A range of marine photosynthetic picoeukaryote phytoplankton species
grown in culture were screened for the
presence of extracellular carbonic anhydrase (CAext), a key
enzyme in inorganic carbon acquisition under carbon-
limiting conditions in some larger marine phytoplankton species. Of the
species tested, extracellular carbonic
anhydrase was detected only in Micromonas pusilla Butcher. The
rapid, light-dependent development of CAext
when cells were transferred from carbon-replete to carbon-limiting conditions
was regulated by the available free-
CO2 concentration and not by total dissolved inorganic carbon.
Kinetic studies provided support for a CO2-
concentrating mechanism in that the K0.5[CO2]
(i.e. the CO2 concentration required for the half-maximal rate
of
photosynthesis) was substantially lower than the Km
[CO2] of Rubisco from related taxa, whilst the intracellular
carbon pool was at least seven fold greater than the extracellular DIC
concentration, for extracellular DIC values
[les ]1.0 mm.
It is proposed that when the flux of CO2 into the cell is
insufficient to support the photosynthetic rate at an
optimum photon irradiance, the development of CAext increases
the availability of CO2 at the plasma membrane.
This ensures rapid acclimation to environmental change and provides an
explanation for the central role of M.
pusilla as a carbon sink in oligotrophic environments.