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Journal of Sea Research 43 (2000) 183–197 www.elsevier.nl/locate/seares Review Paper Physiological aspects of the production and conversion of DMSP in marine algae and higher plants J. Stefels Department of Marine Biology, University of Groningen, P.O. Box 14, 9750 AA Haren, The Netherlands Received 20 April 2000; accepted 9 May 2000 Abstract Dimethylsulphoniopropionate (DMSP) is a compound produced in several classes of algae and higher plants that live in the marine environment. Considering its generally high intracellular concentrations, DMSP has a function in the osmotic protection of algal cells. Due to the relatively slow adaptation of its intracellular concentrations upon salinity shifts, DMSP should, however, not be considered as an osmoticum in the strict sense of being responsible for osmotic balance, but rather as a constitutive compatible solute. Besides salinity, other factors also appear to affect cellular DMSP quotas, but the exact regulatory mechanisms are still unclear. In this review, a brief discussion is given of the three pathways of DMSP biosynthesis that are currently distinguished. This is followed by an overview of the factors that affect DMSP biosynthesis (light, salinity, temperature and nitrogen limitation) in relation to its physiological functions. A new hypothesis is presented in which DMSP production is described as an overflow mechanism for excess reduced compounds and for energy excess. Finally, the possible functionality of the enzymatic cleavage of DMSP is discussed in the context of an overflow mechanism. 䉷 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. Keywords: dimethylsulphoniopropionate; DMSP; dimethylsulphide; DMS; DMSP lyase; biosynthesis; global climate; sulphur assimilation 1. Introduction Since the 1970s, interest in the production of the volatile organic sulphur compound dimethylsulphide (DMS) and its precursor dimethylsulphoniopropionate (DMSP) by marine organisms has been fuelled by the realisation that marine DMS emissions could close the global sulphur budget (Lovelock et al., E-mail address: [email protected] (J. Stefels). Abbreviations: AdoMet, S-adenosylmethionine; APS, adenosine 5 0 phosphosulphate; DMS, dimethylsulphide; DMSP, dimethylsulphoniopropionate; GBT, glycine betaine; GSH, glutathione; MMPA, methylmercaptopropionate; MTOB, 4-methylthio-2-oxobutyrate; MTHB, 4-methylthio-2-hydroxybutyrate; DMSHB, 4-dimethylsulphonio-2-hydroxybutyrate; PAPS, adenosine 3 0 -phosphate 5 0 -phosphosulphate; SMM, S-methylmethionine 1972). Moreover, it was hypothesised that marine DMS emissions are involved in the biological regulation of climate (Bates et al., 1987; Charlson et al., 1987). The oxidation products of atmospheric DMS may act as condensation nuclei, thereby affecting the radiative properties of skies and clouds, with subsequent implications for climate. Since then, an increasing amount of research has been performed in a variety of environments and with a variety of organisms (see e.g. Kiene et al., 1996). Although we now know a lot more on the qualitative aspects of the marine sulphur cycle (Kiene et al., 2000) the factors that control the various pathways are still largely unknown. In plants, sulphur is present in a variety of organic compounds. Most of it occurs in proteins, specifically 1385-1101/00/$ - see front matter 䉷 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. PII: S1385-110 1(00)00030-7 184 J. Stefels / Journal of Sea Research 43 (2000) 183–197 SO4 2out in ATP + SO4 = ADP sulfolipids sulfate esters glycolysis carbohydrates ATP PAPS APS 3-phosphoglycerate 2 GSH GSSG SO326e- phosphoenol pyruvate GS–SO3- GSSG GSH GSH tra n sa mi na tio n 6e- GS–S - pyruvate serine 2e- acetyl-CoA CO2 S 2- a na pl er oti c CO2 fixa tio n O-acetylserine aspartate cysteine glutathione tra n ssu lfu ra tio n protein oxaloacetate O-phosphohomoserine Krebs cycle cystathione homocysteine CH 3 DMSP ATP PP i + Pi S-adenosylmethionine methionine tr a n sme th yl a ti o n s S-adenosylhomocysteine S-methylmethionine other CH3 acceptors homocysteine Fig. 1. Schematic representation of the processes involved in the assimilatory sulphate reduction and biosynthesis of DMSP. No attempt has been made to represent stoichiometries. Explanation is given in the text. This figure is extracted from references discussed in the text and from Quispel and Stegwee (1983) and Salisbury and Ross (1992). in the amino acids cysteine and methionine. Other important compounds that contain sulphur are coenzyme-A, glutathione, the vitamins thiamine and biotin and sulpholipids. The production of DMSP is almost exclusively confined to a few classes of marine micro- and macroalgae (Reed, 1983; Keller et al., 1989; Blunden et al., 1992). Observations of DMSP production in higher plants are rare, with the J. Stefels / Journal of Sea Research 43 (2000) 183–197 exception of a few Spartina species, some sugarcanes and the coastal strand plant Wollastonia biflora (Van Diggelen et al., 1986; Dacey et al., 1987; Pakulski and Kiene, 1992; Hanson et al., 1994; Mulholland and Otte, 2000). On a global scale, the main producers of DMSP are phytoplankton species confined to the classes Dinophyceae (dinoflagellates) and Prymnesiophyceae (including the coccolithophorids) (Keller et al., 1989). Some members of the Chrysophyceae and Bacillariophyceae (diatoms) can also produce significant amounts of DMSP. Intracellular concentrations