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1 History  





2 Methods of study  





3 Composition  





4 Ecology  





5 Genomics  





6 See also  





7 Notes and references  





8 Bibliography  














Photosynthetic picoplankton






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Picoplankton observed by epifluorescence

Photosynthetic picoplanktonorpicophytoplankton is the fraction of the photosynthetic phytoplanktonofcell sizes between 0.2 and 2 μm (i.e. picoplankton). It is especially important in the central oligotrophic regions of the world oceans that have very low concentration of nutrients.

History[edit]

Methods of study[edit]

Analysis of picoplankton by flow cytometry

Because of its very small size, picoplankton is difficult to study by classic methods such as optical microscopy. More sophisticated methods are needed.

  • Cloning and sequencingofgenes such as that of ribosomal RNA, which allows researchers to determine total diversity within a sample
  • DGGE (denaturing gel electrophoresis) that is faster than the previous approach allows researchers to have an idea of the global diversity within a sample
  • In situ hybridization (FISH) uses fluorescent probes recognizing specific taxon, for example a species, a genus or a class.[14] This original description as a species is now thought to be composed of a number of different cryptic species, a finding that has been confirmed by a genome sequencing project of two strains led by researchers at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute.[15]
  • Quantitative PCR can be used, as FISH, to determine the abundance of specific groups. It has the main advantage to allow the rapid analysis of a large number of samples simultaneously,[16] but requires more sophisticated controls and calibrations.

Composition[edit]

Three major groups of organisms constitute photosynthetic picoplankton:

Algal classes containing picoplankton species
Classes Picoplanktonic genera
Chlorophyceae Nannochloris
Prasinophyceae Micromonas, Ostreococcus, Pycnococcus
Prymnesiophyceae Imantonia
Pelagophyceae Pelagomonas
Bolidophyceae Bolidomonas
Dictyochophyceae Florenciella

The use of molecular approaches implemented since the 1990s for bacteria, were applied to the photosynthetic picoeukaryotes only 10 years later around 2000. They revealed a very wide diversity[10][11] and brought to light the importance of the following groups in the picoplankton:

In temperate coastal environment, the genus Micromonas (Prasinophyceae) seems dominant.[14] However, in numerous oceanic environments, the dominant species of eukaryotic picoplankton remain still unknown.[20]

Ecology[edit]

Vertical distribution of picoplankton in the Pacific Ocean

Each picoplanktonic population occupies a specific ecological niche in the oceanic environment.

Thirty years ago, it was hypothesized that the speed of division for micro-organisms in central oceanic ecosystems was very slow, of the order of one week or one month per generation. This hypothesis was supported by the fact that the biomass (estimated for example by the contents of chlorophyll) was very stable over time. However, with the discovery of the picoplankton, it was found that the system was much more dynamic than previously thought. In particular, small predators of a size of a few micrometres which ingest picoplanktonic algae as quickly as they were produced were found to be ubiquitous. This extremely sophisticated predator-prey system is nearly always at equilibrium and results in a quasi-constant picoplankton biomass. This close equivalence between production and consumption makes it extremely difficult to measure precisely the speed at which the system turns over.

In 1988, two American researchers, Carpenter and Chang, suggested estimating the speed of cell division of phytoplankton by following the course of DNA replication by microscopy. By replacing the microscope by a flow cytometer, it is possible to follow the DNA content of picoplankton cells over time. This allowed researchers to establish that picoplankton cells are highly synchronous: they replicate their DNA and then divide all at the same time at the end of the day. This synchronization could be due to the presence of an internal biological clock.

Genomics[edit]

In the 2000s, genomics allowed to cross a supplementary stage. Genomics consists in determining the complete sequence of genome of an organism and to list every gene present. It is then possible to get an idea of the metabolic capacities of the targeted organisms and understand how it adapts to its environment. To date, the genomes of several types of Prochlorococcus[21][22] and Synechococcus,[23] and of a strain of Ostreococcus[24] have been determined. The complete genomes of two different Micromonas strains revealed that they were quite different (different species) and had similarities with land plants.[15] Several other cyanobacteria and of small eukaryotes (Bathycoccus, Pelagomonas) are under sequencing. In parallel, genome analyses begin to be done directly from oceanic samples (ecogenomics or metagenomics),[25] allowing us to access to large sets of gene for uncultivated organisms.

