were collected by fast vacuum
filtering, dehydrated and washed with ethanol, and stored in a vacuum
desiccator. Calcite was prepared by adding 1/50 volume of 5 M
CaCl2 solution to 100 mM Na2CO3
solution. The solution was stirred for 24 h at room temperature. Calcite
crystals were collected by centrifugation at 3,000g for 5 min,
washed three times with 50 mM NH4HCO3 solutions and
lyophilized. Culture aliquots before and after induction of coccolith formation
were collected by centrifugation for 5 min at 4 °C. Cell
pellets were washed twice with 0.7 M sorbitol (second time containing
10% dimethylsulphoxide) to remove extracellular calcium. The supernatant
was poured off and the pellet was resuspended in the remaining solution. Cell
suspensions were loaded into the wells (diameter 4 mm, depth 1 mm)
of custom-made Cu holders, snap-frozen and stored in liquid N2. The
XANES spectra of the Ca K-edge were acquired at the LUCIA beamline at the SOLEIL
Synchrotron Light Source (Saint-Aubin, France) by scanning the X-ray beam energy
from 4,000 to 4,080 eV in 1.0 eV steps before the pre-edge and
0.2 eV steps after the pre-edge. All samples were measured under vacuum
and at cryo-conditions. The synchrotron ring energy was 2.75 GeV and the
current was up to 400 mA. The X-ray energy was selected by a
double-crystal Si(111) monochromator, which was calibrated using Ti foil and
setting the edge at 4,966 eV. The beam size on the sample was ∼1.5
× 1.5 mm2. Spectra of algal samples and
CaCl2 solutions were collected on snap-frozen material, whereas
the spectra for ACC and calcite were collected from powdered samples mounted on
sticky tape. To improve the signal-to-noise ratios, all spectra were based on an
average of three to five scans. Baseline subtraction, normalization, and data
processing and analysis were performed using the Athena software package40. The edge was taken as the maximum of the third peak of the
first derivative of the XANES data. Normalization was performed using a linear
pre-edge function between 25 and 13 eV below Eo and a
quadratic polynomial for the post-edge between 26 and 90 eV above
E0. Linear combination fitting was performed on all cell
spectra using three calcium standards, 10 mM CaCl2, ACC and
coccolith-bearing cells, Ccells, whose spectrum was identical to crystalline
calcite. The 10 mM CaCl2 solution represented free calcium
ions.
Cryo-FIB milling and SEM imaging (cryo-FIB-SEM)
E. huxleyicells were collected by centrifugation, high-pressure frozen in
a Leica HPM 100 apparatus using type-B sample holders (Ted Pella Inc., USA) and
stored in liquid N2. Mounting and sputter coating, and cryo-FIB-SEM
imaging were performed as described previously23. At liquid
N2 temperature, the samples were mounted on a cryo-sample holder
and transferred to the Leica SCD500 cryo-sputter coater, using the VCT100
cryo-transfer shuttle system (Leica Microsystems, Austria). The samples were
sputter coated with a 6-nm platinum layer at
0.06 nm s−1 and then transferred to the
Zeiss Auriga60 FIB SEM microscope (Carl Zeiss Microscopy GmbH, Germany), using
the VCT100 shuttle system. Inside the microscope, a viewing channel for SEM
imaging was directly milled into the sample surface using the 16-nA FIB current
at 30 kV acceleration voltage (16-nA FIB probe at 30 kV). This
initial coarse cross-section was fine polished using the 2-nA FIB probe at
30 kV. In a fully automated process, data cubes of serial SEM images were
acquired. In a serial manner, a thin slice of material was removed by FIB
milling followed by SEM imaging of the freshly exposed block face. For FIB
slicing, the 240-pA FIB probe at 30 kV was used. After each milling step
(step thickness 15 nm), the specimen was imaged by SEM at 2.53 kV
acceleration voltage using the 10-μm aperture. For each slice secondary
electron and backscattered electron images were acquired simultaneously using
the in-lens secondary electron and the EsB detector (EsB grid 1,500 V).
