Copper-uptake kinetics of coastal and oceanic diatoms

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Abstract

We investigated copper (Cu) acquisition mechanisms and uptake kinetics of the marine diatoms Thalassiosira oceanica Hasle, an oceanic strain, and Thalassiosira pseudonana Hasle et Heimdal, a coastal strain, grown under replete and limiting iron (Fe) and Cu availabilities. The Cu-uptake kinetics of these two diatoms followed classical Michaelis-Menten kinetics. Biphasic uptake kinetics as a function of Cu concentration were observed, suggesting the presence of both high- and low-affinity Cu-transport systems. The half-saturation constants (Km) and the maximum Cu-uptake rates (Vmax) of the high-affinity Cu-transport systems (~7-350 nM and 1.5-17 zmol · μm-2 · h-1, respectively) were significantly lower than those of the low-affinity systems (>800 nM and 30-250 zmol · μm-2 · h-1, respectively). The two Cu-transport systems were controlled differently by low Fe and/or Cu. The high-affinity Cu-transport system of both diatoms was down-regulated under Fe limitation. Under optimal-Fe and low-Cu growth conditions, the Km of the high-affinity transport system of T. oceanica was lower (7.3 nM) than that of T. pseudonana (373 nM), indicating that T. oceanica had a better ability to acquire Cu at subsaturating concentrations. When Fe was sufficient, the low-affinity Cu-transport system of T. oceanica saturated at 2,000 nM Cu, while that of T. pseudonana did not saturate, indicating different Cu-transport regulation by these two diatoms. Using CuEDTA as a model organic complex, our results also suggest that diatoms might be able to access Cu bound within organic Cu complexes. © 2010 Phycological Society of America.

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Guo, J., Annett, A. L., Taylor, R. L., Lapi, S., Ruth, T. J., & Maldonado, M. T. (2010). Copper-uptake kinetics of coastal and oceanic diatoms. Journal of Phycology, 46(6), 1218–1228. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1529-8817.2010.00911.x

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