Collaborative Research: Investigating the Ecological Importance of Iron Storage in Diatoms
合作研究:调查硅藻铁储存的生态重要性
基本信息
- 批准号:1334935
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 43.46万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:Standard Grant
- 财政年份:2013
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2013-08-01 至 2017-07-31
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:
项目摘要
Diatoms are responsible for a significant fraction of primary production in the ocean. They are associated with enhanced carbon export and usually dominate the response of phytoplankton to additions of the micronutrient iron in high-nutrient, low-chlorophyll (HNLC) regions. Diatoms, particularly those isolated from the open ocean, appear to have a significant capacity to store iron for later use, and in some groups of diatoms this ability is enabled by the iron storage protein ferritin. Such luxury uptake of iron has long been observed in laboratory cultures and hypothesized to provide diatoms with an ecological benefit in the low-iron waters that cover 40% of the global ocean. However iron storage has been difficult to observe in natural systems due to the methodological challenges of working with mixed plankton assemblages, and a physiological understanding of the impacts of iron on ocean diatoms is lacking. This project combines state-of-the-art high-throughput transcriptomic sequencing and single-cell element analysis with novel laboratory and field incubation experiments to quantify iron storage abilities of cultured and natural diatoms that either contain or lack ferritin and determine the ecological impacts of this process. The overall objective of this project is to examine the ecological importance of iron storage as a selective mechanism controlling the distributions of diatoms along iron gradients in marine ecosystems. The proposed research includes three specific objectives:A. Determine if there is a consistent physiological difference in the ability of pennate versus centric diatoms to store iron.B. Examine whether iron storage capacities across diverse diatom taxa consistently provide a mechanistic explanation for continued growth in the absence of iron.C. Determine whether enhanced iron storage provides diatoms with a competitive within natural phytoplankton assemblages in both coastal and oceanic regions.Transcriptomic sequencing on a variety of ecologically important pennate and centric diatoms will be used to survey for the presence of ferritin-like genes in order to establish biogeographical and/or phylogenetic patterns of occurrence of diatom ferritin. Laboratory culture experiments will be used to quantify the iron storage abilities of these diatoms, as well as the number of cell divisions that can be supported by the stored iron, providing valuable physiological data to inform the understanding of plankton ecology in iron-limited coastal and HNLC systems. The laboratory experiments will be complemented by measurements of ferritin expression and iron storage in coastal and ocean diatoms sampled across gradients of iron availability on two cruises-of-opportunity to the northeast Pacific Ocean.Intellectual Merit: By characterizing the diversity in potential iron storage capacities of diatoms and elucidating the role ferritins play in enhancing iron storage and the iron-limitation response, this project will provide new insights into how this important group of primary producers has adapted to their environment, thus contributing to our knowledge of what factors influence their abundance and distributions. This knowledge is especially important in relation to predicting the future effects of climate change on these organisms that are responsible for significant primary production in marine ecosystems.Broader Impacts: This project incorporates several activities that will directly contribute to education and training. The training of a graduate student, post-doctoral researcher and multiple undergraduates will be directly supported. Additionally, a broader impact goal of this project is to facilitate teaching and learning on marine science-related topics through translating our research objectives into widely distributed educational materials that can be used in the classroom. To accomplish this, a high-school teacher will participate in one of the cruises and convey her experiences at sea to her students as well as develop curricular materials for her class. These will be used for high-school earth and environmental science courses and also distributed to teachers in Maine as part of Bigelow Laboratories teacher training program, thus broadening the scope of the outreach activities.
