| Literature DB >> 30538685 |
Marco Giardina1, Soshan Cheong2, Christopher E Marjo2, Peta L Clode3,4,5, Paul Guagliardo3, Russell Pickford6, Mathieu Pernice1, Justin R Seymour1, Jean-Baptiste Raina1.
Abstract
Microorganisms drive most of the major biogeochemical cycles in the ocean, but the rates at which individual species assimilate and transform key elements is generally poorly quantified. One of these important elements is nitrogen, with its availability limiting primary production across a large proportion of the ocean. Nitrogen uptake by marine microbes is typically quantified using bulk-scale approaches, such as Elemental Analyzer-Isotope Ratio Mass Spectrometry (EA-IRMS), which averages uptake over entire communities, masking microbial heterogeneity. However, more recent techniques, such as secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS), allow for elucidation of assimilation rates at the scale at which they occur: the single-cell level. Here, we combine and compare the application of bulk (EA-IRMS) and single-cell approaches (NanoSIMS and Time-of-Flight-SIMS) for quantifying the assimilation of inorganic nitrogen by the ubiquitous marine primary producer Synechococcus. We aimed to contrast the advantages and disadvantages of these techniques and showcase their complementarity. Our results show that the average assimilation of 15N by Synechococcus differed based on the technique used: values derived from EA-IRMS were consistently higher than those derived from SIMS, likely due to a combination of previously reported systematic depletion as well as differences in sample preparation. However, single-cell approaches offered additional layers of information, whereby NanoSIMS allowed for the quantification of the metabolic heterogeneity among individual cells and ToF-SIMS enabled identification of nitrogen assimilation into peptides. We suggest that this coupling of stable isotope-based approaches has great potential to elucidate the metabolic capacity and heterogeneity of microbial cells in natural environments.Entities:
Keywords: EA-IRMS; NanoSIMS; Synechococcus; ToF-SIMS; metabolic heterogeneity; nitrogen; single cell
Year: 2018 PMID: 30538685 PMCID: PMC6277480 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2018.02847
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
FIGURE 115N assimilation by Synechococcus sp. between (A) EA-IRMS (purple), ToF-SIMS (red), and NanoSIMS (green). Asterisk denote significant differences between ToF-SIMS and NanoSIMS (see Supplementary Table 1). Relationship between different 15N measurement (in Atom%) performed with (B) EA-IRMS and NanoSIMS, (C) EA-IRMS and ToF-SIMS and (D) NanoSIMS and ToF-SIMS. All slopes differed significantly from 0 (ANOVA, p < 0.05). All measurements were carried out on different samples collected from the same culture flask (n = 1 biological replicate). Error bars: standard deviation of three technical replicates measured with EA-IRMS (technical replicates) and single cells measured with NanoSIMS and ToF-SIMS. For number of replicates refer to Supplementary Table 2.
FIGURE 2Quantification of 15N uptake by Synechococcus cells through time at single-cell level using NanoSIMS. (A) Box plot showing an increase in single-cell heterogeneity (lower and upper hinges correspond to the 25th and 75th percentiles) as well as the Fano factor (ratio of sample variance to sample mean; indicated in the figure by gray dots) which measures the heterogeneity of the 15N assimilation. Representative NanoSIMS images showing the distribution of 15N/14N ratio after (B) 15 min, (C) 30 min, (D) 1 h, (E) 2 h, (F) 4 h, and (G) 6 h. Scale bar: 1 μm. Note: the scale of the images increase from (B–G) to highlight the cellular heterogeneity: blue represent natural 15N atom fraction and magenta represent the third quartile of each respective data point. For number of analyzed cells refer to Supplementary Table 2. All measurements were carried out on a sample taken from the same culture flask (n = 1 biological replicate).
FIGURE 3Detection of 15N incorporation into peptides by quantifying C3N- and CNO- in Synechococcus cells with ToF-SIMS. Note: deconvolution of neighboring peaks (13C12C214N and 13C14N16O), resulted in erroneously offset values (by approximately 4 Atom% throughout the time series; shaded gray area). Error bars: standard deviation of single cell measurements. For number of replicates refer to Supplementary Table 2. All measurements were carried out on a sample taken from the same culture flask (n = 1 biological replicate).