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1.
mBio ; 12(5): e0240221, 2021 10 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34579565

RESUMO

Microbes colonize the apical surfaces of polarized epithelia in nearly all animal taxa. In one example, the luminous bacterium Vibrio fischeri enters, grows to a dense population within, and persists for months inside, the light-emitting organ of the squid Euprymna scolopes. Crucial to the symbiont's success after entry is the ability to trigger the constriction of a host tissue region (the "bottleneck") at the entrance to the colonization site. Bottleneck constriction begins at about the same time as bioluminescence, which is induced in V. fischeri through an autoinduction process called quorum sensing. Here, we asked the following questions: (i) Are the quorum signals that induce symbiont bioluminescence also involved in triggering the constriction? (ii) Does improper signaling of constriction affect the normal maintenance of the symbiont population? We manipulated the presence of three factors, the two V. fischeri quorum signal synthases, AinS and LuxI, the transcriptional regulator LuxR, and light emission itself, and found that the major factor triggering and maintaining bottleneck constriction is an as yet unknown effector(s) regulated by LuxIR. Treating the animal with chemical inhibitors of actin polymerization reopened the bottlenecks, recapitulating the host's response to quorum-sensing defective symbionts, as well as suggesting that actin polymerization is the primary mechanism underlying constriction. Finally, we found that these host responses to the presence of symbionts changed as a function of tissue maturation. Taken together, this work broadens our concept of how quorum sensing can regulate host development, thereby allowing bacteria to maintain long-term tissue associations. IMPORTANCE Interbacterial signaling within a host-associated population can have profound effects on the behavior of the bacteria, for instance, in their production of virulence/colonization factors; in addition, such signaling can dictate the nature of the outcome for the host, in both pathogenic and beneficial associations. Using the monospecific squid-vibrio model of symbiosis, we examined how quorum-sensing regulation by the Vibrio fischeri population induces a biogeographic tissue phenotype that promotes the retention of this extracellular symbiont within the light organ of its host, Euprymna scolopes. Understanding the influence of bacterial symbionts on key sites of tissue architecture has implications for all horizontally transmitted symbioses, especially those that colonize an epithelial surface within the host.


Assuntos
Aliivibrio fischeri/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Aliivibrio fischeri/fisiologia , Decapodiformes/microbiologia , Aliivibrio fischeri/química , Aliivibrio fischeri/genética , Animais , Proteínas de Bactérias/genética , Proteínas de Bactérias/metabolismo , Decapodiformes/fisiologia , Regulação Bacteriana da Expressão Gênica , Interações entre Hospedeiro e Microrganismos , Luminescência , Percepção de Quorum , Simbiose
2.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 82(2): 696-704, 2016 01 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26567312

RESUMO

Bacteria use a wide variety of methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs) to mediate their attraction to or repulsion from different chemical signals in their environment. The bioluminescent marine bacterium Vibrio fischeri is the monospecific symbiont of the Hawaiian bobtail squid, Euprymna scolopes, and encodes a large repertoire of MCPs that are hypothesized to be used during different parts of its complex, multistage lifestyle. Here, we report the initial characterization of two such MCPs from V. fischeri that are responsible for mediating migration toward short- and medium-chain aliphatic (or fatty) acids. These receptors appear to be distributed among only members of the family Vibrionaceae and are likely descended from a receptor that has been lost by the majority of the members of this family. While chemotaxis greatly enhances the efficiency of host colonization by V. fischeri, fatty acids do not appear to be used as a chemical cue during this stage of the symbiosis. This study presents an example of straight-chain fatty acid chemoattraction and contributes to the growing body of characterized MCP-ligand interactions.


Assuntos
Aliivibrio fischeri/metabolismo , Proteínas de Bactérias/metabolismo , Ácidos Graxos/metabolismo , Proteínas de Membrana/metabolismo , Aliivibrio fischeri/química , Aliivibrio fischeri/classificação , Aliivibrio fischeri/genética , Animais , Proteínas de Bactérias/genética , Decapodiformes/microbiologia , Ácidos Graxos/química , Proteínas de Membrana/genética , Proteínas Quimiotáticas Aceptoras de Metil , Filogenia
4.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 81(14): 4728-35, 2015 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25956763