of DMSP may vary between zero and 1–2 M in a few dinoflagellates (Keller et al., 1989). More typical values for DMSP-producing algae are 50–400 mM. In these algae, DMSPsulphur can comprise 50 to almost 100% of the total cellular organic sulphur (Matrai and Keller, 1994; Keller et al., 1999a). Knowledge of the biosynthesis of DMSP has emerged only recently and there are now indications that it may proceed through at least three different pathways in different organisms (James et al., 1995; Gage et al., 1997; Kocsis et al., 1998). The function of DMSP in algal physiology is still unclear and the same is true for the enzymatic cleavage of DMSP into dimethylsulphide (DMS) and acrylate. The most likely function of DMSP is related to the osmotic protection of the cell (see below). There is some limited evidence for a function as methyl donor (Ishida, 1968) and as precursor of the phospholipid phosphatidylsulphocholine (Kates and Volcani, 1996). The cleavage by algal DMSP lyase may be an effective chemical defence against grazing (Wolfe et al., 1997); the proposed anti-bacterial function of the cleavage product acrylate is unlikely (Noordkamp et al., 2000). It is the objective of this overview to obtain a better understanding of the regulatory mechanisms involved in the production and conversion of DMSP. A brief discussion is therefore given of the pathways involved in the biosynthesis of DMSP. This is followed by an overview of the factors that affect DMSP biosynthesis in relation to its physiological functions. A new hypothesis is presented in which DMSP production is described as an overflow mechanism for excess reduced compounds and for energy excess. Finally, the possible functionality of the enzymatic cleavage 185 of DMSP is discussed in the context of an overflow mechanism. 2. DMSP biosynthesis Much of our knowledge about processes involved in the assimilation of sulphate up to the incorporation of sulphur into DMSP has been derived from experiments with higher plants, but may be applicable to algae as well. The uptake and reduction of sulphate to sulphide is an energy-requiring process (Brunold, 1990; Leustek and Saito, 1999) (Fig. 1). Firstly, after being taken up in the cytoplasm and subsequently in the chloroplast, sulphate is activated by ATP-sulphurylase to form adenosine 5 0 -phosphosulphate (APS). APS can subsequently be activated to form adenosine 3 0 -phosphate 5 0 -phosphosulphate (PAPS), a precursor for sulpholipids and sulphate esters of polysaccharides. This non-reductive incorporation of sulphate in plant metabolites occurs in the cytoplasm. Sulphate esters of polysaccharides are commonly produced by diatoms, and form the primary component of extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) (Hoagland et al., 1993). They may also constitute a substantial fraction of the colonial mucus of the phytoplankton species Phaeocystis sp. (Van Boekel, 1992). The exact course of the subsequent reductive pathway is still under debate, but it is now accepted that glutathione (GSH) plays a crucial role (Brunold, 1990; Leustek and Saito, 1999). Activated sulphate in APS is transferred to GSH by APS sulphotransferase, which results in S-sulphoglutathione (Fig. 1). The pathway then most likely proceeds towards free sulphite after reduction with GSH, but a carrierbound pathway cannot be excluded. The reduction of the sulpho group of PAPS may produce free sulphite in a similar way. There are indications that GSH may act as both the reductant and the carrier in all these reactions. It is currently thought that the pathway through APS dominates in higher plants and algae, whereas it may proceed through PAPS in bacteria, yeasts and certain cyanobacteria. In the next step, the carrier-bound or free sulphite is reduced to carrier-bound or free sulphide. Both reactions require six electrons, which are usually provided by reduced ferredoxin. In many organisms, however, 186 J. Stefels / Journal of Sea Research 43 (2000) 183–197 NH3+ AdoMet S COO Methionine AdoHcy NH3+ S + - transamination O methylation S decarboxylation? SMM COO MTOB COO- S transamination/ decarboxylation - NADPH NH3+ reduction NADP + OH S DMSP-amine COO MTHB oxidation? - AdoMet methylation S + CHO AdoHcy OH DMSP-ald S oxidation S COO + - + COO - DMSHB oxidative decarboxylation DMSP 1. COMPOSITAE 2. GRAMINEAE 3. MARINE ALGAE Fig. 2. Schematic representation of the three pathways of DMSP biosynthesis from methionine (after Hanson and Gage, 1996; Gage et al., 1997; Kocsis et al., 1998; Summers et al., 1998). reduced pyridine nucleotides can also be used in the reaction with free sulphite. Free sulphide is then incorporated in O-acetylserine to form cysteine and acetate. Whereas the reduction of sulphate to sulphide occurs in the chloroplasts, enzymes for the production of cysteine also have been found in the cytoplasm and mitochondria. In total, one ATP, 6 electrons and the oxidation of two thiol groups, or one ATP and 8 electrons, are needed to reduce sulphate to sulphide. Apart from being the precursor of GSH, cysteine is involved in two important metabolic pathways: the synthesis of protein and the de novo production of methionine (Fig. 1). For the latter process, the thiol group of cysteine is transferred to O-phosphohomoserine to form homocysteine, which is subsequently methylated to methionine (Giovanelli, 1990). Methionine is partly incorporated into protein, but the major pathway for methionine metabolism is the utilisation