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  4. Kleptoplastidic benthic foraminifera from aphotic habitats: insights into assimilation of inorganic C, N and S studied with sub-cellular resolution
 
research article

Kleptoplastidic benthic foraminifera from aphotic habitats: insights into assimilation of inorganic C, N and S studied with sub-cellular resolution

Jauffrais, Thierry
•
LeKieffre, Charlotte  
•
Schweizer, Magali
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January 1, 2019
Environmental Microbiology

The assimilation of inorganic compounds in foraminiferal metabolism compared to predation or organic matter assimilation is unknown. Here, we investigate possible inorganic-compound assimilation in Nonionellina labradorica, a common kleptoplastidic benthic foraminifer from Arctic and North Atlantic sublittoral regions. The objectives were to identify the source of the foraminiferal kleptoplasts, assess their photosynthetic functionality in light and darkness and investigate inorganic nitrogen and sulfate assimilation. We used DNA barcoding of a similar to 830 bp fragment from the SSU rDNA to identify the kleptoplasts and correlated transmission electron microscopy and nanometre-scale secondary ion mass spectrometry (TEM-NanoSIMS) isotopic imaging to study C-13-bicarbonate, N-15-ammonium and S-34-sulfate uptake. In addition, respiration rate measurements were determined to assess the response of N. labradorica to light. The DNA sequences established that over 80% of the kleptoplasts belonged to Thalassiosira (with 96%-99% identity), a cosmopolitan planktonic diatom. TEM-NanoSIMS imaging revealed degraded cytoplasm and an absence of C-13 assimilation in foraminifera exposed to light. Oxygen measurements showed higher respiration rates under light than dark conditions, and no O-2 production was detected. These results indicate that the photosynthetic pathways in N. labradorica are not functional. Furthermore, N. labradorica assimilated both N-15-ammonium and S-34-sulfate into its cytoplasm, which suggests that foraminifera might have several ammonium or sulfate assimilation pathways, involving either the kleptoplasts or bona fide foraminiferal pathway(s) not yet identified.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1111/1462-2920.14433
Web of Science ID

WOS:000456278900009

Author(s)
Jauffrais, Thierry
LeKieffre, Charlotte  
Schweizer, Magali
Geslin, Emmanuelle
Metzger, Edouard
Bernhard, Joan M.
Jesus, Bruno
Filipsson, Helena L.
Maire, Olivier
Meibom, Anders  
Date Issued

2019-01-01

Publisher

WILEY

Published in
Environmental Microbiology
Volume

21

Issue

1

Start page

125

End page

141

Subjects

Microbiology

•

Microbiology

•

elphidium-excavatum terquem

•

glutamate synthase

•

molecular phylogeny

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haynesina-germanica

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gullmar fjord

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amino-acids

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sequestered chloroplasts

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sequence alignment

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sulfate transport

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nitrate storage

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LGB  
Available on Infoscience
June 18, 2019
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/158068
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