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Carbonate-sensitive phytotransferrin controls high-affinity iron uptake in diatoms.

Authors :
McQuaid JB
Kustka AB
Oborník M
Horák A
McCrow JP
Karas BJ
Zheng H
Kindeberg T
Andersson AJ
Barbeau KA
Allen AE
Source :
Nature [Nature] 2018 Mar 22; Vol. 555 (7697), pp. 534-537. Date of Electronic Publication: 2018 Mar 14.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

In vast areas of the ocean, the scarcity of iron controls the growth and productivity of phytoplankton. Although most dissolved iron in the marine environment is complexed with organic molecules, picomolar amounts of labile inorganic iron species (labile iron) are maintained within the euphotic zone and serve as an important source of iron for eukaryotic phytoplankton and particularly for diatoms. Genome-enabled studies of labile iron utilization by diatoms have previously revealed novel iron-responsive transcripts, including the ferric iron-concentrating protein ISIP2A, but the mechanism behind the acquisition of picomolar labile iron remains unknown. Here we show that ISIP2A is a phytotransferrin that independently and convergently evolved carbonate ion-coordinated ferric iron binding. Deletion of ISIP2A disrupts high-affinity iron uptake in the diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum, and uptake is restored by complementation with human transferrin. ISIP2A is internalized by endocytosis, and manipulation of the seawater carbonic acid system reveals a second-order dependence on the concentrations of labile iron and carbonate ions. In P. tricornutum, the synergistic interaction of labile iron and carbonate ions occurs at environmentally relevant concentrations, revealing that carbonate availability co-limits iron uptake. Phytotransferrin sequences have a broad taxonomic distribution and are abundant in marine environmental genomic datasets, suggesting that acidification-driven declines in the concentration of seawater carbonate ions will have a negative effect on this globally important eukaryotic iron acquisition mechanism.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1476-4687
Volume :
555
Issue :
7697
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29539640
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature25982