New preprint out today – how bacteria induce metamorphosis in coccolithophores!

Pleased to announce a new preprint live today to bioRXiv titled “Bacteria induce an amoeboid phase in coccolithophores that persists after bloom collapse”. This work was led by Sophie Zweifel, a PhD student in the Stocker Lab, and delves into a previously uncharacterised life-stage in bloom-forming coccolithophores.

Coccolithophores, such as Geophryocapsa huxleyi (formally Emiliania huxleyi), follow a biphasic lifestyle, switching from a heavily-calcified diploid morphotype, to a motile but less-calcified haploid form. This species is responsible for the kilometre-scale algal bloom events visible from space (and often seen in the media!), and one of the most important oceanic primary producers.

In this work, we characterised a rapid metamorphosis of the single cell, whereby a haploid cell rapidly elongates and drastically alters its swimming patterns. Through an extensive screening panel, we show that this transition is solely induced in bloom-forming coccolithophores when exposed to high bacterial concentrations, in conditions reminiscent of algal bloom collapse. These ‘amoeboid’ cells are capable of persisting long after the haploid phase has succumbed to the harsh environmental conditions generated by the surrounding bacterial population, and presents a potential avenue for the cells to survive and propogate after a bloom collapse. This is another exciting example of how inter-species interactions shape ecosystem-scale processes and events, and opens up new questions in our understanding of these key microbial players.

This was very exciting work to be involved in that pulled together microscopy, microfluidics, microbiology in a comprehensive experimental study, and we’re delighted to share the preprint with you today!

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