Diatom Phytochromes Reveal the Existence of Far-Red-Light-Based Sensing in the Ocean

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Fortunato, Antonio Emidio | Jaubert, Marianne | Enomoto, Gen | Bouly, Jean-Pierre | Raniello, Raffaella | Thaler, Michael | Malviya, Shruti | Bernardes, Juliana Silva | Rappaport, Fabrice | Gentili, Bernard | Huysman, Marie J. J. | Carbone, Alessandra | Bowler, Chris | d'Alcalà, Maurizio Ribera | Ikeuchi, Masahiko | Falciatore, Angela

Edité par CCSD ; American Society of Plant Biologists (ASPB) -

International audience. The absorption of visible light in aquatic environments has led to the common assumption that aquatic organisms sense and adapt to penetrative blue/green light wavelengths but show little or no response to the more attenuated red/far-red wavelengths. Here, we show that two marine diatom species, Phaeodactylum tricornutum and Thalassiosira pseudonana, possess a bona fide red/far-red light sensing phytochrome (DPH) that uses biliverdin as a chromophore and displays accentuated red-shifted absorbance peaks compared with other characterized plant and algal phytochromes. Exposure to both red and far-red light causes changes in gene expression in P. tricornutum, and the responses to far-red light disappear in DPH knockout cells, demonstrating that P. tricornutum DPH mediates far-red light signaling. The identification of DPH genes in diverse diatom species widely distributed along the water column further emphasizes the ecological significance of far-red light sensing, raising questions about the sources of far-red light. Our analyses indicate that, although far-red wavelengths from sunlight are only detectable at the ocean surface, chlorophyll fluorescence and Raman scattering can generate red/far-red photons in deeper layers. This study opens up novel perspectives on phytochrome-mediated far-red light signaling in the ocean and on the light sensing and adaptive capabilities of marine phototrophs.

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