Prey preference in a kleptoplastic dinoflagellate is linked to photosynthetic performance

Author:

Yamada Norico1ORCID,Lepetit Bernard1ORCID,Mann David G23ORCID,Sprecher Brittany N1ORCID,Buck Jochen M1,Bergmann Paavo4ORCID,Kroth Peter G1ORCID,Bolton John J5,Dąbek Przemysław6ORCID,Witkowski Andrzej6ORCID,Kim So-Yeon7ORCID,Trobajo Rosa2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, University of Konstanz , Konstanz, Germany

2. Marine and Continental Waters Program, Institute for Food and Agricultural Research and Technology , La Ràpita, Spain

3. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh , Edinburgh, UK

4. Electron Microscopy Centre, University of Konstanz , Konstanz, Germany

5. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Cape Town , Cape Town, South Africa

6. Institute of Marine and Environmental Sciences, University of Szczecin , Szczecin, Poland

7. Department of Oceanography, Kunsan National University , Gunsan, Republic of Korea

Abstract

Abstract Dinoflagellates of the family Kryptoperidiniaceae, known as “dinotoms”, possess diatom-derived endosymbionts and contain individuals at three successive evolutionary stages: a transiently maintained kleptoplastic stage; a stage containing multiple permanently maintained diatom endosymbionts; and a further permanent stage containing a single diatom endosymbiont. Kleptoplastic dinotoms were discovered only recently, in Durinskia capensis; until now it has not been investigated kleptoplastic behavior and the metabolic and genetic integration of host and prey. Here, we show D. capensis is able to use various diatom species as kleptoplastids and exhibits different photosynthetic capacities depending on the diatom species. This is in contrast with the prey diatoms in their free-living stage, as there are no differences in their photosynthetic capacities. Complete photosynthesis including both the light reactions and the Calvin cycle remain active only when D. capensis feeds on its habitual associate, the “essential” diatom Nitzschia captiva. The organelles of another edible diatom, N. inconspicua, are preserved intact after ingestion by D. capensis and expresses the psbC gene of the photosynthetic light reaction, while RuBisCO gene expression is lost. Our results indicate that edible but non-essential, “supplemental” diatoms are used by D. capensis for producing ATP and NADPH, but not for carbon fixation. D. capensis has established a species-specifically designed metabolic system allowing carbon fixation to be performed only by its essential diatoms. The ability of D. capensis to ingest supplemental diatoms as kleptoplastids may be a flexible ecological strategy, to use these diatoms as “emergency supplies” while no essential diatoms are available.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Microbiology

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