Uptake of Cu by Thalassiosira oceanica requires that Cu(II) is reduced to Cu(I) prior to transport across the cell membrane. The reduction step is mediated biochemically by cellular reductases active… Click to show full abstract
Uptake of Cu by Thalassiosira oceanica requires that Cu(II) is reduced to Cu(I) prior to transport across the cell membrane. The reduction step is mediated biochemically by cellular reductases active with a broad range of Cu chemical species. Here, we report on the cellular Cu(II) reduction and Cu(I) uptake of a diatom under saturating and subsaturating irradiance. An increase in growth irradiance, from 50 to 400 μmol photons m-2 s-1, increased the rate of extracellular Cu(II) reduction and steady-state Cu uptake. Under these conditions, Cu-limited cells acquired Cu more efficiently and maintained faster rates of growth than Cu-limited cells in low light. Pseudo-first-order reaction rate constants were about 70-fold faster for Cu(I) uptake than for Cu(II) reduction so that reduction was the rate-determining step in Cu acquisition. Accordingly, steady-state Cu uptake rates predicted from the reduction rate constants agreed well with measured rates of Cu uptake obtained from cultures growing at low nanomolar Cu concentrations. Transcript abundance of putative Cu(II) reductases followed a similar pattern to cupric reductase activity, increasing in Cu-limited cells and with increasing growth irradiance. The results are significant in showing Cu(II) reduction as the rate-determining step in Cu uptake: they suggest that biologically mediated Cu(II) reduction may be an important part of the Cu cycle in surface waters of the open sea.
               
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