Project: Iron and Light Limitation in Ecologically Important Polar Diatoms: Comparative Transcriptomics and Development of Molecular Indicators

Acronym/Short Name:Polar_Transcriptomes
Project Duration:2014-08 - 2017-07
Geolocation:Antarctica

Description

The Southern Ocean surrounding Antarctica is changing rapidly in response to Earth's warming climate. These changes will undoubtedly influence communities of primary producers (the organisms at the base of the food chain, particularly plant-like organisms using sunlight for energy) by altering conditions that influence their growth and composition. Because primary producers such as phytoplankton play an important role in global biogeochemical cycling, it is essential to understand how they will respond to changes in their environment. The growth of phytoplankton in certain regions of the Southern Ocean is constrained by steep gradients in chemical and physical properties that vary in both space and time. Light and iron have been identified as key variables influencing phytoplankton abundance and distribution within Antarctic waters. Microscopic algae known as diatoms are dominant members of the phytoplankton and sea ice communities, accounting for significant proportions of primary production. The overall objective of this project is to identify the molecular bases for the physiological responses of polar diatoms to varying light and iron conditions. The project should provide a means of evaluating the extent these factors regulate diatom growth and influence net community productivity in Antarctic waters. The project will also further the NSF goals of making scientific discoveries available to the general public and of training new generations of scientists. It will facilitate the teaching and learning of polar-related topics by translating the research objectives into readily accessible educational materials for middle-school students. This project will also provide funding to enable a graduate student and several undergraduate students to be trained in the techniques and perspectives of modern biology.

Although numerous studies have investigated how polar diatoms are affected by varying light and iron, the cellular mechanisms leading to their distinct physiological responses remain unknown. Using comparative transcriptomics, the expression patterns of key genes and metabolic pathways in several ecologically important polar diatoms recently isolated from Antarctic waters and grown under varying iron and irradiance conditions will be examined. In addition, molecular indicators for iron and light limitation will be developed within these polar diatoms through the identification of iron- and light-responsive genes -- the expression patterns of which can be used to determine their physiological status. Upon verification in laboratory cultures, these indicators will be utilized by way of metatranscriptomic sequencing to examine iron and light limitation in natural diatom assemblages collected along environmental gradients in Western Antarctic Peninsula waters. In order to fully understand the role phytoplankton play in Southern Ocean biogeochemical cycles, dependable methods that provide a means of elucidating the physiological status of phytoplankton at any given time and location are essential.


DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
Biovolume data from samples obtained on Gould cruise LMG1411 in the Western Antarctica Peninsula during 2014 (Polar Transcriptome project).2016-11-28Final no updates expected
Diatom growth rates from samples collected on the Gould cruise LMG1411 in the Western Antarctica Peninsula from 2014 (Polar Transcriptomes project)2016-11-28Final no updates expected
Presence and absence of iron and light-related functional genes collected on the Gould (LMG1411) cruise in the Western Antarctica Peninsula during 2014 (Polar Transcriptomes project)2016-11-21Final no updates expected
Marine Microbial Eukaryote Transcriptome Sequencing Project (MMETSP) location information on samples obtained on Gould (LMG1411) in the Western Antarctica Peninsula during 2014 (Polar Transcriptomes project)2016-11-21Final no updates expected
BLASTp homology data from genes obtained in samples collected on the Gould (LMG1411) cruise in the Western Antarctica Peninsula during 2014 (Polar Transcriptomes project).2016-11-21Final no updates expected
Isolate information on genes found in samples collected on the Gould (LMG1411) cruise in the Western Antarctica Peninsula in 2014 (Polar Transcriptomes project).2016-11-18Final no updates expected
Transcriptome statistics from samples obtained on LMG1411 collected on the Gould (LMG1411) in the Western Antarctica Peninsula in 2014. (Polar Transcriptomes project)2016-11-18Final no updates expected
Reference sequences, genes, and K0 numbers for sampled diatoms on the Laurence Gould (LMG1411) in the Western Antarctica Peninsula during 2014. (Polar Transcriptomes project)2016-10-12Final no updates expected

Project Home Page


People

Principal Investigator: Adrian Marchetti
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC-Chapel Hill)

Contact: Adrian Marchetti
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC-Chapel Hill)


Data Management Plan

Marchetti_DMP.pdf (54.98 KB)
02/09/2025