963 resultados para Radiation-induced Apoptosis
Resumo:
The adenovirus type 5 E1A (abbreviated E1A) has previously been known as an immortalization oncogene because E1A is required for transforming oncogenes, such as ras and E1B, to transform cells in primary cultures. However, E1A has also been shown to downregulate the overexpression of the Her-2/neu oncogene, resulting in suppression of transformation and tumorigenesis induced by that oncogene. In addition, E1A is able to promote apoptosis induced by anticancer drugs, irradiation, and serum deprivation. Many tyrosine kinases, such as the EGF receptor, Her-2/Neu, Src, and Axl are known to play a role in oncogenic signals in transformed cells. To study the mechanism underlying the E1A-mediated tumor-suppressing function, we exploited a modified tyrosine kinase profile assay (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci, 93, 5958–5962, 1996) to identify potential tyrosine kinases regulated by E1A. RT-PCR products were synthesized with two degenerate primers derived from the conserved motifs of various tyrosine kinases. A tyrosine kinase downregulated by E1A was identified as Axl by analyzing the Alu I-digested RT-PCR products. We isolated the DNA fragment of interest, and found that E1A negatively regulated the expression of the transforming receptor tyrosine kinase Axl at the transcriptional level. To study whether downregulation of the Axl receptor is involved in E1A-mediated growth suppression, we transfected axl cDNA into E1A-expressing cells (ip1-E1A) to establish cells that overexpressed Axl (ip1-E1A-Axl). The Axl ligand Gas6 triggered a greater mitogenic effect in these ip1-E1A-Axl cells than in the control cells ip1-E1A and protected the Axl-expressing cells from serum deprivation-induced apoptosis. Further study showed that Akt is required for Axl-Gas6 signaling to prevent ip1-E1A-Axl cells from serum deprivation-induced apoptosis. These results indicate that downregulation of the Axl receptor by E1A is involved in E1A-mediated growth suppression and E1A-induced apoptosis, and thereby contributes to E1A's anti-tumor activities. ^
Resumo:
Overexpression of the receptor tyrosine kinase p185ErbB2 confers taxol resistance in breast cancers and activation of p34Cdc2 is required for taxol-induced apoptosis and cytotoxicity. Here, we investigated the underlying mechanisms and found that overexpression of p185 ErbB2 inhibits taxol-induced apoptosis through two branches to inhibit activation of p34Cdc2. ^ Overexpression of p185ErbB2 in MDA-MB-435 cells by transfection transcriptionally upregulated p21Cip1, which associates with p34Cdc2, inhibits taxol-mediated p34Cdc2 activation, delays cell entrance to G2/M phase, and thereby inhibits taxol-induced apoptosis. In p21Cip1 antisense-transfected MDA-MB-435 cells or in p21−/− MEF cells, p185ErbB2 was unable to inhibit taxol-induced apoptosis. Therefore, p21Cip1 participates in the regulation of a G2/M checkpoint that contributes to resistance to taxol-induced apoptosis in p185ErbB2-overexpressing breast cancer cells. ^ Direct phosphorylation on Tyrosine-15 of p34Cdc2 by p185 ErbB2 receptor tyrosine kinase inhibits p34Cdc2 activation. The wild-type p185ErbB2 but not the kinase-defective mutant, when overexpressed in breast cancer cells, can phosphorylate p34Cdc2 on tyrosine (Tyr)15, an inhibitory phosphorylation site of p34 Cdc2. The kinase domain of the ErbB2 receptor was sufficient for binding to p34Cdc2 and directly phosphorylating the recombinant Cdc2. Phosphospecific Cdc2-Tyr15 immunoblot analyses, immunocomplex kinase assays, and phospho-amino acid analyses revealed that p185ErbB2 specifically phosphorylates Cdc2 on Tyr15. Phosphorylation of Cdc2-Tyr15 by ErbB2 is modulated during cell cycle and corresponded with delayed cell entry into G2/M phase. The kinase-defective p185ErbB2, which incapable of phosphorylating Cdc2-Tyr15, failed to inhibit taxol-induced activation and apoptosis, whereas the wild-type and the constitutive-active p185ErbB2 did. Increased Cdc2-Tyr15 phosphorylation was found in Erb132-overexpressing tumors from breast cancer patients. Thus, direct phosphorylation of Cdc2-Tyr15 by p185 ErbB2 RTK in breast cancer cells inhibits taxol-induced p34 Cdc2 activation and apoptosis, thereby conferring taxol resistance. ^
Resumo:
The promyelocytic leukemia protein PML is a growth suppressor essential for induction of apoptosis by diverse apoptotic stimuli. The mechanism by which PML regulates cell death remains unclear. In this study we found that ectopic expression of PML potentiates cell death in the TNFα-resistant tumor line U2OS and significantly sensitized these cells to apoptosis induced by TNFα in a p53-independent manner. Our study demonstrated that both PML and PML/TNFα-induced cell death are associated with DNA fragmentation, activation of caspase-3, -7, -8, and degradation of DFF/ICAD. Furthermore, we found that PML-induced and PML/TNFα-induced cell death could be blocked by the caspase-8 inhibitors crmA and c-FLIP, but not by Bcl-2, the inhibitor of mitochondria-mediated apoptotic pathway. These findings indicate that this cell death event is initiated through the death receptor-dependent apoptosis pathway. Our study further showed that PML recruits NF-kappa B (NF-κB) to the PML nuclear body, blocks NF-κB binding to its cognate enhancer, and represses its transactivation function with the C-terminal region. Therefore PML inhibits the NF-κB survival pathway. Overexpression of NF-κB rescued cell death induced by PML and PML/TNFκ. These results imply that PML is a functional repressor of NF-κB. This notion was further supported by the finding that the PML−/− mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEFs) are more resistant than the wild-type MEFs to TNFκ-induced apoptosis. In conclusion, our studies convincingly demonstrated that PML potentiates cell death through inhibition of the NF-κB survival pathway. Activation of NF-κB frequently occurs during oncogenesis. Our study here suggests that a loss of PML function enhances the NF-κB survival pathway and this event may contribute to tumorigenesis. ^
Resumo:
Philadelphia chromosome (Ph)-positive chronic myeloid leukemia is caused by a clonal myeloproliferative expansion of malignant primitive hematopoietic progenitor cells. The Ph results from the reciprocal translocation of the ends of chromosome 9 and 22, which generate Bcr-Abl fusion proteins. The Bcr-Abl proteins possess a constitutively activated Abl tyrosine kinase, which is the driving force responsible for causing leukemia. The activated Bcr-Abl tyrosine kinase stimulates multiple signal transduction pathway affecting growth, differentiation and survival of cells. It is known that the Bcr-Abl tyrosine kinase activates several signaling proteins including Stat5, which is a member of the Jak/Stat pathway that is activated by cytokines that control the growth and differentiation of normal hematopoietic cells. Our laboratory was the first one to report that Jak2 tyrosine kinase is activated in a human Bcr-Abl positive hematopoietic cell line. In this thesis, we further investigated the activation of Jak2 by Bcr-Abl. We found that Jak2 is activated not only in cultured Bcr-abl positive cell lines but also in blood cells from CML blast crisis patients. We also demonstrated that SH2 domain of Bcr-Abl is required for efficient activation Jak2. We further showed that Jak2 binds to the C-terminal domain of Bcr-Abl; tyrosine residue 1007, which is critical for Jak2 activation, is phosphorylated by Bcr-Abl. We searched downstream targets of Jak2 in Bcr-Abl positive cells. We treated Bcr-Abl positive cells with a Jak2 kinase inhibitor AG490 and found that c-Myc protein expression is inhibited by AG490. We further demonstrated that Jak2 inhibitor AG490 not only inhibit C-MYC transcription but also protect c-Myc protein from proteasome-dependent degradation. We also showed that AG490 did not affect Bcr-Abl kinase activity and Stat5 activation and its downstream target Bcl-xL expression. AG490 also induced apoptosis of Bcr-Abl positive cells, similar to Bcr-Abl kinase inhibitor STI571 (also termed Gliveec, a very effective drug for CML), but unlike STI571 the apoptosis effects induced by AG490 can not be rescued by IL-3 containing WEHI conditioned medium. We further established several Bcr-Abl positive clones that express a kinase-inactive Jak2 and found that these clones had reduced tumor formation in nude mice assays. Taken together, these results establish that Jak2 is activated in Bcr-Abl positive CML cells and it is required for c-Myc induction and the oncogenic effects of Bcr-Abl. Furthermore, Jak2 and Stat5 are two independent targets of Bcr-Abl. ^
Resumo:
Normal development and tissue homeostasis requires the carefully orchestrated balance between cell proliferation and cell death. Cell cycle checkpoints control the extent of cell proliferation. Cell death is coordinated through the activation of a cell suicide pathway that results in the morphologically recognizable form of death, apoptosis. Tumorigenesis requires that the balance between these two pathways be disrupted. The tumor suppressor protein Rb has not only been shown to be involved in the enforcement of cell cycle checkpoints, but has also been implicated in playing a role in the regulation of apoptosis. The manner in which Rb enforces cell cycle checkpoints has been well studied; however, its involvement in the regulation of apoptosis is still very unclear. p84N5 is a novel nuclear death domain containing protein that has been