Project: The Ecology of Prochlorococcus: Toward a Model System for Microbial Oceanography

Acronym/Short Name:Prochlorococcus
Project Duration:2002-11 - 2008-12
Geolocation:BATS and HOT station ALOHA

Description

The goal was to collect long-term, high-resolution data on the temporal and spatial variability of Prochlorococcus ecotypes in the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. The abundance of five Prochlorococcus ecotypes was determined by quantitative PCR at 12 depths every month for 5 years at two locations.

The work was done in coordination with NSF-funded Bermuda Atlantic Time Series (BATS) and Hawaii Ocean Time-series (HOT), but not officially affiliated with these programs.

Geolocation:

BATS location (5 nautical mile radius around 31 40'N, 64 10'W)

HOT Station ALOHA (5 nautical mile radius around 22 45'N, 158 00' W)

References:

Temporal dynamics of Prochlorococcus ecotypes in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. Rex R Malmstrom, Allison Coe, Gregory C Kettler, Adam C Martiny, Jorge Frias-Lopez, Erik R Zinser, Sallie W Chisholm. The ISME Journal 4, 1252-1264 (13 May 2010) doi:10.1038/ismej.2010.60 Link to paper

Original Project Abstract:

The power of a model system for advancing our understanding of the natural world has been proven repeatedly in diverse sub-disciplines of science. This approach is equally valuable for the study of marine microbial ecology, either through the sustained study of a particular ecosystem, or through the study of a particular organism at all scales of organization from the genome to the ecosystem level. In this project the investigators will do the latter through a diverse set of laboratory and field studies designed to advance the understanding of Prochlorococcus, the numerically dominant phytoplankter in the world oceans. The objective is to understand what regulates the distribution and abundance of this important primary producer. Prochlorococcus has a number of features that make it a useful model organism for understanding the forces that shape marine microbial systems, and for generating hypotheses that will advance the field of Microbial Oceanography. It is the smallest and most abundant photosynthetic cell in the oceans, it can be isolated into culture, and it can be easily enumerated and studied in situ. Furthermore, it has the smallest genome of any known photosynthetic cell -- the minimal phototroph to date. Prochlorococcus is really a collection of "ecotypes", i.e., closely related but physiologically distinct populations that co-exist with different distributions along the light, temperature, nutrient, and predator (including viruses) gradients that shape their habitat. These distributions are determined by the relative fitness of the cells, i.e. the balance of growth rates and death rates along these gradients. The broad challenge is to understand the forces that have shaped this microdiversity over evolutionary time, and that guide the self-organization of these populations under different selective regimes. This is a multi-dimensional project designed to understand the "bottom up" (growth limitation by light, temperature, oxygen, and nutrients) and "top down" (mortality from viruses and grazing) influences on the population growth of different Prochlorococcus ecotypes through both laboratory and field studies. The project will involve high-throughput studies of the growth of ecotypes along gradients of environmental variables in the laboratory, as well as studies of the distribution of ecotypes along spatial and temporal gradients in the field (at the Hawaii and Bermuda Time Series Stations, along a longitudinal Atlantic transect, and in Oxygen Minimum Zones in the Arabian Sea and Peruvian Upwelling) using Q-PCR to assess their relative abundance. The investigators will also study the life cycle of viruses that infect Prochlorococcus and cross infect between ecotypes, and the growth and mortality rates of specific ecotypes in field samples due to grazing pressure. Another set of analyses will measure the full diversity of co-occurring Prochlorococcus in selected field samples, and work toward understanding at what level genetic diversity corresponds to ecologically meaningful diversity. Finally, the study will develop statistical methods for the characterization and analysis of Prochlorococcus ecotype "fitness spaces" established in the laboratory, and compare them with the distribution of ecotypes along environmental gradients in the field. This will allow a rigorously analysis of the degree to which different selective pressures shape the relative abundance of the different Prochlorococcus ecotypes in the oceans, and how they change over time and space.



People

Lead Principal Investigator: Sallie W. Chisholm
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT-Dept CEE)

Co-Principal Investigator: Daniele Veneziano
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)

Contact: Sallie W. Chisholm
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT-Dept CEE)