of its methyl group in transmethylation reactions via S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet). In this pathway, methionine essentially acts as a catalyst, accompanied by a recycling system in which methionine is regenerated (Giovanelli, 1987); it is thus not a true sink for methionine. Besides its incorporation into protein, the larger part of methionine may be consumed—albeit not in all plants—by the production of DMSP. Currently, there is strong evidence that the biochemical pathway from methionine to DMSP has evolved at least three times independently through different intermediates (Fig. 2). The best studied DMSP-containing plant is Wollastonia biflora (Compositae), a common Indo-Pacific strand plant. In W. biflora, S-methylation is the first step in the sequence, which results in the production of S-methylmethionine (SMM). This methylation reaction is dependent on AdoMet. After this step, the pathway towards DMSP proceeds through the production of DMSP-aldehyde. This involves a transamination and J. Stefels / Journal of Sea Research 43 (2000) 183–197 decarboxylation, but no intermediates have been identified (Hanson et al., 1994; James et al., 1995; Hanson and Gage, 1996). Most higher plants—also non-DMSP-containing plants—have the enzymes to mediate the methylation of methionine and the oxidation of DMSP-ald, but it is the conversion of SMM to DMSP-ald that is specific for DMSP synthesis. In W. biflora, the methylation reaction occurs in the cytosol. Then, SMM is transported to the chloroplast, where the conversion into DMSP-ald and DMSP takes place. The oxidation reaction is catalysed by a dehydrogenase that uses NAD as a cofactor and which has strong similarities with betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase (Trossat et al., 1996). A second pathway has been identified in Spartina alterniflora (Gramineae) (Kocsis et al., 1998). In this sea grass DMSP-amine was identified as an intermediate between SMM and DMSP-ald (Fig. 2). The enzymes that catalyse the production and conversion of DMSP-amine are still to be identified, but a decarboxylase and oxidase are suggested, respectively. The specific production of DMSP-amine in grasses led the authors to conclude that the DMSP-specific pathway from SMM to DMSP-ald had evolved independently in the Compositae and Gramineae. A third and entirely different pathway (Fig. 2) was identified in the green macroalga Enteromorpha intestinalis (Gage et al., 1997; Summers et al., 1998). The first step is a transamination of methionine to form 4-methylthio-2-oxobutyrate (MTOB), which is followed by an NADPH-linked reduction to 4methylthio-2-hydroxybutyrate (MTHB). Then an AdoMet-dependent methylation occurs which yields the novel sulphonium compound 4-dimethylsulphonio-2-hydroxybutyrate (DMSHB), followed by an oxidative decarboxylation to DMSP. The first two steps appeared reversible; they are widespread among a variety of higher and lower plants, though much higher activities are found in DMSP-containing algae. The conversion of MTHB to DMSHB seems to be specific for DMSP synthesis. DMSHB was also found in three planktonic species: Emiliania huxleyi (a prymnesiophyte), Melosira nummuloides (a diatom) and Tetraselmis sp. (a prasinophyte) (Gage et al., 1997). All three converted the supplied DMSHB to DMSP and it was therefore suggested that they have the same pathway as E. intestinalis. In studies with thalli of the macroalga Ulva lactuca 187 and the heterotrophic dinoflagellate Crypthecodinium cohnii a slightly different pathway was proposed (Greene, 1962; Uchida et al., 1996). These authors also did not observe SMM as an intermediate and suggested a sequence of steps involving a decarboxylation, deamination, oxidation and methylation. This would then involve the intermediate formation of methylmercaptopropionate (MMPA). Their experiments are, however, not conclusive and the results are not inconsistent with the sequence proposed by Gage et al. (1997). Moreover, Summers et al. (1998) measured activities of putative enzymes of the third DMSP pathway in two other Ulva species. 3. Factors affecting DMSP synthesis 3.1. Light Because sulphate reduction is an energy- and reductant-consuming process, reduction is coupled to cell metabolism, and may, in parallel with increasing metabolic rates, be stimulated by light. This should not be confused with light dependency, as is the case for carbon uptake. Indeed, a light stimulation of sulphate uptake and incorporation has been observed (Cuhel et al., 1984; Cuhel and Lean, 1987a), but dark uptake of exogenous sulphate, when available at high concentrations, is also a common phenomenon in plants and algae (Bates, 1981; Cuhel et al., 1984; Cuhel and Lean, 1987a,b; Brunold, 1993). Dark uptake indicates that reducing power does not necessarily need to be derived from photosynthesis directly. It may continue at a rate comparable to that under illumination, depending on the physiological state of the cell and its light history. Because of the high sulphate concentrations in marine environments (approximately 28 mM), there is no need to store sulphate in algal cells; it is taken up when required (Cuhel et al., 1984; Cuhel and Lean, 1987a). Essential cell constituents like protein and amino acids are important sulphur-containing compounds, and the uptake of sulphate therefore parallels their production. In growing cells the dark production of protein and lipid occurs at the expense