Publication | Open Access
ELEMENTAL AND BIOCHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF <i>RHINOMONAS RETICULATA</i> (CRYPTOPHYTA) IN RELATION TO LIGHT AND NITRATE‐TO‐PHOSPHATE SUPPLY RATIOS<sup>1</sup>
28
Citations
37
References
2005
Year
EngineeringPhotobiologyLight IntensityReactive Nitrogen SpecieBioenergeticsGrowth RateMicrobial EcologyNutrient StoichiometryEnvironmental MicrobiologyInflow MediumPhotosynthesisBiochemistryPhotosystemsBiologyNutrient CycleMicrobiologyMetabolismMedicinePlant Physiology
The biochemical basis for variations in the critical nitrogen‐to‐phosphorus (N:P) ratio, which defines the transition between N‐ and P‐limitation of growth rate, is currently not well understood. To assess this issue, we cultured the cryptophyte Rhinomonas reticulata NOVARINO in chemostats with inflow nitrate‐to‐phosphate ratios ranging from 5 to 60 mol N·(mol P) −1 at two light intensities. The nitrate‐to‐phosphate ratio marking the transition between N‐ and P‐limitation was independent of light intensity and was between 30 and 45 mol N/mol P. In N‐limited cells, the particulate N:P ratio was stable at around 23 mol N/mol P over a range of inflow nitrate‐to‐phosphate from 5 to 30, whereas in P‐limited cells this ratio was around 90 mol N/mol P at inflow nitrate‐to‐phosphate ratios of 45 and 60. Cell phosphorus decreased with increasing nitrate‐to‐phosphate ratio up to the critical nitrate‐to‐phosphate ratio for each light intensity, above which they remained stable. The C:P of R. reticulata cells increased with increasing inflow nitrate‐to‐phosphate from around the Redfield value (106 mol C/mol P) to around 700. There was a significant effect of light on C:P in the N‐ limited cells, with higher C:P under high light conditions that was not observed in the P‐limited chemostats. Cellular RNA was not influenced by light but was greatly influenced by the type of nutrient limitation. In contrast, chl a , C, N, and protein were not influenced by the nitrate‐to‐phosphate in the inflow medium. Total protein per RNA was independent of light intensity but exhibited a maximum at inflow nitrate‐to‐phosphate of 30. Our results suggest a strong “two‐level” homeostatic mechanism of cellular N and P content in R. reticulata with two distinct states that are determined by the type of nutrient limitation and not by light.
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