TY - JOUR
T1 - Flow cytometric sorting of loricate choanoflagellates from the oligotrophic ocean
AU - Kamennaya, Nina A.
AU - Kennaway, Gabrielle
AU - Leadbeater, Barry S.C.
AU - Sleigh, Michael A.
AU - Zubkov, Mikhail V.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors acknowledge the chief and fellow scientists, the captains, officers and crew aboard the RRSs James Clark Ross, James Cook and Discovery IV for their help during the JR303, JC142 and DY084, respectively. The authors further acknowledge the chief and fellow scientists (from the Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology, Bremen), the captain, officers and crew aboard the RV SONNE for help during the SO245. The authors are especially grateful to the RV SONNE chief engineer Achim Schüler for his invaluable help with fast sorter pneumatics. The authors are very grateful to Peter Burkill for inspiring high-speed flow sorting at sea and to Vitalii Zubkov for his help with making the containerised flow sorting laboratory seaworthy. The authors thank Priscila Lange and Ivo Tews for their help with the flow cytometry analyses on the JR303 and SO245, respectively. The authors thank Ian Hands-Portman from the University of Warwick, Tomasz Goral and Alex Ball from the Natural History Museum, London and Chrissie Prychid from the Royal Botanical Gardens, Kew in London for their help with the electron microscopy imaging. This study was supported by the UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) Research Grants (NE/M014363/1 and NE/M011186/1) and the Max Planck Society for the Advancement of Science, Germany.
Funding Information:
The authors acknowledge the chief and fellow scientists, the captains, officers and crew aboard the RRSs James Clark Ross, James Cook and Discovery IV for their help during the JR303, JC142 and DY084, respectively. The authors further acknowledge the chief and fellow scientists (from the Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology, Bremen), the captain, officers and crew aboard the RV SONNE for help during the SO245. The authors are especially grateful to the RV SONNE chief engineer Achim Schüler for his invaluable help with fast sorter pneumatics. The authors are very grateful to Peter Burkill for inspiring high-speed flow sorting at sea and to Vitalii Zubkov for his help with making the containerised flow sorting laboratory seaworthy. The authors thank Priscila Lange and Ivo Tews for their help with the flow cytometry analyses on the JR303 and SO245, respectively. The authors thank Ian Hands-Portman from the University of Warwick, Tomasz Goral and Alex Ball from the Natural History Museum, London and Chrissie Prychid from the Royal Botanical Gardens, Kew in London for their help with the electron microscopy imaging. This study was supported by the UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) Research Grants (NE/M014363/1 and NE/M011186/1) and the Max Planck Society for the Advancement of Science, Germany.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022
PY - 2022/10/1
Y1 - 2022/10/1
N2 - It is challenging to study protists with extensive, loosely-associated extracellular structures because of the problems with keeping specimens intact. Here we have tested the suitability of high-speed flow cytometric sorting as a tool for studying such protists using oceanic loricate choanoflagellates as a model. We chose choanoflagellates because their lorica-to-cell volume ratio is > 10 and the voluminous loricae, i.e., the siliceous cell baskets essential for taxonomic identification, only loosely enclose the cells. Besides, owing to low concentrations, choanoflagellates are grossly under-sampled in the oligotrophic ocean. On four research cruises the small heterotrophic protists from samples collected in the photic layer of the South Atlantic and South Pacific oligotrophic (sub)tropical gyres and adjacent mesotrophic waters were flow sorted at sea for electron microscopy ashore. Among the flow-sorted protozoa we were able to select loricate choanoflagellates to assess their species diversity and concentrations. The well-preserved loricae of flow-sorted choanoflagellates made identification of 29 species from 14 genera possible. In the oligotrophic waters, we found neither endemic species nor evident morphological adaptations other than a tendency for lighter silicification of loricae. Common sightings of specimens storing extra costae in preparation for division, indicate choanoflagellates thriving in oligotrophic waters rather than enduring them. Thus, this case study demonstrates that high-speed flow sorting can assist in studying protists with extracellular structures 16–78× bigger than the enclosed cell.
AB - It is challenging to study protists with extensive, loosely-associated extracellular structures because of the problems with keeping specimens intact. Here we have tested the suitability of high-speed flow cytometric sorting as a tool for studying such protists using oceanic loricate choanoflagellates as a model. We chose choanoflagellates because their lorica-to-cell volume ratio is > 10 and the voluminous loricae, i.e., the siliceous cell baskets essential for taxonomic identification, only loosely enclose the cells. Besides, owing to low concentrations, choanoflagellates are grossly under-sampled in the oligotrophic ocean. On four research cruises the small heterotrophic protists from samples collected in the photic layer of the South Atlantic and South Pacific oligotrophic (sub)tropical gyres and adjacent mesotrophic waters were flow sorted at sea for electron microscopy ashore. Among the flow-sorted protozoa we were able to select loricate choanoflagellates to assess their species diversity and concentrations. The well-preserved loricae of flow-sorted choanoflagellates made identification of 29 species from 14 genera possible. In the oligotrophic waters, we found neither endemic species nor evident morphological adaptations other than a tendency for lighter silicification of loricae. Common sightings of specimens storing extra costae in preparation for division, indicate choanoflagellates thriving in oligotrophic waters rather than enduring them. Thus, this case study demonstrates that high-speed flow sorting can assist in studying protists with extracellular structures 16–78× bigger than the enclosed cell.
KW - Extensive extracellular structures
KW - High-speed flow sorting
KW - Morphological species diversity
KW - Oligotrophic ocean
KW - Pelagic loricate choanoflagellates
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85138220130&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ejop.2022.125914
DO - 10.1016/j.ejop.2022.125914
M3 - Article
C2 - 36137332
AN - SCOPUS:85138220130
SN - 0932-4739
VL - 86
JO - European Journal of Protistology
JF - European Journal of Protistology
M1 - 125914
ER -