Microbial controls on DMSP degradation and DMS formation in the Sargasso Sea

Maria Vila-Costa, Johanna M. Rinta-Kanto, Rachel S. Poretsky, Shulei Sun, Ronald P. Kiene, Mary Ann Moran

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterScientificpeer-review

    17 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Bacterial degradation of dimethylsulfo- niopropionate (DMSP) represents one of the main sources of the climatically–active trace gas dimethyl- sulfide (DMS) in the upper ocean. Short-term enrich- ment studies to stimulate specific pathways of DMSP degradation in oligotrophic waters from the Sargasso Sea were used to explore regulatory connections between the different bacterial DMSP degradation steps and determine potential biological controls on DMS formation in the open ocean. Experiments were conducted with surface water at the BATS station in the western North Atlantic Ocean. We added selected organic substrates (25 nmol L-1 final concentration) to induce different steps of DMSP degradation in the microbial community, and then measured DMSP dynamics (assimilation and turnover rates), DMS yields (using 35sulfur-DMSP tracer), and bacterial production rates. In most treatments, the main fate of consumed S-DMSP was excretion as a non-volatile S product. 35S-DMSP tracer turnover rates (accumula- tion ? assimilation ? excretion of transformed pro- ducts as DMS or others) increased upon addition of DMSP and glucose, but not acrylate, methymercapto- propionate (MMPA), methanethiol, DMS or glycine betaine. DMS yields from 35S-DMSP never exceeded 16 % except in a short term DMSP enrichment, for which the yield reached 45 %(±17 %). Results show that availability of non-sulfur containing labile C sources (glucose, acrylate) decreased bacterial DMS production while stimulating bacterial heterotrophic production, and suggest an influence of bacterial sulfur demand in controlling DMS-yielding pathways. How- ever, regulatory effects on 35S-DMSP fate were not consistent across all reduced sulfur compounds (i.e., methanethiol or MMPA), and may reflect alternate roles of DMSP as a bacterial energy source and osmolyte.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationBiogeochemistry
    PublisherKluwer Academic Publishers
    Pages295-305
    Number of pages11
    ISBN (Print)1053301499
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2014
    Publication typeA3 Book chapter

    Publication series

    NameBiogeochemistry
    Volume120

    Keywords

    • Bacterioplankton
    • DMS
    • DMSP
    • Dimethylsulfide
    • Dimethylsulfoniopropionate
    • Sargasso sea

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