The image resolution was 2,048 × 1,536 pixels, lateral image pixel size
was 5 nm and the slice thickness was 15 nm. Images were recorded
using line averaging (N=51) and a dwell time of 200 ns. The
cycle time for recording an individual image was 36.1 s. The milling time
for removing each slice was 13.4 s. The image series used to reconstruct
the cell shown in Fig. 2d consisted of 200 individual
slices, representing a volume of 10.2 × 7.6 × 3 μm.
Throughout the preparation and data acquisition process, the temperature was
never higher than −150 °C. Image processing and segmentation of
data cubes were performed as follows: secondary electron images were Fourier
filtered to remove the vertical stripes arising from the water fall effect by
FIB milling and aligned automatically with the ‘Linear Stack Alignment
with SIFT' plugin of ImageJ (http://rsbweb.nih.gov/ij/index.html), allowing only for
translations. The same translation applied to each image of the secondary
electron stack was then applied to the corresponding image of the EsB stack.
Segmentation of structures of interest was performed using Amira 3D (FEI, USA).
Organelles were segmented manually from secondary electron image stacks using
the lasso tool. The Ca-rich bodies were segmented automatically from EsB image
stacks using the Magic Wand tool. Surfaces were generated from segmented
structures and smoothed. The MaterialStatistic module was used to calculate
volumes and average grey scale intensities (EsB image stack only) of segmented
structures. The grey scale intensities in the EsB image stacks were used for the
quantification of calcium within the Ca-rich bodies. The grey scale intensities
were calibrated against the backscattered coefficient (η) of
materials with known composition (internal standards). The calibration line was
used to estimate η at positions of interest. From η, the
concentration of calcium was retrieved. In detail, lipid bodies, artificial
seawater medium and external coccoliths were used as internal standards. The
effective backscattered coefficient for every internal standard,
ηeff, was estimated using the mixture rule:
ηeff=∑ηi ×
c, where c is the weight
fraction of the ith atom and η the
corresponding atomic backscattered coefficient. η
was calculated for each atom using the empirical Heinrich's formula under
the assumption that η for low atomic weight elements (Z<20)
does not change significantly with the primary beam energy41.
Mass weight fractions for every atom (that is, the ccoefficients) were calculated under the assumption that (1) lipid bodies are
constituted of linear hydrocarbons (largely CH2), (2) the
c's of the extracellular solution are
known from the composition of the seawater medium, (3) external coccoliths are
made of pure calcite. From the calibration line (EsB intensity versus
ηeff), the effective backscattered coefficient for the
Ca-rich body was derived and, assuming that the Ca-rich body is a concentrated
solution of electrolytes with a Ca:P atomic ratio of 1:2 (Supplementary table 1), the mass fraction of
calcium ions was calculated. From this, the molarity of calcium inside the
Ca-rich bodies was approximated by
1/ρs=cw/ρw+∑c/ρ,
where cw and ρw are the weight fractions
and the density of water, respectively, and c is the
weight fractions of the electrolytes and ρ their
densities calculated from their atomic radii.
Analytical scanning transmission electron microscopy
Cells were high-pressure frozen with 1-hexadecane (Sigma-Aldrich) as
cryoprotectant and freeze-substituted with 2% (w/v) osmium tetroxide
(Electron Microscopy Sciences) and 8% (v/v) 2,2-dimethoxypropane
(Sigma-Aldrich) in acetone for 5 days at −85 °C. Samples were
warmed-up to room temperature over 2 days and embedded in Spurr's resin
over 4 days. Resulting resin blocks were sectioned to ∼130 nm using a
Leica UC-6 microtome. Thin sections were collected in pre-cooled ethylene glycol
and mounted on copper grids. Dark-field electron imaging, EELS and EDX
spectroscopy were performed on a Tecnai G2 F20 X-Twin microscope equipped with a
field-emission electron source (operated at 200 kV), a Fishione HAADF
detector at 330 mm camera length (diffraction contrast+Z contrast)
for image acquisition in the STEM mode, a Gatan Tridiem imaging filter for
acquisition of energy-filtered images and an EDAX Genesis X-ray analyser.