of low molecular weight and polymeric carbohydrates (Morris, 1981). These compounds, when respired, provide the carbon skeletons as well as the energy 188 J. Stefels / Journal of Sea Research 43 (2000) 183–197 for dark metabolism. Part of the energy can be used for the assimilation of sulphate. Whether the production of DMSP from methionine is related to the light regime may differ for each pathway. In isolated chloroplasts of the higher plant W. biflora—which exhibits the first pathway—the conversion of SMM to DMSP was promoted by photosynthesis, but could also proceed in the dark at approximately 40% of the light rates (Trossat et al., 1996). Other experiments on the effects of light on DMSP production are mainly done with marine algae, which most likely display the third pathway. In experiments with macroalgae, the stimulation of DMSP production by light was observed after several weeks of incubation (Karsten et al., 1990, 1991, 1992). Day length, however, appeared to be a complicating factor, by having a significant effect on DMSP content (Karsten et al., 1990). During short-day incubations of 6 h light and 18 h dark, no effect of light intensities was observed for Urospora penicilliformis, whereas a long-day incubation of 18 h light and 6 h dark resulted in a doubling of the DMSP content between 2 and 30 mmol photons m ⫺2 s ⫺1. This indicates that DMSP production is not directly stimulated by light but that the light history, and thus the physiological state of the cell, should be taken into consideration. Dark DMSP production was observed in Ulva lactuca under fluctuating salinity regimes (Dickson et al., 1982) and during 24-h measurements in a temperate strain of the planktonic species Phaeocystis (Stefels et al., 1996), indicating that DMSP production was not directly dependent on light. 3.2. Salinity Many unicellular algae are wall-less cells or have a cell wall with a low elastic modulus (coefficient of elasticity), which implies that they are not able to build up high turgor pressures inside the cell. Upon changes in external water potential, these cells will first exhibit an adjustment of their cell volume as water flows in or out of the cell. In microalgae, this is a rapid process, completed within seconds. It results in a dilution or concentration of the solutes inside the cell, which changes the osmotic potential accordingly. In order to maintain optimal growth, however, cellular conditions like ionic composition, metabolite pools and pH need to be kept within relatively narrow ranges (Bisson and Kirst, 1995). Cells will therefore try to recover their original volume. This is achieved by adjusting the osmotic potential of the cell by means of osmotically active compounds not directly involved in growth. Adjustment is established by active transportation of ions in or out of the cell and by the accumulation or degradation of low molecular weight organic solutes. The former process may be completed within 20–60 min at relatively low energy costs, whereas the latter proceeds at a slower rate and has higher energy needs (Kirst, 1989). The adjustment of ions and organic solutes is metabolically regulated. It often involves the compartmentation of solutes in order to prevent metabolic inhibition, with highest ion concentrations found in vacuoles, and organic solutes confined to the cytoplasm. Marine pelagic organisms live in an environment of low-water potential. Open ocean salinities may vary between 33 and 37 PSU, which is equivalent to 970– 1060 mosmol kg ⫺1 or ⫺2.5 to ⫺2.73 MPa at atmospheric pressure (Kirst, 1989). In such environments, it is important for the cell to produce organic solutes at concentrations that are high enough to be osmotically active and which are compatible with metabolism. These so-called compatible solutes are non-inhibitory low molecular weight organic solutes which accumulate in the cytoplasm of cells at low water potential. Contrary to isosmol concentrations of ions, these solutes have little or no inhibitory effects on metabolic functions, protecting proteins and stabilising membranes under conditions of high ionic strength. Many of these compounds are direct products of photosynthesis, like sugars (e.g. sucrose, trehalose), polyols (e.g. glycerol, mannitol, sorbitol) and heterosides (e.g. floridoside, isofloridoside), but compounds not directly derived from photosynthesis are also used. These are quaternary ammonium compounds (e.g. the betaines and especially glycine betaine), amino acids (especially proline), and tertiary sulphonium compounds (especially DMSP) (Blunden and Gordon, 1986; Bisson and Kirst, 1995). Not all compounds are produced within one organism. Rather, taxonomic differences in solute combinations can be observed. Although isosmol concentrations of these solutes have comparable osmotic potentials, the energy costs and the amounts of carbon and nitrogen required for the various solutes may differ considerably. Consequently, the physiological condition of the J. Stefels / Journal of Sea Research 43 (2000) 183–197 Fig. 3. DMSP content of Phaeocystis sp. cells growing exponentially in batch cultures. Cells were adapted to the salinities for at least five generations. Values are means of duplicate cultures; range is indicated. cell may affect the production of solutes, which results in changes in their relative concentrations. Subcellular compartmentation of solutes is also an important aspect in osmotic acclimation. In vacuoles, high