shown to interact with the N-terminus of Rb. The fact that it contains a death domain and the fact that it is nuclear localized possibly provides the first known mechanism for apoptotic signaling from the nucleus. The following study tested the hypothesis that the novel exclusively nuclear death domain containing protein p84N5 is an important mediator of programmed cell death and that its apoptotic function is reliant upon its nuclear localization and is regulated by unique functional domains within the p84N5 protein. We identified the p84N5 nuclear localization signal (NLS), eliminated it, and tested the functional significance of nuclear localization by using wild type and mutant sequences fused to EGFP-C1 (Clontech) to create wild type GFPN5 and subsequent mutants. The results of these assays demonstrated exclusive nuclear localization of GFPN5 is required for normal p84N5 induced apoptosis. We further conducted large-scale mutagenesis of the GFPN5 construct to identify a minimal region within p84N5 capable of interacting with Rb. We were able to identify a minimal sequence containing p84N5 amino acids 318 to 464 that was capable of interacting with Rb in co-immunoprecipitation assays. We continued by conducting a structural and functional analysis to identify the region or regions within p84N5 responsible for inducing apoptosis. Point mutations and small-scale deletions within the death domain of p84N5 lessened the effect but did not eliminate p84N5-induced cytotoxicity. Further analysis revealed that the minimal sequence of 318 to 464 of p84N5 was capable of inducing apoptosis to a similar degree as wild-type GFPN5 protein. Since amino acids 318 to 464 of p84N5 are capable of inducing apoptosis and interacting with Rb, we propose possible mechanisms whereby p84N5 may function in a Rb regulated manner. These results demonstrate that p84N5 induced apoptosis is reliant upon its nuclear localization and is regulated by unique functional domains within the p84N5 protein. ^
Resumo:
Tissue transglutaminase (tTGase) is an enzyme that catalyzes the posttranslational modification of proteins via Ca2+-dependent cross-linking reactions. In this study, we extended our earlier observation that tTGase is highly expressed in MCF-7 human breast carcinoma cells selected for the multidrug resistance phenotype (MCF-7/DOX). To directly assess the involvement of tTGase in drug resistance, parental MCF-7 (MCF-7/WT) cells were transfected with cDNAs encoding either a catalytically active (wildtype) or inactive (mutant) tTGase protein. Expression of wildtype tTGase led to spontaneous apoptosis in MCF-7/WT cells, while the mutant tTGase was tolerated by the cells but did not confer resistance to doxorubicin. Analysis of calcium by a spectrofluorometric technique revealed that MCF-7/DOX cells exhibit a defective mechanism in intracellular calcium mobilization, which may play a role in preventing the in situ activation of tTGase and thus allowing the cells to grow despite expressing this enzyme. An elevation in intracellular calcium by treatment with the calcium ionophore A23187 induced rapid and substantial apoptosis in MCF-7/DOX cells as determined by morphological and biochemical criteria. Pretreatment of MCF-7/DOX cells with a tTGase-specific inhibitor (monodansylcadaverine) suppressed A12387-induced apoptosis, suggesting the possible involvement of tTGase-catalyzed protein cross-linking activity. A23187-induced apoptosis in MCF-7/DOX cells was further characterized by PARP cleavage and activation of downstream caspases (-3, -6, and -7). Another interesting aspect of tTGase/A23187-induced apoptosis in MCF-7/DOX cells was that these cells failed to show any prototypic changes associated with the mitochondrial (altered membrane potential, cytochrome c release, caspase-9 activation), receptor-induced (Bid cleavage), or endoplasmic reticulum-stressed (caspase-12 activation) apoptotic pathways. In summary, our data demonstrate that, despite being highly resistant to conventional chemotherapeutic drugs, MCF-7/DOX cells are highly sensitive to apoptosis induced by increased intracellular calcium. We conclude that tTGase does not play a direct role in doxorubicin resistance in MCF-7/DOX cells, but may play a role in enhancing the sensitivity of these cells to undergo apoptosis. ^
Resumo:
The c-myc oncogene has the unusual ability to induce proliferation and apoptosis. Transgenic mice have been generated in which the expression of Myc is under the control of an epithelial-specific keratin 5 (K5) promoter. These mice have increased levels of proliferation and p53-dependent apoptosis, and are predisposed to developing spontaneous tumors in epithelial tissues. In this study, various knockout mice were bred to K5 Myc transgenic mice to identify factors involved in the aberrant apoptosis, hyperproliferation, and spontaneous tumorigenesis present in these mice. Consistent with in vitro studies, Myc-induced, p53-dependent apoptosis in transgenic epidermis was found to be partially dependent on p19ARF, a p53 regulator that inhibits mdm2. Additionally, the rate of tumorigenesis was increased when p19ARF was absent in Myc transgenic mice. Consistent with previous reports that some E2F family members may function as tumor suppressors, inactivation of either E2f1 or E2f2 was found to accelerate tumor development in the K5 Myc transgenic mice. Acceleration of tumorigenesis in the absence of E2F1 occurred despite the fact that apoptotic levels were increased in transgenic tissue and tumors null for E2f1 , whereas hyperproliferation was unaffected. In contrast, inactivation of E2f2 was found to increase hyperproliferation in the K5 Myc transgenic mice, while having no effect on apoptosis. The lack of E2f1 in the Myc transgenic mice increased the expression of several p53 transcription target genes, which may explain the increased apoptosis in these mice. In transgenic epidermis, p53 is phosphorylated at serine 18, a site of phosphorylation by ATM. Inactivation of ATM in K5 Myc transgenic mice impaired Myc-induced apoptosis, identifying ATM as having an important role in Myc-induced apoptosis. Moreover, the absence of ATM accelerates tumorigenesis in K5-expressing tissues. However, p53 accumulation and phosphorylation at serine 18 induced by Myc occurs independent of ATM. Therefore, another activity of ATM appears to be important for Myc-induced apoptosis. These findings show that acceleration of tumorigenesis in K5 Myc transgenic mice, as in the case of p53, p19ARF, E2F1, E2F2, and ATM absence, does not necessarily correlate with suppression of Myc-induced apoptosis, as seen only when p53, p19ARF or ATM was absent. ^
Resumo:
The hypothesis addressed in this project was that novel variants of naturally occurring human glutathione S-transferase P1 (GSTP1) can be created by random mutagenesis of the GSTP1 active site to yield polypeptides with increased enzymatic activity against electrophilic substrates. Specifically, the mutant proteins would metabolize and inactivate selected electrophiles more efficiently than wild-type GSTP1 and confer significant cytoprotection, as measured by reduced apoptosis and increased clonogenic survival. Glutathione S-transferase P1, a major electrophile metabolizing and detoxifying enzyme, is encoded by a polymorphic genetic locus. This locus contains nucleotide transitions in the region encoding the active site of the peptide that yields proteins with significant structural and functional differences. The method of Degenerate Oligonucleotide Mediated Random Mutagenesis (DOMRM) was used to generate cDNAs encoding unique GSTP1 polypeptides with mutations within electrophile binding site (H-site) while leaving the glutathione binding site unaffected. A prokaryotic expression library of the mutant GSTP1 polypeptides was created and screened for increased resistance to cisplatin. This screen resulted in the isolation of 96 clones representing 22 distinct mutant cDNA sequences. To investigate the effects of the changes in the H-site on the biological activity of GSTP1, the cDNA of wild-type GSTP1c and two of the identified mutants were stably transfected into human LNCaP-Pro5 prostate cancer cells that do not endogenously express GSTP1. Wild-type transfectants were resistant to doxorubicin-induced apoptosis and displayed increased clonogenic survival compared to vector controls. However, contrary to the hypothesis, in both assays the mutant transfectants were no more resistant to doxorubicin than the wild-type transfectants. To elucidate the mechanisms underlying GSTP1-mediated survival, an in-vitro assay was developed to determine whether active GSTP1 protein directly metabolizes doxorubicin by conjugation to reduced glutathione (GSH). Although GSH did promote the appearance of a unique doxorubicin conjugate, conjugate formation was not substantially increased by the addition of GSTP1 in a variety of reaction conditions. ^
Resumo:
The solid-state-physics technique of electron spin resonance (ESR) has been employed in an exploratory study of marine limestones and impact-related deposits from Cretaceous-Tertiary (KT) boundary sites including Spain (Sopelana and Caravaca), New Jersey (Bass River), the U.S. Atlantic continental margin (Blake Nose, ODP Leg 171B/1049/A), and several locations in Belize and southern Mexico within -600 km of the Chicxulub crater. The ESR spectra of SO3(1-) (a radiation-induced point defect involving a sulfite ion substitutional for CO3(2-) which has trapped a positive charge) and Mn(2+) in calcite were singled out for analysis because they are unambiguously interpretable and relatively easy to record. ESR signal strengths of calcite-related SO3(1-) and Mn(2+) have been studied as functions of stratigraphic position in whole-rock samples across the KT boundary at Sopelana, Caravaca, and Blake Nose. At all three of these sites, anomalies in SO3(1-) and/or Mn(2+) intensities are noted at the KT boundary relative to the corresponding background levels in the rocks above and below. At Caravaca, the SO3(1-) background itself is found to be lower by a factor of 2.7 in the first 30,000 years of the Tertiary relative to its steady-state value in the last 15,000 years of the Cretaceous, indicating either an abrupt and quasi-permanent change in ocean chemistry (or temperature) or extinction of the marine biota primarily responsible for fixing sulfite in the late Cretaceous limestones. An exponential decrease in the Mn(2+) concentration per unit mass calcite, [Mn(2+)], as the KT boundary at Caravaca is approached from below (1/e characteristic length =1.4 cm) is interpreted as a result of post-impact leaching of the seafloor. Absolute ESR quantitative analyses of proximal impact deposits from Belize and southern Mexico group naturally into three distinct fields in a twodimensional [SO3(1-)]-versus-[Mn(2+)] scatter plot. These fields contain (I) limestone ejecta clasts, (II) accretionary lapilli, and (III) a variety of SO3(1-) -depleted/Mn(2+) enriched impact deposits. Data for the investigated non-impact-related Cretaceous and Tertiary marine limestones (Spain and Blake Nose) fall outside of these three fields. With reference to thes enon-impact deposits, fields I, II, and III can be respectively characterized as Mn(2+) -depleted, SO3(1-) -enhanced, and SO3(1-) -depleted. It is proposed that (1) field I represents calcites from the Yucatin Platform, and that the Mn(2+) -depleted signature can be used as an indicator of primary Chicxulub ejecta in deep marine environments and (2) field II represents calcites that include a component formed in the vapor plume, either from condensation in the presence of CO2/SO3(1-) -rich vapors, or reactions between CaO and CO2/SO3 rich vapors, and that this SO3(1-) -enhanced signature can be used as an indicator of impact vapor plume deposits. Given these two propositions, the ESR data for the Blake Nose deposits are ascribed to the presence of basal coarse calcitic Chicxulub ejecta clasts, while the finer components that are increasingly represented toward the top are interpreted to contain high- SO3(1-) calcite from the vapor plume. The apparently-undisturbed Bass River deposit may contain even higher concentrations of vapor-plume calcite. None of the three components included in field III appear to be represented at distal, deep marine KT-boundary sites; this field may include several types of impact-related deposits of diverse origins and diagenetic histories.
Resumo:
En el paradigma clásico, los efectos biológicos de la radiación ionizante se atribuyen al daño en el ADN inducido en cada célula irradiada. La demostración de efectos de vecindad causados por radiación ionizante (EVIR) ha generado un cambio profundo en la concepción actual de la radiobiología. Los EVIR son aquellos efectos causados por la radiación que se producen en células que no han sido irradiadas. Diversos avances técnicos, en particular el empleo de microhaces, han permitido estudiar los EVIR in vitro. Se conocen dos vías por las cuales las células irradiadas pueden comunicarse con las no irradiadas, a saber: mediante uniones especializadas (nexos) que comunican los citoplasmas de células adyacentes, y mediante la secreción de factores solubles al medio extracelular. Estos factores incluyen varias citokinas y especies reactivas del oxígeno y nitrógeno. Las vías de señalización en las células afectadas involucran en particular la activación de proteína kinasas activadas por mitógenos (MAPK) y del factor de transcripción NFciclooxigenasa 2, sintasa de óxido nítrico 2 y NAD(P)H oxidasa. Los EVIR pueden causar mutaciones puntuales y cambios epigenéticos. Los efectos sobre las vías de señalización pueden persistir indefinidamente e incluso transmitirse a la descendencia. Paradójicamente, en ciertas condiciones los EVIR pueden ser adaptativos, es decir que tornan a las células afectadas más resistentes a la radiación. La adaptación exige síntesis de proteínas y mejora la capacidad celular de reparar el ADN y resistir el estrés oxidativo. Los EVIR también se han demostrado in vivo. Por tanto, pueden tener implicaciones importantes en radioterapia, tanto para mejorar la eficacia terapéutica como para reducir la incidencia de efectos adversos. Asimismo, su mejor conocimiento puede influenciar las normas internacionales de radioprotección.
