Photochemical vs. bacterial control of H2O2 concentration across a pCO2 gradient mesocosm experiment in the subtropical North Atlantic

In the surface ocean, microorganisms are both a source of extracellular H2O2and, via the production of H2O2destroying enzymes, also one of the main H2O2sinks. Within microbial communities, H2O2sources and sinks may be unevenly distributed and thus microbial community structure could influence ambien...

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Published in:Frontiers in Marine Science
Main Authors: Hopwood, Mark J., Riebesell, Ulf, Arístegui, Javier, Ludwig, Andrea, Achterberg, Eric P., Hernández, Nauzet
Other Authors: 55978805700, 7004763337, 7006816204, 55554656400, 7003373116, 55539663700
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10553/46022
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2018.00105
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author Hopwood, Mark J.
Riebesell, Ulf
Arístegui, Javier
Ludwig, Andrea
Achterberg, Eric P.
Hernández, Nauzet
author2 55978805700
7004763337
7006816204
55554656400
7003373116
55539663700
author_facet Hopwood, Mark J.
Riebesell, Ulf
Arístegui, Javier
Ludwig, Andrea
Achterberg, Eric P.
Hernández, Nauzet
author_sort Hopwood, Mark J.
collection Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria: Acceda
container_title Frontiers in Marine Science
container_volume 5
description In the surface ocean, microorganisms are both a source of extracellular H2O2and, via the production of H2O2destroying enzymes, also one of the main H2O2sinks. Within microbial communities, H2O2sources and sinks may be unevenly distributed and thus microbial community structure could influence ambient extracellular H2O2concentrations. Yet the biogeochemical cycling of H2O2and other reactive oxygen species (ROS) is rarely investigated at the community level. Here, we present a time series of H2O2concentrations during a 28-day mesocosm experiment where a pCO2gradient (400-1,450 μatm) was applied to subtropical North Atlantic waters. Pronounced changes in H2O2concentration were observed over the duration of the experiment. Initially H2O2concentrations in all mesocosms were strongly correlated with surface H2O2concentrations in ambient seawaters outside the mesocosms which ranged from 20 to 92 nM over the experiment duration (Spearman Rank Coefficients 0.79-0.93, p-values < 0.001-0.015). After approximately 9 days of incubation however, H2O2concentrations had increased across all mesocosms, later reaching >300 nM in some mesocosms (2-6 fold higher than ambient seawaters). The correlation with ambient H2O2was then no longer significant (p > 0.05) in all treatments. Furthermore, changes in H2O2could not be correlated with inter-day changes in integrated irradiance. Yet H2O2concentrations in most mesocosms were inversely correlated with bacterial abundance (negative Spearman Rank Coefficients ranging 0.59-0.94, p-values < 0.001-0.03). Our results therefore suggest that ambient H2O2concentration can be influenced by microbial community structure with shifts toward high bacterial abundance correlated with low extracellular H2O2concentrations. We also infer that the nature of mesocosm experiment design, i.e., the enclosure of water within open containers at the ocean surface, can strongly influence extracellular H2O2concentrations. This has potential chemical and biological implications during incubation experiments due to the role of H2O2as both a stressor to microbial functioning and a reactive component involved in the cycling of numerous chemical species including, for example, trace metals and haloalkanes.
