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1.
PLoS One ; 17(2): e0254910, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35213532

ABSTRACT

The mutualism between the thioautotrophic bacterial ectosymbiont Candidatus Thiobius zoothamnicola and the giant ciliate Zoothamnium niveum thrives in a variety of shallow-water marine environments with highly fluctuating sulfide emissions. To persist over time, both partners must reproduce and ensure the transmission of symbionts before the sulfide stops, which enables carbon fixation of the symbiont and nourishment of the host. We experimentally investigated the response of this mutualism to depletion of sulfide. We found that colonies released some initially present but also newly produced macrozooids until death, but in fewer numbers than when exposed to sulfide. The symbionts on the colonies proliferated less without sulfide, and became larger and more rod-shaped than symbionts from freshly collected colonies that were exposed to sulfide and oxygen. The symbiotic monolayer was severely disturbed by growth of other microbes and loss of symbionts. We conclude that the response of both partners to the termination of sulfide emission was remarkably quick. The development and the release of swarmers continued until host died and thus this behavior contributed to the continuation of the association.


Subject(s)
Ciliophora/genetics , Rhizobiaceae/genetics , Sulfides/metabolism , Symbiosis/genetics , Animals , Aquatic Organisms/genetics , Aquatic Organisms/physiology , Bacteria/genetics , Carbon Cycle/genetics , Ciliophora/physiology , Phylogeny , Rhizobiaceae/physiology
2.
Sci Rep ; 9(1): 15081, 2019 10 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31636334

ABSTRACT

Evolutionary theory predicts potential shifts between cooperative and uncooperative behaviour under fluctuating environmental conditions. This leads to unstable benefits to the partners and restricts the evolution of dependence. High dependence is usually found in those hosts in which vertically transmitted symbionts provide nutrients reliably. Here we study host dependence in the marine, giant colonial ciliate Zoothamnium niveum and its vertically transmitted, nutritional, thiotrophic symbiont from an unstable environment of degrading wood. Previously, we have shown that sulphidic conditions lead to high host fitness and oxic conditions to low fitness, but the fate of the symbiont has not been studied. We combine several experimental approaches to provide evidence for a sulphide-tolerant host with striking polyphenism involving two discrete morphs, a symbiotic and an aposymbiotic one. The two differ significantly in colony growth form and fitness. This polyphenism is triggered by chemical conditions and elicited by the symbiont's presence on the dispersing swarmer. We provide evidence of a single aposymbiotic morph found in nature. We propose that despite a high fitness loss when aposymbiotic, the ciliate has retained a facultative life style and may use the option to live without its symbiont to overcome spatial and temporal shortage of sulphide in nature.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/metabolism , Ciliophora/microbiology , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Sulfides/pharmacology , Symbiosis , Bacteria/drug effects , Bayes Theorem , Ciliophora/drug effects , Ciliophora/growth & development , Ciliophora/ultrastructure , Phylogeny , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics , RNA, Ribosomal, 18S/genetics , Symbiosis/drug effects
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