RESUMO

The establishment of a productive symbiosis between Euprymna scolopes, the Hawaiian bobtail squid, and its luminous bacterial symbiont, Vibrio fischeri, is mediated by transcriptional changes in both partners. A key challenge to unraveling the steps required to successfully initiate this and many other symbiotic associations is characterization of the timing and location of these changes. We report on the adaptation of hybridization chain reaction-fluorescent in situ hybridization (HCR-FISH) to simultaneously probe the spatiotemporal regulation of targeted genes in both E. scolopes and V. fischeri. This method revealed localized, transcriptionally coregulated epithelial cells within the light organ that responded directly to the presence of bacterial cells while, at the same time, provided a sensitive means to directly show regulated gene expression within the symbiont population. Thus, HCR-FISH provides a new approach for characterizing habitat transition in bacteria and for discovering host tissue responses to colonization.


Assuntos
Aliivibrio fischeri/genética , Decapodiformes/genética , Decapodiformes/microbiologia , Hibridização in Situ Fluorescente/métodos , Simbiose , Aliivibrio fischeri/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Aliivibrio fischeri/fisiologia , Animais , Proteínas de Bactérias/genética , Proteínas de Bactérias/metabolismo , Decapodiformes/fisiologia
5.
Environ Microbiol ; 14(3): 655-68, 2012 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21980988

RESUMO

This study reports the first description and molecular characterization of naturally occurring, non-bioluminescent strains of Vibrio fischeri. These 'dark' V. fischeri strains remained non-bioluminescent even after treatment with both autoinducer and aldehyde, substrate additions that typically maximize light production in dim strains of luminous bacteria. Surprisingly, the entire lux locus (eight genes) was absent in over 97% of these dark V. fischeri strains. Although these strains were all collected from a Massachusetts (USA) estuary in 2007, phylogenetic reconstructions allowed us to reject the hypothesis that these newly described non-bioluminescent strains exhibit monophyly within the V. fischeri clade. These dark strains exhibited a competitive disadvantage against native bioluminescent strains when colonizing the light organ of the model V. fischeri host, the Hawaiian bobtail squid Euprymna scolopes. Significantly, we believe that the data collected in this study may suggest the first observation of a functional, parallel locus-deletion event among independent lineages of a non-pathogenic bacterial species.


Assuntos
Aliivibrio fischeri/genética , Decapodiformes/genética , Proteínas Luminescentes/genética , Aliivibrio fischeri/fisiologia , Animais , Proteínas de Bactérias/genética , Proteínas de Bactérias/metabolismo , Sequência de Bases , Decapodiformes/microbiologia , Decapodiformes/fisiologia , Genes Bacterianos/fisiologia , Luz , Região de Controle de Locus Gênico , Medições Luminescentes , Proteínas Luminescentes/metabolismo , Massachusetts , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Filogenia , Simbiose/genética
6.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 75(1): 193-202, 2009 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18997024

RESUMO

We resolved the intraspecific diversity of Vibrio fischeri, the bioluminescent symbiont of the Hawaiian sepiolid squid Euprymna scolopes, at two previously unexplored morphological and geographical scales. These scales ranged from submillimeter regions within the host light organ to the several kilometers encompassing two host populations around Oahu. To facilitate this effort, we employed both novel and standard genetic and phenotypic assays of light-organ symbiont populations. A V. fischeri-specific fingerprinting method and five phenotypic assays were used to gauge the genetic richness of V. fischeri populations; these methods confirmed that the symbiont population present in each adult host's light organ is polyclonal. Upon statistical analysis of these genetic and phenotypic population data, we concluded that the characteristics of symbiotic populations were more similar within individual host populations than between the two distinct Oahu populations of E. scolopes, providing evidence that local geographic symbiont population structure exists. Finally, to better understand the genesis of symbiont diversity within host light organs, the process of symbiosis initiation in newly hatched juvenile squid was examined both experimentally and by mathematical modeling. We concluded that, after the juvenile hatches, only one or two cells of V. fischeri enter each of six internal epithelium-lined crypts present in the developing light organ. We hypothesize that the expansion of different, crypt-segregated, clonal populations creates the polyclonal adult light-organ population structure observed in this study. The stability of the luminous-bacterium-sepiolid squid mutualism in the presence of a polyclonal symbiont population structure is discussed in the context of contemporary evolutionary theory.


