Ecosystem consequences of a nitrogen-fixing proto-organelle

Jane C. Marks, Michael C. Zampini, Raina Fitzpatrick, Saeed H. Kariunga, Augustine Sitati, Ty J. Samo, Peter K. Weber, Steven Thomas, Bruce A. Hungate, Christina E. Ramon, Michael Wulf, Victor O. Leshyk, Egbert Schwartz, Jennifer Pett-Ridge, Mary E. Power

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Microscale symbioses can be critical to ecosystem functions, but the mechanisms of these interactions in nature are often cryptic. Here, we use a combination of stable isotope imaging and tracing to reveal carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) exchanges among three symbiotic primary producers that fuel a salmon-bearing river food web. Bulk isotope analysis, nanoSIMS (secondary ion mass spectrometry) isotope imaging, and density centrifugation for quantitative stable isotope probing enabled quantification of organism-specific C- and N-fixation rates from the subcellular scale to the ecosystem. After winters with riverbed-scouring floods, the macroalga Cladophora glomerata uses nutrients in spring runoff to grow streamers up to 10 m long. During summer flow recession, riverine N concentrations wane and Cladophora becomes densely epiphytized by three species of Epithemia, diatoms with N-fixing endosymbionts (proto-organelles) descended from a free-living Crocosphaera cyanobacterium. Over summertime epiphyte succession on Cladophora, N-fixation rates increased as Epithemia spp. became dominant, Cladophora C-fixation declined to near zero, and Epithemia C-fixation increased. Carbon transfer to caddisflies grazing on Cladophora with high densities of Epithemia was 10-fold higher than C transfer to caddisflies grazing Cladophora with low Epithemia loads. In response to demand for N, Epithemia allocates high levels of newly fixed C to its endosymbiont. Consequently, these endosymbionts have the highest rates of C and N accumulation of any taxon in this tripartite symbiosis during the biologically productive season and can produce one of the highest areal rates of N-fixation reported in any river ecosystem.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbere2503108122
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume122
Issue number37
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 16 2025

Keywords

  • Epithemia
  • N-fixation
  • diazoplast
  • endosymbiosis
  • epiphytic microbiome

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General

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