B12 Is Also an Essential Vitamin for Marine LifeMay 21, 2007B12-an essential vitamin for land-dwelling animals, including humans-also turns out to be an essential ingredient for growing marine plants that are critical to the ocean food web and Earth's climate, scientists have found. The presence or absence of B12 in the ocean plays a vital and previously overlooked role in determining where, how much, and what kinds of microscopic algae (called phytoplankton) will bloom in the sea, according to a study published in the May issue of the journal Limnology and Oceanography. These photosynthesizing plants, in turn, have a critical impact on Earth's climate: They draw huge amounts of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, from the air, incorporating carbon into their bodies. When they die or are eaten, carbon is transferred to the ocean depths, where it cannot re-enter the atmosphere. B12 contains the metal cobalt and can be synthesized only by certain singled-celled bacteria and archaea. Humans, animals, and many algae require B12 to manufacture essential proteins, but they cannot make it and must either acquire it from the environment or eat food that contains B12, said the study's lead authors, Erin Bertrand and Mak Saito. The two biogeochemists at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution wondered whether the vitamin was also important in the ocean, where B12 and cobalt are both found in exceedingly low concentrations. Bertrand, Saito, and colleagues collected water samples from three locales in the highly fertile Ross Sea off Antarctica during an expedition in 2005 aboard the icebreaker Nathaniel B. Palmer. To one set of samples, they added B12 and iron (another essential nutrient for plant growth); to a second set, they added just iron; and to a third, they added neither. Samples stimulated with both iron and B12 showed significantly higher concentrations of plant life in general and greater concentrations of a particular type of marine algae called diatoms. "The possibility that a vitamin could substantially influence phytoplankton growth and community composition in the marine environment is a novel and exciting finding," the study's authors wrote. The finding underscores the complexities of the marine food web and raises questions about the delicately balanced ecosystem's vulnerabilities to changing climate. It also sheds light on the sources and cycling of vitamin B12 and cobalt in the ocean, especially in the Southern Ocean around Antarctica, where the only nearby continent-a standard source of metal particles blown into the sea-is largely ice-covered. Nevertheless, polar regions harbor some of the most extensive phytoplankton blooms in the world and are believed to play a significant role in exporting carbon to the deep ocean. In the Ross Sea, spectacular spring blooms of marine algae called Phaeocystis antarctica dissipate by summer and are followed by blooms of diatoms. The scientists' experiments-showing more diatom growth with the addition of B12-indicate that Phaeocystis may have a competitive advantage over diatoms in the Ross Sea's springtime. The sea contains bacteria and archaea that make B12, but their populations are low, particularly in the spring, and so B12 supplies are limited. Phaeocystis effectively monopolize the B12 supply by forming colonies cemented by sticky mucous that attracts B12 -making bacteria, Bertrand and Saito theorize. In a symbiotic relationship, the algae get their required vitamin and the bacteria get a steady supply of carbon made by the plants. When Phaeocystis dies off and the bacteria are eaten or decomposed, B12 is released once again to the ocean and is available to be used by diatoms. Any disruption in the timing or abundances of these microbial populations has ramifications on the ecosystem and the climate, the scientists said. For example, Phaeocystis antarctica in the Ross Sea takes up more carbon dioxide than diatoms, so if the marine community shifts to diatoms, the Ross Sea would likely remove less carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Unlike diatoms, Phaeocystis also produce a compound called dimethylsulfioniopriopionate, or DMSP, which is released into the air and helps produce clouds that block solar radiation. Polar oceans do not have large bacterial populations to produce B12, making the vitamin a critical factor influencing the food web, the cycling of carbon in the ocean, and the climate, Bertrand and Saito said. At the same time, climate changes could affect the availability of B12 by causing changes in ocean temperatures, bacterial populations, and other factors. The ozone hole produced in the austral spring above Antarctica could also induce a cascade of effects by allowing more penetration of ultraviolet radiation that is known to degrade B12, they said. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution |
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| Related B12 Current Events and B12 News Articles Let them eat snail A nutritionist in Nigeria says that malnutrition and iron deficiency in schoolchildren could be reduced in her country by baking up snail pie. New findings suggest strategy to help generate HIV-neutralizing antibodies New discoveries about anti-HIV antibodies may bring researchers a step closer to creating an effective HIV vaccine, according to a new paper co-authored by scientists at the Vaccine Research Center of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health. Blood test identifies women at risk from Alzheimer's Middle-aged women with high levels of a specific amino acid in their blood are twice as likely to suffer from Alzheimer's many years later, reveals a thesis from the Sahlgrenska Academy at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden. Commentary warns of unexpected consequences of proton pump inhibitor use in reflux disease Despite being highly effective and beneficial for many patients, unexpected consequences are emerging in patients who are prescribed proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) for reflux diseases. Designer molecule detects tiny amounts of cyanide, then glows A small molecule designed to detect cyanide in water samples works quickly, is easy to use, and glows under ultraviolet or "black" light. Scientists develop a new HIV microbicide -- and a way to mass produce it in plants In what could be a major pharmaceutical breakthrough, research published online in The FASEB Journal describes how scientists from St George's, University of London have devised a one-two punch to stop HIV. Caltech scientists show why anti-HIV antibodies are ineffective at blocking infection Some 25 years after the AIDS epidemic spawned a worldwide search for an effective vaccine against the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), progress in the field seems to have effectively become stalled. Are vitamin supplements effective in celiac disease patients? Coeliac disease is a typical example of a malabsorption syndrome conferring increased risk for various deficiency states, including folate and vitamin B12. Hyperhomocysteinemia is significantly more frequent in patients with newly diagnosed coeliac disease than healthy controls. Low levels of vitamin B12 may increase risk for neural tube defects Children born to women who have low blood levels of vitamin B12 shortly before and after conception may have an increased risk of a neural tube defect, according to an analysis by researchers at the National Institutes of Health, Trinity College Dublin, and the Health Research Board of Ireland. BGU researchers identify vitamin B12 as an effective canker sore therapy A team of physicians at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev has discovered that a nightly dose of vitamin B12 is a simple, effective and low risk therapy to prevent Recurrent Aphthous Stomatitis (RAS), better known as "canker sores." More B12 Current Events and B12 News Articles |
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