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Creators/Authors contains: "Jiang, Hai-Bo"

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  1. null (Ed.)
    Primary productivity in the nutrient-poor subtropical ocean gyres depends on new nitrogen inputs from nitrogen fixers that convert inert dinitrogen gas into bioavailable forms. Temperature and iron (Fe) availability constrain marine nitrogen fixation, and both are changing due to anthropogenic ocean warming. We examined the physiological responses of the globally important marine nitrogen fixer, Crocosphaera watsonii across its full thermal range as a function of iron availability. At the lower end of its thermal range, from 22 to 27°C, Crocosphaera growth, nitrogen fixation, and Nitrogen-specific Iron Use Efficiencies (N-IUEs, mol N fixed hour –1 mol Fe –1 ) increased with temperature. At an optimal growth temperature of 27°C, N-IUEs were 66% higher under iron-limited conditions than iron-replete conditions, indicating that low-iron availability increases metabolic efficiency. However, Crocosphaera growth and function decrease from 27 to 32°C, temperatures that are predicted for an increasing fraction of tropical oceans in the future. Altogether, this suggests that Crocosphaera are well adapted to iron-limited, warm waters, within prescribed limits. A model incorporating these results under the IPCC RCP 8.5 warming scenario predicts that Crocosphaera N-IUEs could increase by a net 47% by 2100, particularly in higher-latitude waters. These results contrast with published responses of another dominant nitrogen fixer ( Trichodesmium ), with predicted N-IUEs that increase most in low-latitude, tropical waters. These models project that differing responses of Crocosphaera and Trichodesmium N-IUEs to future warming of iron-limited oceans could enhance their current contributions to global marine nitrogen fixation with rates increasing by ∼91 and ∼22%, respectively, thereby shifting their relative importance to marine new production and also intensifying their regional divergence. Thus, interactive temperature and iron effects may profoundly transform existing paradigms of nitrogen biogeochemistry and primary productivity in open ocean regimes. 
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  2. ABSTRACT Cyanobacteria are foundational drivers of global nutrient cycling, with high intracellular iron (Fe) requirements. Fe is found at extremely low concentrations in aquatic systems, however, and the ways in which cyanobacteria take up Fe are largely unknown, especially the initial step in Fe transport across the outer membrane. Here, we identified one TonB protein and four TonB-dependent transporters (TBDTs) of the energy-requiring Fe acquisition system and six porins of the passive diffusion Fe uptake system in the model cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803. The results experimentally demonstrated that TBDTs not only participated in organic ferri-siderophore uptake but also in inorganic free Fe (Fe′) acquisition. 55 Fe uptake rate measurements showed that a TBDT quadruple mutant acquired Fe at a lower rate than the wild type and lost nearly all ability to take up ferri-siderophores, indicating that TBDTs are critical for siderophore uptake. However, the mutant retained the ability to take up Fe′ at 42% of the wild-type Fe′ uptake rate, suggesting additional pathways of Fe′ acquisition besides TBDTs, likely by porins. Mutations in four of the six porin-encoding genes produced a low-Fe-sensitive phenotype, while a mutation in all six genes was lethal to cell survival. These diverse outer membrane Fe uptake pathways reflect cyanobacterial evolution and adaptation under a range of Fe regimes across aquatic systems. IMPORTANCE Cyanobacteria are globally important primary producers and contribute about 25% of global CO 2 fixation. Low Fe bioavailability in surface waters is thought to limit the primary productivity in as much as 40% of the global ocean. The Fe acquisition strategies that cyanobacteria have evolved to overcome Fe deficiency remain poorly characterized. We experimentally characterized the key players and the cooperative work mode of two Fe uptake pathways, including an active uptake pathway and a passive diffusion pathway in the model cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. Our finding proved that cyanobacteria use ferri-siderophore transporters to take up Fe′, and they shed light on the adaptive mechanisms of cyanobacteria to cope with widespread Fe deficiency across aquatic environments. 
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