concentrations of Na ⫹, Cl ⫺, to a lesser extent K ⫹ and in some cases sucrose can build up, whereas in the cytoplasm osmotic potential is mainly controlled by organic solutes and K ⫹. In macroalgae, intracellular DMSP content appears to be linked to the relative proportion of the cytoplasm, supporting a cytoplasmic location (Reed, 1983). The cytoplasm of microalgae makes up 25–80% of total cell volume, a relatively high percentage compared with macroalgae and higher plants. Consequently, the contribution of organic solutes to total osmotic potential is also relatively high (Kirst, 1985). In W. biflora, about one-half of the DMSP is chloroplastic (Trossat et al., 1998). Not all organic solutes have equal protective properties. Based on a comparison of general properties of compatible solutes and in vitro enzyme assays, Kirst (1996) concluded that DMSP may be less effective as compatible solute than e.g. betaine, proline or glycerol. For instance, the property of being rapidly synthesised or degraded upon changes in water potential seems not to be applicable to DMSP. There are only limited data on the relatively rapid adaptation of intracellular DMSP content after a hyperosmotic 189 shock (Dickson et al., 1982; Vairavamurthy et al., 1985). Most observations indicate that under such conditions DMSP is only slowly produced, if at all (Reed, 1983; Dickson and Kirst, 1986; Edwards et al., 1987; Stefels et al., 1996). After hypoosmotic shocks, DMSP was rapidly released from Tetraselmis subcordiformis cells (Dickson and Kirst, 1986), whereas intracellular DMSP content hardly changed in Phaeocystis sp. cells (Stefels et al., 1996). When cultured for a prolonged period of time, DMSP has been found to increase with salinity in several micro- and macroalgal species (Vairavamurthy et al., 1985; Dickson and Kirst, 1986,1987a,b; Karsten et al., 1992). A typical example is provided by cultures of Phaeocystis sp. (Fig. 3). In other cases, intracellular DMSP levels remained unchanged (Van Diggelen et al., 1986; Edwards et al., 1987; Colmer et al., 1996). Due to its usually high intracellular concentrations, DMSP may thus be considered as a constitutive compatible solute, but not an osmoticum in the strict sense of being responsible for osmotic balance (Reed, 1984). Kirst (1996) suggested that DMSP may act as a buffer during the initial period after hyperosmotic shocks, when immediate cell volume changes result in concomitant changes of intracellular solute concentrations; an effect which takes place without active production or degradation of the solute. 3.3. Temperature Besides a role in the osmotic acclimation of the cell, there are indications that DMSP may act as cryoprotectant. Nishiguchi and Somero (1992) observed that the compatibility of DMSP with protein structure increased at low temperatures, and suggested that DMSP may function as an effective cryoprotectant. This was confirmed by experiments with extracts from the polar macroalga Acrosiphonia arcta (Karsten et al., 1996). At low temperatures, DMSP appeared to stabilise the activity of malate dehydrogenase in these extracts. In fact, increased enzyme activity was observed when high DMSP concentrations were applied. A stabilising effect was also observed in the cold-labile enzyme lactate dehydrogenase, when DMSP was added prior to freezing and thawing of the enzyme preparation (Karsten et al., 1996). Stabilising effects increased with concentration 190 J. Stefels / Journal of Sea Research 43 (2000) 183–197 and became increasingly stronger than those of proline and sucrose. A possible role of DMSP in cryoprotection was also confirmed by observations of high intracellular concentrations in strains of polar macroalgae cultured at 0⬚C as compared to strains cultured at 10⬚C (Karsten et al., 1992, 1996). These concentrations were high enough to protect enzymes in macroalgal tissue after periods of freezing, as are often encountered in polar regions. The same trend was observed in the prasinophyte Tetraselmis subcordiformis cultured at four different temperatures ranging from 5 to 23⬚C (Sheets and Rhodes, 1996). In these cultures, the DMSP content per cell increased 8-fold as growth temperature decreased. 3.4. Nitrogen limitation Already during the early days of DMSP research, the similarity in structure and properties between DMSP and its nitrogen analogue glycine betaine (GBT) was noted (Challenger, 1951). This led to the suggestion that DMSP could act as an osmolyte in algal cells and even replace GBT (and other nitrogen-containing osmolytes such as proline, trigonelline, homarine but also free amino acids) under conditions of nitrogen limitation. Especially in higher plants, in which the last step in DMSP biosynthesis is similar to the one in betaine synthesis, both mediated by a similar enzyme (Trossat et al., 1996), one might expect interactive production. In several studies, indeed a positive correlation was observed between nitrogen and GBT (Van Diggelen et al., 1986; Colmer et al., 1996) and a negative correlation between nitrogen and DMSP (Dacey et al., 1987; Hanson et al., 1994; Colmer et al., 1996), but a reciprocal relationship between DMSP and GBT is not always established (Mulholland and Otte, 2000). Data on the GBT content of marine phytoplankton are still limited. Its production appears to be species specific, but these species are not necessarily DMSP producers (Keller et al., 1999a). From the limited data available, it appears that