Publication | Closed Access
Extracellular DNA Plays a Key Role in Deep-Sea Ecosystem Functioning
377
Citations
6
References
2005
Year
EutrophicationEngineeringDeep-sea EcologyMarine ChemistryOrganic PhosphorusOceanographyMarine EnvironmentOrganic GeochemistryExtracellular Dna AccountsMicrobial EcologyBiological OceanographyNutrient StoichiometryBiogeochemistryDna ReplicationMarine BiotaBiologyNatural SciencesMarine BiologyExtracellular DnaDeep Sea
The ecological role and biogeochemical relevance of extracellular DNA in the oceanic sediments are unknown. Our global estimates indicate that up to 0.45 gigatons of extracellular DNA are present in the top 10 centimeters of deep-sea sediments, representing the largest reservoir of DNA in the world oceans. We demonstrate that extracellular DNA accounts for about one fifth of the total organic phosphorus regeneration and provides almost half of the prokaryotic demand for organic phosphorus. It therefore plays a key role in deep-sea ecosystem functioning on a global scale.
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