Assuntos
Aliivibrio fischeri/classificação , Aliivibrio fischeri/genética , Estruturas Animais/microbiologia , Biodiversidade , Decapodiformes/microbiologia , Aliivibrio fischeri/isolamento & purificação , Aliivibrio fischeri/fisiologia , Animais , Técnicas de Tipagem Bacteriana , Análise por Conglomerados , Impressões Digitais de DNA , DNA Bacteriano/genética , Genótipo , Havaí , Modelos Teóricos , Fenótipo , Simbiose
7.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 102(8): 3004-9, 2005 Feb 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15703294

RESUMO

Vibrio fischeri belongs to the Vibrionaceae, a large family of marine gamma-proteobacteria that includes several dozen species known to engage in a diversity of beneficial or pathogenic interactions with animal tissue. Among the small number of pathogenic Vibrio species that cause human diseases are Vibrio cholerae, Vibrio parahaemolyticus, and Vibrio vulnificus, the only members of the Vibrionaceae that have had their genome sequences reported. Nonpathogenic members of the genus Vibrio, including a number of beneficial symbionts, make up the majority of the Vibrionaceae, but none of these species has been similarly examined. Here we report the genome sequence of V. fischeri ES114, which enters into a mutualistic symbiosis in the light organ of the bobtail squid, Euprymna scolopes. Analysis of this sequence has revealed surprising parallels with V. cholerae and other pathogens.


Assuntos
Aliivibrio fischeri/genética , Genoma Bacteriano , Simbiose , Aliivibrio fischeri/patogenicidade , Toxinas Bacterianas/genética , Composição de Bases , Sequência de Bases , Fímbrias Bacterianas/genética , Família Multigênica , Fases de Leitura Aberta , Plasmídeos
8.
J Bacteriol ; 183(22): 6590-7, 2001 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11673429

RESUMO

The nascent light-emitting organ of newly hatched juveniles of the Hawaiian sepiolid squid Euprymna scolopes is specifically colonized by cells of Vibrio fischeri that are obtained from the ambient seawater. The mechanisms that promote this specific, cooperative colonization are likely to require a number of bacterial and host-derived factors and activities, only some of which have been described to date. A characteristic of many host-pathogen associations is the presence of bacterial mechanisms that allow attachment to specific tissues. These mechanisms have been well characterized and often involve bacterial fimbriae or outer membrane proteins (OMPs) that act as adhesins, the expression of which has been linked to virulence regulators such as ToxR in Vibrio cholerae. Analogous or even homologous mechanisms are probably operative in the initiation and persistence of cooperative bacterial associations, although considerably less is known about them. We report the presence in V. fischeri of ompU, a gene encoding a 32.5-kDa protein homolog of two other OMPs, OmpU of V. cholerae (50.8% amino acid sequence identity) and OmpL of Photobacterium profundum (45.5% identity). A null mutation introduced into the V. fischeri ompU resulted in the loss of an OMP with an estimated molecular mass of about 34 kDa; genetic complementation of the mutant strain with a DNA fragment containing only the ompU gene restored the production of this protein. The expression of the V. fischeri OmpU was not significantly affected by either (i) iron or phosphate limitation or (ii) a mutation that renders V. fischeri defective in the synthesis of a homolog of the OMP-regulatory protein ToxR. The ompU mutant grew normally in complex nutrient media but was more susceptible to growth inhibition in the presence of either anionic detergents or the antimicrobial peptide protamine sulfate. Interestingly, colonization experiments showed that the ompU null mutant initiated a symbiotic association with juvenile light organ tissue with only about 60% of the effectiveness of the parent strain. When colonization did occur, it proceeded more slowly and resulted in an approximately fourfold-smaller bacterial population. Surprisingly, there was no evidence that in a mixed infection with its parent, the ompU-defective strain had a competitive disadvantage, suggesting that the presence of the parent strain provided a shared compensatory activity. Thus, the OmpU protein appears to play a role in the normal process by which V. fischeri initiates its colonization of the nascent light organ of juvenile squids.