the response of GBT quota on nitrogen availability was much more straightforward than the response of DMSP, with highest levels under N-replete conditions (Keller et al., 1999a,b). In several studies, DMSP production was shown to increase with N-limitation (Turner et al., 1988; Gröne and Kirst, 1992; Keller and Korjeff-Bellows, 1996), but this is in contrast to recent findings in batch cultures and continuous cultures of the same species (Keller et al., 1999a,b). The experiments in batch cultures by Keller et al. (1999a) differed from previous studies in that they applied 24 h light, in stead of a dark:light cycle. In all species examined, DMSP production continued regardless of N availability; if anything, cellular DMSP content decreased over the growth cycle rather than increased, as was expected. In some species this was at least partly due to increased levels of dissolved DMSP. In continuous cultures, the intracellular DMSP concentration was inversely related with N-limited growth rates in Thallassiosira pseudonana, to some extent also in Emiliania huxleyi, but not in Amphidinium carterae (Keller et al., 1999b). Additions of nitrate to N-limited cultures resulted in reduced cellular DMSP content in T. pseudonana and A. carterae, but not in E. huxleyi. In batch cultures of an Antarctic Phaeocystis strain cultured under various iron and light conditions, intracellular DMSP concentrations increased under highlight conditions and iron depletion, but not under lowlight conditions and iron depletion (Stefels and Van Leeuwe, 1996). Although this was not observed in the DMSP quota on a per-cell basis, it was argued that the intracellular concentrations are the only relevant data to discuss from a physiological point of view. It was inferred that under high-light and low-iron conditions the cells were experiencing reduced nitrogen assimilation induced by iron limitation, whereas under conditions of low light and low iron, cells were severely energy-limited, which resulted in overall suppressed metabolic rates. As was argued before by Keller (1988/1989), these experiments stressed the importance of cell volume measurements, in order to allow calculations of intracellular concentrations. 4. DMSP production as an overflow mechanism for excess reduced sulphur and as a means of dissipating energy excess From studies of higher plants it is known that the concentrations of cysteine and methionine are kept at a low equilibrium level in the order of 10 mM. It is therefore important for a cell to have a buffering J. Stefels / Journal of Sea Research 43 (2000) 183–197 NO32- 191 SO42- amino acids ? + APS serine – S 2- O-acetylserine cysteine – glutathione – protein methionine NH3 S-adenosyl- tra n smeth yla ti on s methionine algae S-methylmethionine NH3 higher plants DMSP DMS Fig. 4. Regulatory coupling between the assimilatory nitrate and sulphate reduction pathways. Solid lines represent reaction pathways. Dotted arrows indicate negative (⫺) or positive (⫹) regulatory effects. mechanism to regulate cysteine and methionine levels, when the influx of sulphur exceeds the cell’s conversion capacity into amino acids, proteins and other sulphur-containing components, or when protein degradation increases the cellular concentration of these compounds (Rennenberg, 1989; Brunold, 1990; Giovanelli, 1990). In higher plants, cysteine concentrations may be regulated by the synthesis of glutathione with subsequent excretion into the medium. The methionine concentration appears to be regulated through a strong negative feedback mechanism of its own de novo synthesis (Fig. 4) (Giovanelli, 1990). It has been suggested that SMM may also be involved in the methionine regulation, by acting as a storage of methyl groups via a small cycle in which SMM is formed from methionine, and in which two molecules of methionine can be regenerated when SMM donates a methyl group to homocysteine (Fig. 1) (Giovanelli, 1987; Mazelis, 1993). In W. biflora, however, the flux through the SMM cycle appeared to be small compared with the flux through DMSP (Hanson et al., 1994). In higher plants, it is well known that a reciprocal regulatory coupling exists between the pathways of assimilatory sulphate and nitrate reduction (Fig. 4) (Giovanelli, 1990; Brunold, 1993). This mechanism ensures the appropriate proportions of sulphurcontaining and other amino acids for protein synthesis. The availability of O-acetylserine presumably plays a key role in this regulation. High concentrations enhance the activity of APS sulphotransferase 192 J. Stefels / Journal of Sea Research 43 (2000) 183–197 and cysteine synthesis. On the other hand, an increased cysteine concentration has been shown to inhibit serine acetyltransferase activity, thereby reducing O-acetylserine production. In higher plants this mechanism may result in inhibited sulphate reduction under nitrogen limitation, and vice versa. For many DMSP-producing algae and plants, however, it has been observed that N-limitation may result in increased DMSP production (Dacey et al., 1987; Turner et al., 1988; Gröne and Kirst, 1992; Hanson et al., 1994; Colmer et al., 1996), in other words, in increased sulphur incorporation relative to nitrogen incorporation. This may be explained if the production of DMSP is considered as an overflow mechanism. One may regard an overflow mechanism as a reaction of the cell under conditions of unbalanced growth: it produces (and discards) compounds in order to ensure