Soft X-ray cryo-tomography and spectromicroscopy
Cells were EDTA-decalcified and allowed to resume coccolith formation in normal
medium for 3 h before collection by centrifugation. Cells in 3-μl
medium and 1 μl of a 100-nm latex bead solution (2.5%,
Sigma-Aldrich) were placed together on top of Quantifoil R 2/2 holey film copper
transmission electron microscopy grids (Quantifoil, Germany). The beads served
as fiducial markers for the tomographic reconstruction. The sample was placed in
a humidified chamber, manually blotted and plunge-frozen in liquid ethane using
a Cryoplunge 3 system (Gatan Inc., USA). The frozen samples were kept at
cryogenicconditions throughout shipment, mounting and imaging. Hydroxyapatite
was synthesized by mixing 0.1 M CaCl2 solution with
0.1 M Na2HPO4 solution in a similar protocol to the
synthesis of the calcium carbonate samples for XANES analysis. X-ray imaging was
performed at the MISTRAL beamline (ALBA Synchrotron, Barcelona, Spain)4243. Initially, a tilt series at 520 eV X-ray energy was
collected to allow a 3D volume reconstruction of cells and their internal
structures. At this energy, carbon-rich, as well as Ca-rich, molecules have an
intense contrast against the water-rich cytoplasm. The tilt series consisted of
121–131 images taken at 1° degree intervals. Exposure time was
1–2 s to maximize signal-to-noise level and minimize radiation
damage. The data sets were acquired using a zone plate objective lens with an
outermost zone width of Δrn=40 nm. The
effective pixel size in the images was 11.8 nm. The projection images
were normalized using flat-field images of 1-s exposure (incoming flux delivered
by the capillary condenser lens) and corrected for changes in the electron beam
current. Alignment and reconstruction of the tilt series were carried out with
IMOD44. For tomogram reconstruction, the simultaneous
iterative reconstruction technique45 was used. The resolution of
the tomograms was calculated by the fourier shell correlation
(FSCe/o) criterion46 using a threshold of 0.25. The
visualization and segmentation of the final volumes were carried out using the
software Amira 3D (FEI, USA). Energy scan series around the Ca
L2,3-edge followed the tilt series. In an energy scan, the same field
of view was repeatedly imaged under changing X-ray energies starting at
347.7 eV and going up to 354.7 eV in 0.15 eV steps, which
is approximately half the energy resolution of the beamline for the used slits
configuration. The objective zone plate lens and the charge-coupled device
detector positions were automatically adjusted to maintain focus and constant
magnification. Intracellular coccoliths were used as internal standard for the
calibration of the absolute value of the energy. The extraction of a XANES
spectrum for a specific area in the image was carried out by plotting the
averaged intensity of pixels in this area, as a function of the energy at which
the image was taken. First, the images of the different energies were aligned.
For the spectrum of intracellular coccoliths, all pixels being part of a
coccolith were manually marked in four cells and the intensity value plotted
corresponded to the averaged intensity of all pixels. Analogously, the spectrum
of Ca-rich bodies and the cytoplasm were obtained. Calcium localization in the
samples was carried out by subtracting an image taken at 342 eV (before
the Ca L-edge) from an image taken at 353.2 eV (at the peak of the second
white line of the Ca L-edge). The contrast in the difference image is dominated
by areas containing substantial Ca content. To exclude a possible radiation
damage that can affect the spectroscopic features of the Ca atoms, a second
energy scan was conducted after the first one. The identical spectra in both the
scans confirmed that the irradiation did not affect the Ca local structure. The
combination of Ca absorption at a specific location and the 3D data on the
geometry of the Ca-rich bodies enabled the estimation of Ca concentration from
the acquired data. The pixel intensities in the difference images, acquired
using energy-resolved X-ray microscopy, give a semi-quantitative estimation of
the content of Ca atoms in the X-ray path through this location. To estimate the
concentration from the amount of calcium present in the X-ray path, the length
of the Ca-rich volume at the relevant orientation was measured in the 3D
reconstructed data. Intracellular coccoliths were used as internal standards to
calibrate the Ca concentration in calcite which is 27 M. On four cells,
the Ca concentration of calcite was measured with 13.7% s.d.
Additional information
How to cite this article: Sviben, S. et al. A vacuole-like compartment
concentrates a disordered calcium phase in a key coccolithophorid alga. Nat.
Commun. 7:11228 doi: 10.1038/ncomms11228 (2016).
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