Assuntos
Adesinas Bacterianas/fisiologia , Proteínas da Membrana Bacteriana Externa/fisiologia , Decapodiformes/microbiologia , Simbiose , Vibrio/fisiologia , Adesinas Bacterianas/química , Adesinas Bacterianas/genética , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Animais , Animais Recém-Nascidos , Proteínas da Membrana Bacteriana Externa/química , Proteínas da Membrana Bacteriana Externa/genética , Órgão Elétrico/microbiologia , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Mutação , Alinhamento de Sequência , Homologia de Sequência de Aminoácidos , Vibrio/química
9.
J Bacteriol ; 183(1): 309-17, 2001 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11114931

RESUMO

HvnA and HvnB are proteins secreted by Vibrio fischeri ES114, an extracellular light organ symbiont of the squid Euprymna scolopes, that catalyze the transfer of ADP-ribose from NAD(+) to polyarginine. Based on this activity, HvnA and HvnB were presumptively designated mono-ADP-ribosyltransferases (ARTases), and it was hypothesized that they mediate bacterium-host signaling. We have cloned hvnA and hvnB from strain ES114. hvnA appears to be expressed as part of a four-gene operon, whereas hvnB is monocistronic. The predicted HvnA and HvnB amino acid sequences are 46% identical to one another and share 44% and 34% identity, respectively, with an open reading frame present in the Pseudomonas aeruginosa genome. Four lines of evidence indicate that HvnA and HvnB mediate polyarginine ADP-ribosylation not by ARTase activity, but indirectly through an NAD(+)-glycohydrolase (NADase) activity that releases free, reactive, ADP-ribose: (i) like other NADases, and in contrast to the ARTase cholera toxin, HvnA and HvnB catalyzed ribosylation of not only polyarginine but also polylysine and polyhistidine, and ribosylation was inhibited by hydroxylamine; (ii) HvnA and HvnB cleaved 1, N(6)-etheno-NAD(+) and NAD(+); (iii) incubation of HvnA and HvnB with [(32)P]NAD(+) resulted in the production of ADP-ribose; and (iv) purified HvnA displayed an NADase V(max) of 400 mol min(-1) mol(-1), which is within the range reported for other NADases and 10(2)- to 10(4)-fold higher than the minor NADase activity reported in bacterial ARTase toxins. Construction and analysis of an hvnA hvnB mutant revealed no other NADase activity in culture supernatants of V. fischeri, and this mutant initiated the light organ symbiosis and triggered regression of the light organ ciliated epithelium in a manner similar to that for the wild type.


Assuntos
Proteínas de Bactérias , Decapodiformes/microbiologia , NAD+ Nucleosidase/genética , NAD+ Nucleosidase/metabolismo , Pentosiltransferases/genética , Vibrio/enzimologia , Vibrio/genética , ADP Ribose Transferases , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Animais , Clonagem Molecular , Decapodiformes/anatomia & histologia , Deleção de Genes , Genes Bacterianos , Dados de Sequência Molecular , NAD+ Nucleosidase/química , Pentosiltransferases/química , Pentosiltransferases/metabolismo , Poli(ADP-Ribose) Polimerases/metabolismo , Alinhamento de Sequência , Análise de Sequência de DNA , Simbiose
10.
Curr Opin Microbiol ; 3(6): 603-7, 2000 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11121780

RESUMO

Associations between marine invertebrates and their cooperative bacterial symbionts offer access to an understanding of the roots of host-microbe interaction; for example, several symbioses like the squid-vibrio light organ association serve as models for investigating how each partner affects the developmental biology of the other. Previous results have identified a program of specific developmental events that unfolds as the association is initiated. In the past year, published studies have focused primarily on describing the mechanisms underlying the signaling processes that occur between the juvenile squid and the luminous bacteria that colonize it.


Assuntos
Decapodiformes/microbiologia , Simbiose/fisiologia , Vibrio/fisiologia , Animais , Medições Luminescentes , Especificidade da Espécie
11.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 97(18): 10231-5, 2000 Aug 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10963683

RESUMO

While most animal-bacterial symbioses are reestablished each successive generation, the mechanisms by which the host and its potential microbial partners ensure tissue colonization remain largely undescribed. We used the model association between the squid Euprymna scolopes and Vibrio fischeri to examine this process. This light organ symbiosis is initiated when V. fischeri cells present in the surrounding seawater enter pores on the surface of the nascent organ and colonize deep epithelia-lined crypts. We discovered that when newly hatched squid were experimentally exposed to natural seawater, the animals responded by secreting a viscous material from the pores of the organ. Animals maintained in filtered seawater produced no secretions unless Gram-negative bacteria, either living or dead, were reintroduced. The viscous material bound only lectins that are specific for either N-acetylneuraminic acid or N-acetylgalactosamine, suggesting that it was composed of a mucus-containing matrix. Complex ciliated fields on the surface of the organ produced water currents that focused the matrix into a mass that was tethered to, and suspended above, the light organ pores. When V. fischeri cells were introduced into the seawater surrounding the squid, the bacteria were drawn into its fluid-filled body cavity during ventilation and were captured in the matrix. After residing as an aggregate for several hours, the symbionts migrated into the pores and colonized the crypt epithelia. This mode of infection may be an example of a widespread strategy by which aquatic hosts increase the likelihood of successful colonization by rarely encountered symbionts.


