Deficiency of nitrogen but not phosphorus triggers the life cycle transition of the dinoflagellate Scrippsiella acuminata from vegetative growth to resting cyst formation.

Harmful Algae

CAS Key Laboratory of Marine Ecology and Environmental Sciences, Institute of Oceanology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Qingdao, 266071, China; Laboratory of Marine Ecology and Environmental Science, Qingdao National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology, Qingdao, 266237, China; Center for Oce

Published: October 2022


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Article Abstract

Nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) are essential elements for algal growth. When N and P are deficient, dinoflagellates will take a series of measures to achieve population continuation including formation of resting cysts, an important ecological strategy of dinoflagellates that plays a key role in the initiation and termination of harmful algal blooms (HABs). How the deficiency of N and P affects algal growth and cyst formation has been investigated in some dinoflagellate species, but how it affects the life cycle transition in dinoflagellates has been poorly understood. In this study, we further explored the effect of N and P deficiency on the algal growth and resting cyst production in the cosmopolitan HABs-causing species Scrippsiella acuminata via refining the N and P concentration gradients. Further, we tracked the expression patterns of one CyclinB and one CDK1 genes of S. acuminata at different growth stages under three deficiency concentrations (1/1000 dilutions of N, P, and both N and P). The results suggest that N deficiency always triggered the cyst formation but P deficiency mainly inhibited the vegetative growth instead of inducing cyst formation. We also observed the highest cyst production when S. acuminata was cultured in the f/2-Si medium that was a one-thousandth dilution of N and P (N∼ 0.882 μM; P∼ 0.0362 μM). Our results for the expressions of CyclinB and CDK1 were well consistent with the results of algal growth and cyst formation at different deficiencies of N and P in terms of that higher expressions of these two genes were corresponding to higher rates of vegetative cell growth, while their expressions in resting cysts maintained to be moderate but significantly lower than that in fast-growing vegetative cells. Although we are still not sure whether the changing expressions of the two genes did regulate the transition of life cycle (i.e. cyst formation), or happened as parallels to the expressions of other truly regulating genes, our observations are surely inspirational for further investigations on the genetic regulation of life cycle transition in dinoflagellates. Our work will provide clues to probe the physiological and molecular mechanisms underlying the nutrient deficiency-induced alternation between life cycle stages in dinoflagellates.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.hal.2022.102312DOI Listing

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