4.6 Article

Phosphorus Feast and Famine in Cyanobacteria: Is Luxury Uptake of the Nutrient Just a Consequence of Acclimation to Its Shortage?

Journal

CELLS
Volume 9, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells9091933

Keywords

luxury uptake; cyanobacteria; polyphosphate; transcriptomics; ultrastructure rearrangements; phosphorus starvation

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Funding

  1. Russian Science Foundation [20-64-46018]
  2. Moscow State University Grant for Leading Scientific Schools Depository of the Living Systems
  3. Russian Science Foundation [20-64-46018] Funding Source: Russian Science Foundation

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To cope with fluctuating phosphorus (P) availability, cyanobacteria developed diverse acclimations, including luxury P uptake (LPU)-taking up P in excess of the current metabolic demand. LPU is underexplored, despite its importance for nutrient-driven rearrangements in aquatic ecosystems. We studied the LPU after the refeeding of P-deprived cyanobacterium Nostoc sp. PCC 7118 with inorganic phosphate (P-i), including the kinetics of P-i uptake, turnover of polyphosphate, cell ultrastructure, and gene expression. The P-deprived cells deployed acclimations to P shortage (reduction of photosynthetic apparatus and mobilization of cell P reserves). The P-starved cells capable of LPU exhibited a biphasic kinetic of the P-i uptake and polyphosphate formation. The first (fast) phase (1-2 h after P-i refeeding) occurred independently of light and temperature. It was accompanied by a transient accumulation of polyphosphate, still upregulated genes encoding high-affinity P-i transporters, and an ATP-dependent polyphosphate kinase. During the second (slow) phase, recovery from P starvation was accompanied by the downregulation of these genes. Our study revealed no specific acclimation to ample P conditions in Nostoc sp. PCC 7118. We conclude that the observed LPU phenomenon does not likely result from the activation of a mechanism specific for ample P conditions. On the contrary, it stems from slow disengagement of the low-P responses after the abrupt transition from low-P to ample P conditions.

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