Assuntos
Decapodiformes/microbiologia , Decapodiformes/fisiologia , Bactérias Gram-Negativas/fisiologia , Bactérias Gram-Positivas/fisiologia , Simbiose , Vibrio/fisiologia , Animais , Clonagem Molecular , Epitélio/microbiologia , Epitélio/fisiologia , Proteínas de Fluorescência Verde , Lectinas , Proteínas Luminescentes/análise , Proteínas Luminescentes/genética , Proteínas Recombinantes/análise , Água do Mar/microbiologia
12.
Mol Microbiol ; 37(1): 168-79, 2000 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10931314

RESUMO

Vibrio fischeri is the sole species colonizing the light-emitting organ of the Hawaiian squid, Euprymna scolopes. Upon entering the nascent light organ of a newly hatched juvenile squid, the bacteria undergo morphological and physiological changes that include the loss of flagellation and the induction of bioluminescence. These and other events reveal a pattern of genetic regulation that is a response to the colonization of host tissue. In this study, we isolated and characterized a glnD:mTn5Cm mutant of V. fischeri. In addition to the predicted defects in the efficiency of nitrogen utilization, this glnD mutant had an unexpected reduction in the ability to produce siderophore and grow under iron-limiting conditions. Although the glnD mutant could colonize juvenile squid normally over the first 24 h, it was subsequently unable to persist in the light organ to the usual extent. This persistence phenotype was more severe if the mutant was pregrown under iron-limiting conditions before inoculation, but could be ameliorated by the presence of excess iron. These results indicate that the ability to respond to iron limitation may be an important requirement in the developing symbiosis. Supplying the glnD gene in trans restored normal efficiency of nitrogen use, iron sequestration and colonization phenotypes to the glnD:mTn5Cm mutant; thus, there appears to be a genetic and/or metabolic linkage between nitrogen sensing, siderophore synthesis and symbiosis competence in V. fischeri that involves the glnD gene.


Assuntos
Elementos de DNA Transponíveis , Ferro/metabolismo , Nitrogênio/metabolismo , Nucleotidiltransferases/genética , Simbiose , Vibrio/enzimologia , Animais , Carbono/metabolismo , Clonagem Molecular , Decapodiformes/microbiologia , Teste de Complementação Genética , Nucleotidiltransferases/metabolismo , Proteínas PII Reguladoras de Nitrogênio , Fenótipo , Sideróforos/metabolismo , Vibrio/classificação , Vibrio/genética , Vibrio/crescimento & desenvolvimento
13.
J Bacteriol ; 182(16): 4578-86, 2000 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10913092

RESUMO

The bioluminescent bacterium Vibrio fischeri and juveniles of the squid Euprymna scolopes specifically recognize and respond to one another during the formation of a persistent colonization within the host's nascent light-emitting organ. The resulting fully developed light organ contains brightly luminescing bacteria and has undergone a bacterium-induced program of tissue differentiation, one component of which is a swelling of the epithelial cells that line the symbiont-containing crypts. While the luminescence (lux) genes of symbiotic V. fischeri have been shown to be highly induced within the crypts, the role of these genes in the initiation and persistence of the symbiosis has not been rigorously examined. We have constructed and examined three mutants (luxA, luxI, and luxR), defective in either luciferase enzymatic or regulatory proteins. All three are unable to induce normal luminescence levels in the host and, 2 days after initiating the association, had a three- to fourfold defect in the extent of colonization. Surprisingly, these lux mutants also were unable to induce swelling in the crypt epithelial cells. Complementing, in trans, the defect in light emission restored both normal colonization capability and induction of swelling. We hypothesize that a diminished level of oxygen consumption by a luciferase-deficient symbiotic population is responsible for the reduced fitness of lux mutants in the light organ crypts. This study is the first to show that the capacity for bioluminescence is critical for normal cell-cell interactions between a bacterium and its animal host and presents the first examples of V. fischeri genes that affect normal host tissue development.


