Precipitation of calcium carbonate mineral induced by viral lysis of cyanobacteria: evidence from laboratory experiments
2019
Abstract. Viruses have been acknowledged as being important components of
the marine system for the past 2 decades, but their role in the functioning
of the geochemical cycle has not been thoroughly elucidated to date.
Virus-induced rupturing of cyanobacteria is theoretically capable of
releasing intracellular bicarbonate and inducing the homogeneous nucleation
of calcium carbonate; however, experiment-based support for virus-induced
calcification is lacking. In this laboratory study, both water carbonate
chemistry and precipitates were monitored during the viral infection and
lysis of host cells. Our results show that viral lysis of cyanobacteria can
influence the carbonate equilibrium system remarkably and promotes the
formation and precipitation of carbonate minerals. Amorphous calcium
carbonate (ACC) and aragonite were evident in the lysate, compared with the
Mg(OH) 2 (brucite in this paper) precipitate in noninfected
cultures, implying that a different precipitation process had occurred. Based
on the carbonate chemistry change and microstructure of the precipitation, we
propose that viral lysis of cyanobacteria can construct a calcification
environment where carbonate is the dominant inorganic carbon species.
Numerous virus particles available in lysate may coprecipitate with the
calcium carbonate. The experimental results presented in this study
demonstrate both the pathway and the outcome with respect to how viruses
influence the mineralization of carbonate minerals. It is suggested that
viral calcification offers new perspectives on mechanisms of CaCO 3
biomineralization and may play a crucial role within the Earth system.
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