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2018.00105
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spelling ftunivlaspalmas:oai:https://accedacris.ulpgc.es:10553/46022 2025-01-16T23:38:27+00:00 Photochemical vs. bacterial control of H2O2 concentration across a pCO2 gradient mesocosm experiment in the subtropical North Atlantic Hopwood, Mark J. Riebesell, Ulf Arístegui, Javier Ludwig, Andrea Achterberg, Eric P. Hernández, Nauzet 55978805700 7004763337 7006816204 55554656400 7003373116 55539663700 2018 http://hdl.handle.net/10553/46022 https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2018.00105 eng eng Frontiers in Marine Science 2296-7745 http://hdl.handle.net/10553/46022 doi:10.3389/fmars.2018.00105 85044967863 105 5 Frontiers in Marine Science [ISSN 2296-7745], v. 5, article number 105 2510 Oceanografía Hydrogen peroxide H2O2 Mesocosm Atlantic pCO2 info:eu-repo/semantics/article Journal article 2018 ftunivlaspalmas https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2018.00105 2019-09-08T16:42:36Z In the surface ocean, microorganisms are both a source of extracellular H2O2and, via the production of H2O2destroying enzymes, also one of the main H2O2sinks. Within microbial communities, H2O2sources and sinks may be unevenly distributed and thus microbial community structure could influence ambient extracellular H2O2concentrations. Yet the biogeochemical cycling of H2O2and other reactive oxygen species (ROS) is rarely investigated at the community level. Here, we present a time series of H2O2concentrations during a 28-day mesocosm experiment where a pCO2gradient (400-1,450 μatm) was applied to subtropical North Atlantic waters. Pronounced changes in H2O2concentration were observed over the duration of the experiment. Initially H2O2concentrations in all mesocosms were strongly correlated with surface H2O2concentrations in ambient seawaters outside the mesocosms which ranged from 20 to 92 nM over the experiment duration (Spearman Rank Coefficients 0.79-0.93, p-values < 0.001-0.015). After approximately 9 days of incubation however, H2O2concentrations had increased across all mesocosms, later reaching >300 nM in some mesocosms (2-6 fold higher than ambient seawaters). The correlation with ambient H2O2was then no longer significant (p > 0.05) in all treatments. Furthermore, changes in H2O2could not be correlated with inter-day changes in integrated irradiance. Yet H2O2concentrations in most mesocosms were inversely correlated with bacterial abundance (negative Spearman Rank Coefficients ranging 0.59-0.94, p-values < 0.001-0.03). Our results therefore suggest that ambient H2O2concentration can be influenced by microbial community structure with shifts toward high bacterial abundance correlated with low extracellular H2O2concentrations. We also infer that the nature of mesocosm experiment design, i.e., the enclosure of water within open containers at the ocean surface, can strongly influence extracellular H2O2concentrations. This has potential chemical and biological implications during incubation experiments due to the role of H2O2as both a stressor to microbial functioning and a reactive component involved in the cycling of numerous chemical species including, for example, trace metals and haloalkanes. Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria: Acceda Frontiers in Marine Science 5
spellingShingle 2510 Oceanografía
Hydrogen peroxide
H2O2
Mesocosm
Atlantic
pCO2
Hopwood, Mark J.
Riebesell, Ulf
Arístegui, Javier
Ludwig, Andrea
Achterberg, Eric P.
Hernández, Nauzet
Photochemical vs. bacterial control of H2O2 concentration across a pCO2 gradient mesocosm experiment in the subtropical North Atlantic
title Photochemical vs. bacterial control of H2O2 concentration across a pCO2 gradient mesocosm experiment in the subtropical North Atlantic
title_full Photochemical vs. bacterial control of H2O2 concentration across a pCO2 gradient mesocosm experiment in the subtropical North Atlantic
title_fullStr Photochemical vs. bacterial control of H2O2 concentration across a pCO2 gradient mesocosm experiment in the subtropical North Atlantic
title_full_unstemmed Photochemical vs. bacterial control of H2O2 concentration across a pCO2 gradient mesocosm experiment in the subtropical North Atlantic
title_short Photochemical vs. bacterial control of H2O2 concentration across a pCO2 gradient mesocosm experiment in the subtropical North Atlantic
title_sort photochemical vs. bacterial control of h2o2 concentration across a pco2 gradient mesocosm experiment in the subtropical north atlantic
topic 2510 Oceanografía
Hydrogen peroxide
H2O2
Mesocosm
Atlantic
pCO2
topic_facet 2510 Oceanografía
Hydrogen peroxide
H2O2
Mesocosm
Atlantic
pCO2
url http://hdl.handle.net/10553/46022
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2018.00105