Genomes of photosynthetic picoplankton strains
that have been sequenced to date
Genus Strain Sequencing center Remark
Prochlorococcus MED4 JGI
SS120 Genoscope
MIT9312 JGI
MIT9313 JGI
NATL2A JGI
CC9605 JGI
CC9901 JGI
Synechococcus WH8102 JGI
WH7803 Genoscope
RCC307 Génoscope
CC9311 TIGR [26]
Ostreococcus OTTH95 Genoscope
Micromonas RCC299 and CCMP1545 JGI [15]

See also[edit]

Notes and references[edit]

  1. ^ Butcher, R. (1952). Contributions to our knowledge of the smaller marine algae. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the UK 31: 175-91.
  • ^ Manton, I. & Parke, M. (1960). Further observations on small green flagellates with special reference to possible relatives of Chromulina pusilla Butcher. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the UK 39: 275-98.
  • ^ a b Waterbury, J. B. et al. (1979). Wide-spread occurrence of a unicellular, marine planktonic, cyanobacterium. Nature 277: 293-4.
  • ^ Johnson, P. W. & Sieburth, J. M. (1979). Chroococcoid cyanobacteria in the sea: a ubiquitous and diverse phototrophic biomass. Limnology and Oceanography 24: 928-35.
  • ^ Johnson, P. W. & Sieburth, J. M. (1982). In-situ morphology and occurrence of eucaryotic phototrophs of bacterial size in the picoplankton of estuarine and oceanic waters. Journal of Phycology 18: 318-27.
  • ^ Li, W. K. W. et al. (1983). Autotrophic picoplankton in the tropical ocean. Science 219: 292-5.
  • ^ a b Chisholm, S. W. et al. (1988). A novel free-living prochlorophyte occurs at high cell concentrations in the oceanic euphotic zone. Nature 334: 340-3.
  • ^ Chisholm, S. W. et al. (1992). Prochlorococcus marinus nov. gen. nov. sp.: an oxyphototrophic marine prokaryote containing divinyl chlorophyll a and b. Archives of Microbiology 157: 297-300.
  • ^ a b Courties, C. et al. (1994). Smallest eukaryotic organism. Nature 370: 255.
  • ^ a b López-García, P. et al. (2001). Unexpected diversity of small eukaryotes in deep-sea Antarctic plankton. Nature 409: 603-7.
  • ^ a b Moon-van der Staay, S. Y. et al. (2001). Oceanic 18S rDNA sequences from picoplankton reveal unsuspected eukaryotic diversity. Nature 409: 607-10.
  • ^ Rappe, M. et al. (1998). Phylogenetic diversity of ultraplankton plastid Small-Subunit rRNA genes recovered in environmental nucleic acid samples from the Pacific and Atlantic coasts of the United States. Applied and Environmental Microbiology 64294-303.
  • ^ Kim, E., Harrison, J., Sudek, S. et al. (2011). Newly identified and diverse plastid-bearing branch on the eukaryotic tree of life. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA. Vol. 108: 1496-1500.
  • ^ a b Not, F. et al. (2004). A single species Micromonas pusilla (Prasinophyceae) dominates the eukaryotic picoplankton in the western English Channel. Applied and Environmental Microbiology 70: 4064-72.
  • ^ a b c Worden, A.Z., et al. (2009). Green evolution and dynamic adaptations revealed by genomes of the marine picoeukaryotes Micromonas. Science 324: 268-272.
  • ^ Johnson, Z. I. et al. (2006). Niche partitioning among Prochlorococcus ecotypes along ocean-scale environmental gradients. Science 311: 1737-40.
  • ^ Partensky, F. et al. (1999). Prochlorococcus, a marine photosynthetic prokaryote of global significance. Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews 63: 106-27.
  • ^ Andersen, R. A. et al. (1993). Ultrastructure and 18S rRNA gene sequence for Pelagomonas calceolata gen. and sp. nov. and the description of a new algal class, the Pelagophyceae classis nov. Journal of Phycology 29: 701-15.
  • ^ Guillou, L. et al. (1999). Bolidomonas: a new genus with two species belonging to a new algal class, the Bolidophyceae (Heterokonta). Journal of Phycology 35: 368-81.
  • ^ Worden, A.Z. & Not, F.(2008) Ecology and Diversity of Picoeukaryotes. Book Chapter in: Microbial Ecology of the Ocean, 2nd Edition. Ed. D. Kirchman. Wiley.
  • ^ Rocap, G. et al. (2003). Genome divergence in two Prochlorococcus ecotypes reflects oceanic niche differentiation. Nature 424: 1042-7.
  • ^ Dufresne, A. et al. (2003). Genome sequence of the cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus marinus SS120, a nearly minimal oxyphototrophic genome. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 100: 10020-5.
  • ^ Palenik, B. et al. (2003). The genome of a motile marine Synechococcus. Nature 424: 1037-42.
  • ^ Derelle, E. et al. (2006). Genome analysis of the smallest free-living eukaryote Ostreococcus tauri unveils many unique features. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 103: 11647-52.
  • ^ Venter, J. C. et al. (2004). Environmental genome shotgun sequencing of the Sargasso Sea. Science 304: 66-74.
  • ^ Palenik, B. et al. (2006). Genome sequence of Synechococcus CC9311: Insights into adaptation to a coastal environment. PNAS 103: 13555-9.
  • Bibliography[edit]

    Cyanobacteria
    Eukaryotes
    Ecology
    Molecular Biology and Genomes

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