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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Secretion in unicellular marine phytoplankton: demonstration of regulated exocytosis in Phaeocystis globosa.

TLDR
The first demonstration that Phaeocystis globosa does not "exude", but secretes microscopic gels is reported, which is a first of its kind.
Abstract
Almost half of the global photosynthetic activity is carried out in the ocean. During blooms, Phaeocystis can fix CO(2) at rates up to 40 g C m(-2) month(-1). Most of this carbon is released as polysaccharides. However, the cellular mechanism whereby this huge amount of organic material is exported into the seawater remains unknown. A vaguely defined process of "exudation" is believed responsible for the release of these biopolymers. Here we report the first demonstration that Phaeocystis globosa does not "exude", but secretes microscopic gels. Secretion is stimulated by blue light (lambda = 470+/-20 nm), and it is transduced by a characteristic intracellular Ca(2+) signal that precedes degranulation. The polysaccharides that form the matrix of these gels remain in condensed phase while stored in secretory vesicles. Upon exocytosis, the exopolymer matrix undergoes a characteristic phase transition accompanied by extensive swelling resulting in the formation of microscopic hydrated gels. Owing to their tangled topology, once released into the seawater, the polymers that make these gels can reptate (axially diffuse), interpenetrate neighboring gels, and anneal them together forming massive mucilage accumulations that are characteristic of Phaeocystis blooms. These gel masses can supply a rich source of microbial substrates, disperse in the seawater, and/or eventually sediment to the ocean floor.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Microbial structuring of marine ecosystems

TL;DR: The need to examine the biochemical interactions of microorganisms with ocean systems at the nanometre to millimetre scale is stressed — a scale that is relevant to microbial activities and must be scaled up to make useful predictions of how marine ecosystems in the whole ocean might respond to global change.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dissolved organic matter (DOM) release by phytoplankton in the contemporary and future ocean

TL;DR: There is a need for research to determine how changes in the partitioning of primary production between dissolved and particulate phases will have bottom-up effects on ecosystem structure and function and how these changes affect the fate of organic matter in the ocean.
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Mast Cell Mediators: Their Differential Release and the Secretory Pathways Involved

TL;DR: This review summarizes the knowledge of MC mediators and will focus on what is known about the discriminatory release of these mediators dependent upon diverse stimuli, MC phenotypes, and species of origin, as well as on the intracellular synthesis, storage, and secretory processes involved.
Journal ArticleDOI

Marine microgels as a source of cloud condensation nuclei in the high Arctic

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that, in the high Arctic, marine gels with unique physicochemical characteristics originate in the organic material produced by ice algae and/or phytoplankton in the surface water, and dominate the available cloud condensation nuclei number population in thehigh Arctic (north of 80°N) during the summer season.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A new generation of Ca2+ indicators with greatly improved fluorescence properties.

TL;DR: A new family of highly fluorescent indicators has been synthesized for biochemical studies of the physiological role of cytosolic free Ca2+ using an 8-coordinate tetracarboxylate chelating site with stilbene chromophores that offer up to 30-fold brighter fluorescence.
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Intracellular aspects of the process of protein synthesis

G E Palade
- 01 Aug 1975 - 
TL;DR: The title of the Nobel Lecture of George Palade (1 August, p. 347) should have been "Intracellular aspects of the process of protein secretion."
Journal ArticleDOI

Optical properties of the clearest natural waters (200–800 nm)

TL;DR: A comparative analysis and new data allow a consistent and accurate set of optical properties for the clearest natural waters and for pure fresh water and saltwater to be estimated from 300 to 800 nm.
Journal ArticleDOI

Kinetics of swelling of gels

TL;DR: In this article, a theory of the kinetics of the swelling of polyacrylamide gels is presented, which is based on the assumption that the swelling time is determined by the diffusion coefficient of the fluid molecules.
Journal ArticleDOI

Membrane Fusion and Exocytosis

TL;DR: Fusion of intracellular membranes in eukaryotic cells involves several protein families including SNAREs, Rab proteins, and Sec1/Munc-18 related proteins (SM-proteins).
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