2016
DOI: 10.1071/en15052
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Assessment of DMSP turnover reveals a non-bioavailable pool of dissolved DMSP in coastal waters of the Gulf of Mexico

Abstract: Environmental context. DMSP is one of the most important substrates for marine bacteria and its cycling contributes substantially to fluxes of carbon and sulfur in the ocean. Accurate determination of the concentration of DMSP available to bacteria is essential to quantifying DMSP consumption rates, and this work improves those determinations by identifying non-bioavailable pools of DMSP that have previously gone unrecognised. Improved estimates of DMSP consumption rates will lead to better understanding of it… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Water samples were incubated at the in situ temperature in 1‐L Bioprocess Containers with 5 μmol/L glycine betaine (GBT). GBT is structurally similar to DMSP and is often used as a competitive inhibitor to study the microbial consumption of DMSP (Kiene & Gerard, ; Kiene et al, ; C. Li et al, ). The containers for DMSP degradation were placed in a dark incubator at the in situ temperature.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Water samples were incubated at the in situ temperature in 1‐L Bioprocess Containers with 5 μmol/L glycine betaine (GBT). GBT is structurally similar to DMSP and is often used as a competitive inhibitor to study the microbial consumption of DMSP (Kiene & Gerard, ; Kiene et al, ; C. Li et al, ). The containers for DMSP degradation were placed in a dark incubator at the in situ temperature.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The analytical precision was better than 5%, whereas the absolute detection limit of the gas chromatography system was 1 pmol of DMS per injection. The production and consumption rates of DMS and DMSPd in seawater were determined by the inhibitor addition method (Li et al, ). A complete description of measurements above was presented by Li et al ().…”
Section: Data Sources and Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For the biological production and consumption of DMS, duplicate unamended bottles were incubated as control, along with a separate set of duplicate bottles that were amended with ∼200 μ M dimethyldisulfide (DMDS, 98% purity; Sigma Chemical Co.), which is an effective inhibitor of bacterial DMS consumption (Wolfe & Kiene, ). In parallel with the DMDS inhibitor experiments, for the DMSPd degradation determination, one set was left untreated, and the other set was treated with glycine betaine (GBT, 99% purity; Sigma Chemical Co.), which is an effective inhibitor for blocking DMSP consumption (Li et al, ), to a final concentration of 5 μ M . The production and consumption rates of DMS and DMSPd were determined by incubating a series of Teflon bottles for 6 h (total incubation time) in the dark with continuous flow from seawater intake to maintain the temperature close to that of the sampling depth.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, a part of the intracellular DMSP is cleaved directly into DMS via bacterial or algal DMSP‐lyases (Stefels, ; Stefels et al, ). Once in the water column, dissolved DMSP (DMSPd, Li et al, ) can be utilized by bacteria as sulfur, carbon, or energy source by the demethylation/demethiolation (de/de) pathways (Moran et al, ) or enzymatically cleaved to DMS (Keller et al, ). The non DMS‐producing de/de pathway, which converts approximately 70% of dissolved DMSP into 3‐methyl‐propionate and subsequently to methanethiol and 3‐mercaptopropionate, regularly dominates DMSP metabolism and is preferred over the cleavage route, accounting for 9%–21% of DMSPd consumption when the S and C demands of the bacterial community are high (Kiene et al, ; Moran et al, ; Simó et al, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%