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Total organic sulfur and dimethylsulfoniopropionate in marine phytoplankton: intracellular variations

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Abstract

Cellular levels of particulate organic sulfur (POS) and dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) were determined in cultures of five species of marine phytoplankton, Amphidinium carterae, Prorocentrum minimum, Emiliania huxleyii, Dunaliella tertiolecta and Skeletonema costatum. The first three are known producers of DMSP while the latter two produce little or non-detectable amounts of DMSP. In those species which produced significant amounts of DMSP, intracellular levels of POS and DMSP varied for the dinoflagellates (A. carterae and P. minimum) while they remained fairly constant for the prymnesiophyte (E. huxleyii) over the growth cycle (until late stationary phase), and DMSP accounted for the majority of the POS (50 to 100%). In species with low levels of DMSP, intracellular POS and DMSP decreased or remained constant over the growth cycle, and DMSP accounted for a much lower percentage of the POS (0 to 40%). Species with high DMSP concentrations had higher POS levels per unit cell volume as well, and DMSP accounted for substantially higher percentages of the particulate organic carbon (POC). Molar N:S ratios suggest a non-protein origin for much of the sulfur in the species producing DMSP. During late stationary phase, an increasing percentage of the DMSP became extracellular in the dinoflagellate and diatom (S. costatum) cultures, suggesting leakage. In a bacterized algal culture, measured quantities were considerably less than in an axenic counterpart, suggesting consumption.

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Communicated by N. H. Marcus, Tallahassee

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Matrai, P.A., Keller, M.D. Total organic sulfur and dimethylsulfoniopropionate in marine phytoplankton: intracellular variations. Marine Biology 119, 61–68 (1994). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00350107

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