the continuation of other metabolic pathways. In this respect, the continued production of DMSP keeps the cysteine and methionine concentrations at a low level, thereby preventing possible feedback mechanisms from coming into action (Fig. 4). This allows continued sulphate assimilation even under nitrogen-limited conditions. The transamination reaction in the production pathway of DMSP redistributes nitrogen into new amino acids (Gage et al., 1997). In addition, an increased DMSP concentration may save on the cell’s nitrogen requirement as explained above. Increased DMSP production does not necessarily result in increased intracellular DMSP concentrations. This will depend on the cell’s need for compatible solutes and will be dictated by the sum of all osmotically active compounds; not only the N-containing compounds, but also free carbohydrates, amino acids, etc. Increased excretion into the medium may be a means of dissipating both excess sulphur and carbon. This overflow mechanism is not necessarily confined to nitrogen deficient conditions. It may also play a role in protein turnover. Protein turnover is an essential process, allowing plants to re-utilise amino acids, to change protein content during development and to adapt their enzyme system to new environmental conditions, especially under stress (Cooke et al., 1979; Vierstra, 1993; Dennis et al., 1997). When methionine is produced from the degradation of proteins by proteases, the function of DMSP production would be one of re-allocating nitrogen from methionine to other amino acids, thereby increasing the cell’s ability to address the new condition. Indeed, Gröne and Kirst (1992) observed a 3-fold increase in cellular DMSP content within 24 h in cultures of Tetraselmis subcordiformis to which 100 mM methionine had been added. In leaf disks of W. biflora, DMSP production also increased with the administered dose of methionine (Hanson et al., 1994). Experiments with protease inhibitors added to T. subcordiformis cells experiencing an hyperosmotic shock resulted in a significantly reduced build-up of DMSP compared to control cultures (Gröne and Kirst, 1992). The authors argued that under stress (all conditions which reduce growth) the pool of methionine builds up, resulting in increased DMSP production. They concluded that methionine availability may control DMSP synthesis, indicating a possible role for DMSP in methionine metabolism. This is consistent with an overflow hypothesis. In general, it is observed that the production of protein saturates at lower light intensities than does total carbon incorporation (Morris, 1981; Cuhel et al., 1984; Cuhel and Lean, 1987a). This is the result of different kinetics of nitrate reduction and carbon fixation versus light intensity: the Kmlight for nitrate reduction is significantly lower than that for photosynthetic carbon fixation (Turpin, 1991). Consequently, at lowlight intensities, nitrate assimilation is capable of outcompeting carbon fixation for reducing power, thereby suppressing carbohydrate formation. At high light intensities, a larger portion of total carbon is incorporated into carbohydrates. Once the rate of carbon incorporation exceeds the rate of protein synthesis and cell growth is dictated by N assimilation, it may be beneficial to dissipate excess carbon into DMSP. This hypothesis was used to explain the results of experiments with Phaeocystis sp. cultures grown under different conditions of iron and light (Stefels and Van Leeuwe, 1996) (see also Section 3.4). It could also be applicable for the light experiments carried out by Karsten et al. (1990) (see also Section 3.1): in long-day incubations (18 h light:6 h dark), increased intracellular DMSP concentrations were observed with increasing light intensity; in contrast, the short-day incubations (6 h light:18 h dark) may not have resulted in enough carbon fixation to sustain DMSP production on top of the central metabolic processes necessary for growth. The J. Stefels / Journal of Sea Research 43 (2000) 183–197 relatively high DMSP concentrations in algae cultivated at low temperatures (Karsten et al., 1992, 1996; Sheets and Rhodes, 1996) may follow a comparable explanation. Carbon incorporation into protein often reduces with declining temperatures, whereas the production of carbohydrates is relatively indifferent to temperature (Morris, 1981; Cuhel and Lean, 1987a). Consequently, at low temperatures, when growth is unbalanced, the supply of carbohydrates creates a potential for DMSP production. 5. Enzymatic cleavage of DMSP Since the onset of research on DMSP production by algae, knowledge of the degradation of this compound has remained scarce. Most research on the enzymatic cleavage of DMSP has addressed bacterial degradation (e.g. Kiene, 1990, 1992; Ledyard and Dacey, 1994; Taylor and Visscher, 1996), but now there is increasing evidence for an important role of algal DMSP lyase activity. Lyase activity has been observed in laboratory studies on a variety of microand macro-algal species (Ishida, 1968; Stefels and Van Boekel, 1993; Steinke et al., 1996, 1998). In field samples, lyase activity often appears to be associated with particular species (Stefels et al., 1995), or with the larger size fractions, suggesting a role for algal enzymes (Cantin et al., 1999; Scarratt et al., 2000; Steinke et al., 2000). Little is known about the function of DMSP lyase in algae. Experiments with crude extracts give little information