硅藻是海洋初级生产的重要组成部分。它们与增强的碳输出和通常占主导地位的浮游植物的反应,在高营养,低叶绿素(HNLC)地区的微量营养元素铁的添加。硅藻,特别是那些从开放的海洋中分离出来的硅藻,似乎有很大的能力来储存铁供以后使用,在某些硅藻群中,这种能力是由铁储存蛋白铁蛋白实现的。在实验室培养中,人们长期观察到这种对铁的奢侈摄取,并假设硅藻在覆盖全球海洋40%的低铁沃茨中具有生态效益。然而,由于混合浮游生物组合的方法学挑战,铁储存在自然系统中很难观察到,并且缺乏对铁对海洋硅藻影响的生理学理解。该项目将最先进的高通量转录组测序和单细胞元素分析与新的实验室和田间孵育实验相结合,以量化含有或缺乏铁蛋白的培养和天然硅藻的铁储存能力,并确定这一过程的生态影响。该项目的总体目标是研究铁储存作为控制硅藻沿着铁梯度分布的选择性机制在海洋生态系统中的生态重要性。本研究包括三个具体目标:A.确定羽状硅藻与中心硅藻储存铁的能力是否存在一致的生理差异。检查不同硅藻类群的铁储存能力是否一致地提供了在缺乏铁的情况下持续生长的机械解释。确定是否增强铁存储提供硅藻与自然浮游植物组合在沿海和海洋regions.Transcriptomic测序的各种生态上重要的羽状和中心硅藻的竞争力将用于调查铁蛋白样基因的存在,以建立硅藻铁蛋白的发生地理和/或系统发育模式。实验室培养实验将用于量化这些硅藻的铁存储能力,以及存储的铁可以支持的细胞分裂的数量,提供有价值的生理数据,以了解铁有限的沿海和HNLC系统中的浮游生物生态。实验室实验将通过测量在东北太平洋的两次机会之旅上沿铁可用性梯度取样的沿海和海洋硅藻中的铁蛋白表达和铁储存来补充。通过表征硅藻潜在铁储存能力的多样性并阐明铁蛋白在增强铁储存和铁限制反应中的作用,该项目将提供新的见解,了解这一重要的初级生产者群体是如何适应其环境的,从而有助于我们了解哪些因素影响其丰度和分布。这方面的知识对于预测气候变化对这些生物体的未来影响特别重要,因为这些生物体是海洋生态系统重要的初级生产力的来源。将直接支持一名研究生、博士后研究员和多名本科生的培训。此外,该项目的一个更广泛的影响目标是通过将我们的研究目标转化为可在课堂上使用的广泛分发的教育材料,促进海洋科学相关主题的教学。为了实现这一目标,一名高中教师将参加其中一次巡航,并向她的学生传达她在海上的经历,并为她的班级开发课程材料。这些将用于高中地球和环境科学课程,并作为毕格罗实验室教师培训方案的一部分分发给缅因州的教师,从而扩大了推广活动的范围。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
专著数量(0)
科研奖励数量(0)
会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
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Adrian Marchetti其他文献
Adrian Marchetti的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('Adrian Marchetti', 18)}}的其他基金
Collaborative Research: BoCP-Implementation: The influence of different nutrient delivery modes on functional biodiversity of marine plankton in a changing ocean
合作研究:BoCP-实施:不同养分输送模式对变化海洋中海洋浮游生物功能生物多样性的影响
- 批准号:
2326027 - 财政年份:2023
- 资助金额:
$ 43.46万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
Collaborative Research: Evaluating the contribution of small eukaryotes to nitrate-based new production in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre
合作研究:评估小型真核生物对北太平洋副热带环流硝酸盐新生产的贡献
- 批准号:
2219973 - 财政年份:2022
- 资助金额:
$ 43.46万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
CAREER: An integrated molecular and physiological approach to examining the dynamics of upwelled phytoplankton in current and changing oceans
职业:一种综合的分子和生理方法来检查当前和变化的海洋中上升的浮游植物的动态
- 批准号:
1751805 - 财政年份:2018
- 资助金额:
$ 43.46万 - 项目类别:
Continuing Grant
Collaborative Research: Antarctic Diatom Proteorhodopsins: Characterization and a Potential Role in the Iron-limitation Response
合作研究:南极硅藻蛋白视紫红质:特征及其在铁限制反应中的潜在作用
- 批准号:
1745036 - 财政年份:2018
- 资助金额:
$ 43.46万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
Iron and Light Limitation in Ecologically Important Polar Diatoms: Comparative Transcriptomics and Development of Molecular Indicators
具有重要生态意义的极地硅藻中铁和光的限制:比较转录组学和分子指标的开发
- 批准号:
1341479 - 财政年份:2014
- 资助金额:
$ 43.46万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
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