How do consumers deal with stoichiometric constraints? Lessons from functional genomics using Daphnia pulex

Punidan D. Jeyasingh, Ashok Ragavendran, Susanne Paland, Jacqueline A. Lopez, Robert W. Sterner, John K. Colbourne

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

51 Scopus citations

Abstract

Disaccord between the supply and demand of energy (carbon, C) and certain material elements (e.g. phosphorus, P) across trophic levels is common in most ecosystems and impacts the strength of trophic interactions and ecosystem functions such as productivity and nutrient recycling. Yet, we know little about mechanisms operating at the lower levels of biological organization that drive such higher-level ecological processes. Such information should help refine theories integrating biological processes at multiple levels of organization. Understanding the expression and functions of genes that underlie (to a large degree) physiological adjustments made by organisms to stoichiometric imbalances at trophic interfaces is a first step in this enterprise. Here, we investigate adjustments in gene expression to varying supply and demand of phosphorus relative to other dietary components in the keystone limnetic herbivore, Daphnia pulex. Daphniids were fed an algal diet of either LoC-HiP (molar C:P ∼100) or HiC-LoP (molar C:P ∼900) for 5 days, resulting in significant growth reductions under HiC-LoP conditions. Microarrays measured the transcriptional regulation of 8217 annotated protein-coding genes under contrasting dietary conditions and revealed 1818 differentially expressed (DE) genes; 19% are genes unique to the Daphnia lineage. We mapped DE genes onto a global chart of metabolic pathways to obtain a systems-level perspective on the responses to stoichiometric imbalances. Daphnia differentially regulated pathways were involved in sequestering limiting elements, and in dealing with the products of metabolic adjustments that may be triggered by nutrient stress in primary producers. Functional genomics at trophic interfaces illuminate the complexity of processes underlying stoichiometric constraints on energy and nutrient fluxes in ecosystems.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)2341-2352
Number of pages12
JournalMolecular ecology
Volume20
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2011

Keywords

  • dietary imbalance
  • ecological stoichiometry
  • microarrays
  • phosphorus limitation
  • secondary production
  • transcriptomics
  • trophic interactions

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