| Literature DB >> 27588022 |
Hanan Schoffman1, Hagar Lis2, Yeala Shaked3, Nir Keren1.
Abstract
Iron limits photosynthetic activity in up to one third of the world's oceans and in many fresh water environments. When studying the effects of Fe limitation on phytoplankton or their adaptation to low Fe environments, we must take into account the numerous cellular processes within which this micronutrient plays a central role. Due to its flexible redox chemistry, Fe is indispensable in enzymatic catalysis and electron transfer reactions and is therefore closely linked to the acquisition, assimilation and utilization of essential resources. Iron limitation will therefore influence a wide range of metabolic pathways within phytoplankton, most prominently photosynthesis. In this review, we map out four well-studied interactions between Fe and essential resources: nitrogen, manganese, copper and light. Data was compiled from both field and laboratory studies to shed light on larger scale questions such as the connection between metabolic pathways and ambient iron levels and the biogeographical distribution of phytoplankton species.Entities:
Keywords: co-limitation; iron; limitation; manganese; nitrogen; nutrient; photosynthesis; phytoplankton
Year: 2016 PMID: 27588022 PMCID: PMC4989028 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2016.01223
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Tradeoffs and co-limitation scenarios for iron-nitrogen, manganese, copper, and light interactions.
| Resource | Description of interaction | Type of interaction/s with iron | Trade offs | Adaptations to low [Fe] | Co-limitation scenarios |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nitrogen | Photochemically produced reductive energy (NADPH) requires Fe based electron carriers. | Biochemical dependence | Ambient Fe concentrations constrain biogeographic distribution of diazotrophic/non-diazotrophic phytoplankton in accordance with their partitioning strategy. | Temporal partitioning of N2 fixations allows for smaller cells and Fe recycling. | While iron limitation lowers the efficiency of NO3 uptake, nitrogen demands of Fe-limited cells can still be fully met. |
| Manganese | Mn-SOD may replace Fe-SOD Transporter promiscuity – Mn may enter cell via specific Fe transporters. | Substitution | Mn-SOD compensates for decreased levels of Fe-SOD under limitation. | Mn concentrations in most natural waters are above limiting levels (see | |
| Copper | Plastocyanin is a Cu based electron carrier which may substitute for the Fe containing cytochrome | Substitution Biochemical dependence | Fe demands decreased but greater Cu demands of open ocean diatoms leave them more prone to Cu limitation. | Plastocyanin is constitutively expressed in open ocean diatoms in lieu of cytochrome | Ambient Cu concentrations are mostly sufficient (see |
| Light | Iron is essential to photosynthesis, the greatest cellular Fe sink. | Biochemical dependence | Species with lowered PSI:PSII and Cytochrome | Open ocean strains have less PSI and Cytochrome | Low iron waters at high latitudes. |