on the in vivo activity, and measurements of DMS production in axenic cultures are limited (Vairavamurthy et al., 1985; Stefels and Van Boekel, 1993). If DMSP plays an active role in the osmotic acclimation of cells, degradation by DMSP lyase could be a valuable tool for the down-regulation of its concentration. Evidence for this is limited. Vairavamurthy et al. (1985) observed the production of DMS in cultures of Pleurochrysis carterae ( Hymenomonas carterae) following hypo-osmotic shocks. However, this was observed only at large shock ranges. Moreover, in cultures transferred to 9 and 18 PSU, output rates of DMS over a 24-h period could only account for a 10% reduction of the original DMSP content at 52.5 PSU. It is therefore questionable whether the conversion of DMSP into DMS in 193 this species is a relevant process in osmotic acclimation. The gradual 30% loss of specific activity of DMSP lyase in Phaeocystis sp., when going from 20 to 45 PSU (Stefels and Dijkhuizen, 1996), also does not support the view that cleavage of DMSP is an accurate mechanism in osmotic acclimation. The question therefore remains what the function of algal DMSP lyase actually is. Volatilisation of DMSP may be a comparable mechanism to the emission of H2S in higher plants. The latter process has been suggested to be of importance to the equilibration of intracellular sulphur species, and to remove excess reduced sulphur (Rennenberg, 1989), although this only appears to occur under unrealistically high sulphur concentrations. Data on the active exudation of intracellular DMSP and its conversion into DMS and acrylate are limited. Two studies report values of around 1% per day of the DMSP quota (Vairavamurthy et al., 1985; Dacey and Wakeham, 1986). In Phaeocystis sp., increasing exudation rates were calculated over the growth phase: from 3% in the exponential growth phase to 11% in the senescence phase (Laroche et al., 1999). Thus, in healthy growing cells, this would result in a release in the order of 1 mM of the internal DMSP concentration. Compared to an equilibrium concentration of cysteine and methionine of around 10 mM, this should be sufficient to equilibrate large fluctuations. In stationary cells, an increased DMSP exudation may reflect not only the removal of excess reduced sulphur, but also the dissipation of energy excess, comparable to the exudation of carbohydrates. If we assume that DMSP production reflects overflow metabolism, then the equilibrium concentration of DMSP will be regulated by its degradation rather than by its production. As stated above, this can be done by transporting DMSP out of the cell. Subsequent removal of DMSP by extracellular cleavage into DMS and acrylate will facilitate this release, as DMSP concentration gradients across the membrane are kept maximal. This is especially relevant for the colony-forming species Phaeocystis sp., as the mucus layer surrounding colonial cells will increase the diffusive boundary layer around these cells (Ploug et al., 1999). The robustness of this boundary layer may allow the formation of microzones around the cells in which elevated levels of excretion products are observed (Mitchell et al., 1985), which, in the case 194 J. Stefels / Journal of Sea Research 43 (2000) 183–197 of DMSP, would be unfavourable. In addition to the maintenance of a DMSP gradient, the cell may simultaneously profit from the release of acrylate and protons upon cleavage. The released protons can be used for e.g. nutrient uptake. The build-up of acrylate within the microzone (Noordkamp et al., 2000) may possibly result in concentrations that are repulsive to grazers. In this way, the otherwise wasteful release of DMSP can be of some benefit to the cell. 6. Conclusions Considering its generally high intracellular concentration and the fact that it is a zwitter-ion, DMSP has a function in the osmotic protection of algal cells. It appears to function as a compatible solute, especially at low temperatures. The gradual shifts in DMSP content that can usually be observed after prolonged incubations in different salinities may, however, reflect a changed metabolism rather than an active regulatory mechanism. Compared to other compatible solutes such as polyols, DMSP synthesis is an energyexpensive process. In the photic zone of the marine environment, however, energy is usually not a growth-limiting factor, but rather the requirement of nutrients. In the marine environment, sulphur is a nutrient in excess, whereas nitrogen often limits phytoplankton growth. It is striking that the production of DMSP appears to have evolved in algae and higher plants living in this environment. The fact that DMSP production is confined to several algal classes and a few families of higher plants, together with the observation that DMSP biosynthesis may proceed along three different pathways, may indicate that DMSP synthesis has evolved independently several times. Perhaps it is this relatively abundant occurrence of sulphate that has put little pressure on the efficient use of this compound. It is argued here that DMSP production can be regarded as an overflow mechanism when growth is unbalanced and when there is a need for dissipating excess reduced sulphur and excess energy, bringing nitrogen back into the system. A concomitant increase of the intracellular DMSP concentration will save on the cell’s nitrogen requirement for osmolytes. 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