In low-phosphorus (P) marine systems, phytoplankton replace membrane phospholipids with nonphosphorus lipids, but it is not known how rapidly this substitution occurs. Here, when cells of the model diatom Thalassiosira pseudonana were transferred from P-replete medium to P-free medium, the phospholipid content of the cells rapidly declined within 48 h from 45±0.9 to 21±4.5% of the total membrane lipids; the difference was made up by non-phosphorus lipids. Conversely, when P-limited T. pseudonana were resupplied with P, cells reduced the percentage of their total membrane lipids contributed by a non-phosphorus lipid from 43 ± 1.5 to 7.3 ± 0.9% within 24 h, whereas the contribution by phospholipids rose from 2.2±0.1 to 44±3%. This dynamic phospholipid reservoir contained sufficient P to synthesize multiple haploid genomes, suggesting that phospholipid turnover could be an important P source for cells. Field observations of phytoplankton lipid content may thus reflect short-term changes in P supply and cellular physiology, rather than simply long-term adjustment to the environment. The ISME Journal ( Subject Category: geomicrobiology and microbial contributions to geochemical cycles Keywords: betaine lipids; DGCC; lipid substitution; non-phosphorus lipids; phosphatidylcholine; diatoms Phosphate is chronically scarce in oligotrophic oceans (Krom et al., 1991;Karl et al., 1997;Wu et al., 2000), and phytoplankton appear to posses highly effective physiological mechanisms to reduce their phosphorus (P) quota in these environments (Twining et al., 2010). For example, all phytoplankton groups examined to date, both in culture and in situ, substitute non-phosphorus (sulfur-and nitrogen-containing) lipids for phospholipids in their membranes under low-P conditions (Van Mooy et al., 2009). Such lipid substitution in bacteria (Minnikin et al., 1974;Benning et al., 1995) can take place within hours (Zavaleta-Pastor et al., 2010). However, it is not known how rapidly phytoplankton remodel their membranes, and whether field observations (Van Mooy et al., 2009) reflect longterm adjustment to the environment or an immediate cellular response to low-P conditions.The diatom Thalassiosira pseudonana and other eukaryotic phytoplankton contain the phospholipids phosphatidylcholine (PC), phosphatidylglycerol (PG) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE). Under low-P conditions, T. pseudonana substitutes PC with the betaine lipid diacylglycerylcarboxyhydroxymethylcholine (DGCC), and PG with the sulfolipid sulfoquinovosyldiacylglycerol (SQDG) (Van Mooy et al., 2009).Two culture experiments were conducted to test how rapidly lipid substitution occurs in T. pseudonana upon changes in phosphate concentration. In the first experiment, T. pseudonana CCMP1335 was grown in P-replete medium (in triplicate, Supplementary Methods) until early log-phase. Cells were then gently filtered onto 0.2 mm polycarbonate membranes and resuspended in either phosphatefree (ÀP) or phosphate-replete ( þ P, 36 mmol l À1 phosphate) medium. However, as the ÀP cultures con...