Transitional traits determine the acclimation characteristics of the coccolithophore Chrysotila dentata to ocean warming and acidification.
Satheeswaran ThangarajHaijiao LiuYiyan GuoChangling DingIl-Nam KimSatheeswaran ThangarajPublished in: Environmental microbiology (2023)
Ocean warming and acidification interactively affect the coccolithophore physiology and drives major biogeochemical changes. While numerous studies investigated coccolithophore under short-term conditions, knowledge on how different transitional periods over long-exposure could influence the element, macromolecular and metabolic changes for its acclimation are largely unknown. We cultured the coccolithophore Chrysotila dentata, (culture generations of 1 st , 10 th , and 20 th ) under present (low-temperature low-carbon-dioxide [LTLC]) and projected (high-temperature high-carbon-dioxide [HTHC]) ocean conditions. We examined elemental and macromolecular component changes and sequenced a transcriptome. We found that with long-exposure, most physiological responses in HTHC cells decreased when compared with those in LTLC, however, HTHC cell physiology showed constant elevation between each generation. Specifically, compared to 1 st generation, the 20 th generation HTHC cells showed increases in quota carbon (Qc:29%), nitrogen (Q N :101%), and subsequent changes in C:N-ratio (68%). We observed higher lipid accumulation than carbohydrates within HTHC cells under long-exposure, suggesting that lipids were used as an alternative energy source for cellular acclimation. Protein biosynthesis pathways increased their efficiency during long-term HTHC condition, indicating that cells produced more proteins than required to initiate acclimation. Our findings suggest that the coccolithophore resilience increased between the 1 st -10 th generation to initiate the acclimation process under ocean warming and acidifying conditions. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.