Assuntos
Células Epiteliais/microbiologia , Luciferases/genética , Óperon , Vibrio/fisiologia , Animais , Proteínas de Bactérias/genética , Decapodiformes/microbiologia , Órgão Elétrico/microbiologia , Células Epiteliais/citologia , Medições Luminescentes , Mutagênese , Plasmídeos , Recombinação Genética , Proteínas Repressoras/genética , Simbiose , Transativadores/genética , Vibrio/enzimologia , Vibrio/genética
14.
Trends Microbiol ; 7(10): 414-20, 1999 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10498950

RESUMO

A major goal in microbiology is to understand the processes by which bacteria successfully colonize host tissue. Although a wealth of studies focusing on pathogenic microorganisms has revealed much about the rare interactions that result in disease, far less is known about the regulation of the ubiquitous, long-term, cooperative associations of bacteria with their animal hosts.


Assuntos
Decapodiformes/microbiologia , Oxigênio/metabolismo , Simbiose , Vibrio/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Animais , Decapodiformes/fisiologia , Luz
15.
Arch Microbiol ; 171(3): 205-9, 1999 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10201098

RESUMO

The recent discovery that the fish pathogen Vibrio salmonicida is closely related to the luminous bacteria Vibrio fischeri and Vibrio logei suggested that V. salmonicida might also be capable of bioluminescence. Interestingly, cells of V. salmonicida were found to produce light in culture, but only when exposed to either an aliphatic aldehyde and/or the major V. fischeri autoinducer N-(3-oxo-hexanoyl)-L-homoserine lactone, a transcriptional activator of the luminescence (lux) genes. An extract of spent medium of V. salmonicida that should contain any V. salmonicida acyl-homoserine lactone autoinducer, when added to V. fischeri cells, led to an induction of their luminescence. These results show that V. salmonicida is a newly recognized luminous bacterial species that apparently both produces an autoinducer activity and responds to exogenous V. fischeri autoinducer.


Assuntos
Doenças dos Peixes/microbiologia , Medições Luminescentes , Salmão/microbiologia , Vibrioses/veterinária , Vibrio/fisiologia , Aldeídos/farmacologia , Animais , Oceano Atlântico , Homosserina/análogos & derivados , Lactonas/farmacologia , Luciferases/metabolismo , Vibrio/enzimologia , Vibrio/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Vibrioses/microbiologia
16.
J Mol Microbiol Biotechnol ; 1(1): 13-21, 1999 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10941780

RESUMO

The diversity of microorganisms found in the marine environment reflects the immense size, range of physical conditions and energy sources, and evolutionary age of the sea. Because associations with living animal tissue are an important and ancient part of the ecology of many microorganisms, it is not surprising that the study of marine symbioses (including both cooperative and pathogenic interactions) has produced numerous discoveries of biotechnological and biomedical significance. The association between the bioluminescent bacterium Vibrio fischeri and the sepiolid squid Euprymna scolopes has emerged as a productive model system for the investigation of the mechanisms by which cooperative bacteria initiate colonization of specific host tissues. The results of the last decade of research on this system have begun to reveal surprising similarities between this association and the pathogenic associations of disease-causing Vibrio species, including those of interest to human health and aquaculture. Studies of the biochemical and molecular events underlying the development of the squid-vibrio symbiosis can be expected to continue to increase our understanding of the factors controlling both benign and pathogenic bacterial associations.


Assuntos
Decapodiformes/microbiologia , Simbiose , Vibrio/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Animais , Decapodiformes/imunologia , Decapodiformes/metabolismo , Humanos , Modelos Biológicos , Fagocitose/imunologia , Espécies Reativas de Oxigênio/metabolismo , Vibrio/imunologia , Vibrio/metabolismo
17.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 64(9): 3209-13, 1998 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9726861

RESUMO

One of the principal assumptions in symbiosis research is that associated partners have evolved in parallel. We report here experimental evidence for parallel speciation patterns among several partners of the sepiolid squid-luminous bacterial symbioses. Molecular phylogenies for 14 species of host squids were derived from sequences of both the nuclear internal transcribed spacer region and the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit I; the glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase locus was sequenced for phylogenetic determinations of 7 strains of bacterial symbionts. Comparisons of trees constructed for each of the three loci revealed a parallel phylogeny between the sepiolids and their respective symbionts. Because both the squids and their bacterial partners can be easily cultured independently in the laboratory, we were able to couple these phylogenetic analyses with experiments to examine the ability of the different symbiont strains to compete with each other during the colonization of one of the host species. Our results not only indicate a pronounced dominance of native symbiont strains over nonnative strains, but also reveal a hierarchy of symbiont competency that reflects the phylogenetic relationships of the partners. For the first time, molecular systematics has been coupled with experimental colonization assays to provide evidence for the existence of parallel speciation among a set of animal-bacterial associations.


