Evidence of the Cost of the Production of Microcystins by Microcystis aeruginosa under Differing Light and Nitrate Environmental Conditions

Type Article
Date 2012-01
Language English
Author(s) Briand EnoraORCID1, 2, Bormans Myriam1, Quiblier Catherine2, 3, Salencon Marie-Jose4, Humbert Jean-Francois5
Affiliation(s) 1 : Univ Rennes, Rennes, France.
2 : Museum Natl Hist Nat, F-75231 Paris, France.
3 : Univ Paris Diderot, Paris, France.
4 : Environm Def Fund Rand, Dept LNHE, Chatou, France.
5 : French Natl Inst Agr Res, UMR Biogeochim & Ecol Milleux Continent BIOEMCO, Paris, France.
Source Plos One (1932-6203) (Public Library Science), 2012-01 , Vol. 7 , N. 1 , P. e29981 (1-10)
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0029981
WOS© Times Cited 72
Abstract

The cyanobacterium Microcystis aeruginosa is known to proliferate in freshwater ecosystems and to produce microcystins. It is now well established that much of the variability of bloom toxicity is due to differences in the relative proportions of microcystin-producing and non-microcystin-producing cells in cyanobacterial populations. In an attempt to elucidate changes in their relative proportions during cyanobacterial blooms, we compared the fitness of the microcystin-producing M. aeruginosa PCC 7806 strain (WT) to that of its non-microcystin-producing mutant (MT). We investigated the effects of two light intensities and of limiting and non-limiting nitrate concentrations on the growth of these strains in monoculture and co-culture experiments. We also monitored various physiological parameters, and microcystin production by the WT strain. In monoculture experiments, no significant difference was found between the growth rates or physiological characteristics of the two strains during the exponential growth phase. In contrast, the MT strain was found to dominate the WT strain in co-culture experiments under favorable growth conditions. Moreover, we also found an increase in the growth rate of the MT strain and in the cellular MC content of the WT strain. Our findings suggest that differences in the fitness of these two strains under optimum growth conditions were attributable to the cost to microcystin-producing cells of producing microcystins, and to the putative existence of cooperation processes involving direct interactions between these strains.

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Figure S1. Time-course of cell biovolumes (circles) and Iout (losanges) of the WT (shaded symbols) and MT (empty symbols) strains in monoculture experiments under different culture 3 MB Open access
Figure S2. Time-course of the maximum relative electron transport rates (rETRmax, triangles) and PC:Chl-a ratio (squares) of the WT (shaded symbols) and MT (empty symbols) strains... 3 MB Open access
Figure S3. Light absorption spectra for WT (continuous line) and for MT (dotted line) strains in monoculture experiments under OLHN (optimal light and high nitrogen) culture condition at... 112 KB Open access
Figure S4. Time-course of the cell abundances of the WT (A) and the MT (B) strains during the allelopathy experiments 81 KB Open access
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