Resumo:
Pack ice in the Bellingshausen Sea contained moderate to high stocks of microalgal biomass (3-10 mg Chl a/m**2) spanning the range of general sea-ice microalgal microhabitats (e.g., bottom, interior and surface) during the International Polar Year (IPY) Sea Ice Mass Balance in the Antarctic (SIMBA) studies. Measurements of irradiance above and beneath the ice as well as optical properties of the microalgae therein demonstrated that absorption of photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) by particulates (microalgae and detritus) had a substantial influence on attenuation of PAR and irradiance transmission in areas with moderate snow covers (0.2-0.3 m) and more moderate effects in areas with low snow cover. Particulates contributed an estimated 25 to 90% of the attenuation coefficients for the first-year sea ice at wavelengths less than 500 nm. Strong ultraviolet radiation (UVR) absorption by particulates was prevalent in the ice habitats where solar radiation was highest - with absorption coefficients by ice algae often being as large as that of the sea ice. Strong UVR-absorption features were associated with an abundance of dinoflagellates and a general lack of diatoms - perhaps suggesting UVR may be influencing the structure of some parts of the sea-ice microbial communities in the pack ice during spring. We also evaluated the time-varying changes in the spectra of under-ice irradiances in the austral spring and showed dynamics associated with changes that could be attributed to coupled changes in the ice thickness (mass balance) and microalgal biomass. All results are indicative of radiation-induced changes in the absorption properties of the pack ice and highlight the non-linear, time-varying, biophysical interactions operating within the Antarctic pack ice ecosystem.
Resumo:
It has been proposed that ocean acidification (OA) will interact with other environmental factors to influence the overall impact of global change on biological systems. Accordingly we investigated the influence of nitrogen limitation and OA on the physiology of diatoms by growing the diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum Bohlin under elevated (1000 µatm; high CO2- HC) or ambient (390 µatm; low CO2-LC) levels of CO2 with replete (110 µmol/L; high nitrate-HN) or reduced (10 ?mol/L; low nitrate-LN) levels of NO3- and subjecting the cells to solar radiation with or without UV irradiance to determine their susceptibility to UV radiation (UVR, 280-400 nm). Our results indicate that OA and UVB induced significantly higher inhibition of both the photosynthetic rate and quantum yield under LN than under HN conditions. UVA or/and UVB increased the cells' non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) regardless of the CO2 levels. Under LN and OA conditions, activity of superoxide dismutase and catalase activities were enhanced, along with the highest sensitivity to UVB and the lowest ratio of repair to damage of PSII. HC-grown cells showed a faster recovery rate of yield under HN but not under LN conditions. We conclude therefore that nutrient limitation makes cells more prone to the deleterious effects of UV radiation and that HC conditions (ocean acidification) exacerbate this effect. The finding that nitrate limitation and ocean acidification interact with UV-B to reduce photosynthetic performance of the diatom P. tricornutum implies that ocean primary production and the marine biological C pump will be affected by OA under multiple stressors.
Resumo:
Mixing of seawater subjects phytoplankton to fluctuations in photosynthetically active radiation (400-700 nm) and ultraviolet radiation (UVR; 280-400 nm). These irradiance fluctuations are now superimposed upon ocean acidification and thinning of the upper mixing layer through stratification, which alters mixing regimes. Therefore, we examined the photosynthetic carbon fixation and photochemical performance of a coccolithophore, Gephyrocapsa oceanica, grown under high, future (1,000 µatm) and low, current (390 µatm) CO2 levels, under regimes of fluctuating irradiances with or without UVR. Under both CO2 levels, fluctuating irradiances, as compared with constant irradiance, led to lower nonphotochemical quenching and less UVR-induced inhibition of carbon fixation and photosystem II electron transport. The cells grown under high CO2 showed a lower photosynthetic carbon fixation rate but lower nonphotochemical quenching and less ultraviolet B (280-315 nm)-induced inhibition. Ultraviolet A (315-400 nm) led to less enhancement of the photosynthetic carbon fixation in the high-CO2-grown cells under fluctuating irradiance. Our data suggest that ocean acidification and fast mixing or fluctuation of solar radiation will act synergistically to lower carbon fixation by G. oceanica, although ocean acidification may decrease ultraviolet B-related photochemical inhibition.