Assuntos
Decapodiformes/microbiologia , Filogenia , Simbiose , Vibrio/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Vibrio/genética , Animais , Evolução Biológica , DNA Bacteriano , Decapodiformes/genética , Complexo IV da Cadeia de Transporte de Elétrons/genética , Gliceraldeído-3-Fosfato Desidrogenases/genética , Medições Luminescentes , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Análise de Sequência de DNA , Especificidade da Espécie
18.
J Bacteriol ; 180(8): 2087-92, 1998 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9555890

RESUMO

The catalase gene, katA, of the sepiolid squid symbiont Vibrio fischeri has been cloned and sequenced. The predicted amino acid sequence of KatA has a high degree of similarity to the recently defined group III catalases, including those found in Haemophilus influenzae, Bacteroides fragilis, and Proteus mirabilis. Upstream of the predicted start codon of katA is a sequence that closely matches the consensus sequence for promoters regulated in Escherichia coli by the alternative sigma factor encoded by rpoS. Further, the level of expression of the cloned katA gene in an E. coli rpoS mutant is much lower than in wild-type E. coli. Catalase activity is induced three- to fourfold both as growing V. fischeri cells approach stationary phase and upon the addition of a small amount of hydrogen peroxide during logarithmic growth. The catalase activity was localized in the periplasm of wild-type V. fischeri cells, where its role could be to detoxify hydrogen peroxide coming from the external environment. No significant catalase activity could be detected in a katA null mutant strain, demonstrating that KatA is the predominately expressed catalase in V. fischeri and indicating that V. fischeri carries only a single catalase gene. The catalase mutant was defective in its ability to competitively colonize the light organs of juvenile squids in coinoculation experiments with the parent strain, suggesting that the catalase enzyme plays an important role in the symbiosis between V. fischeri and its squid host.


Assuntos
Catalase/biossíntese , Genes Bacterianos , Estresse Oxidativo , Vibrio/fisiologia , Animais , Sequência de Bases , Catalase/genética , Decapodiformes/microbiologia , Indução Enzimática , Escherichia coli/enzimologia , Regulação Bacteriana da Expressão Gênica , Cinética , Medições Luminescentes , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Células Fotorreceptoras/microbiologia , Plasmídeos , Proteínas Recombinantes/biossíntese , Mapeamento por Restrição , Simbiose , Vibrio/genética , Vibrio/crescimento & desenvolvimento
19.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 95(4): 1818-22, 1998 Feb 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9465100

RESUMO

Animals are typically colonized by diverse bacterial symbionts, many of which are commensal and, in numerous cases, even essential for their host's proper development and growth. In exchange, the host must supply a sufficient array and quantity of nutrients to support the proliferation and persistence of its microbial community. In this investigation, we have examined such a nutritional environment by determining the symbiotic competence of auxotrophic mutants of the bioluminescent bacterium Vibrio fischeri, and have demonstrated that the host squid Euprymna scolopes provides at least 9 aa to the growing culture of symbiotic V. fischeri present in its light-emitting organ. We also collected and analyzed the extracellular fluid from this organ, in which the symbionts reside, and confirmed that it contained significant amounts of amino acids. The combined results suggested that host-derived free amino acids, as well as peptides or proteins, are a source of the amino acids that support the growth of the symbionts. This work describes a technique to sample the symbionts and their surrounding environment without contamination by host tissue components and, in combination with molecular genetic studies, allows the characterization of the nutritional conditions that support a cooperative animal-bacterial symbiosis.


Assuntos
Aminoácidos/metabolismo , Simbiose , Vibrio/fisiologia , Animais , Decapodiformes/microbiologia , Medições Luminescentes , Microscopia Eletrônica , Mutagênese
20.
J Bacteriol ; 180(1): 59-64, 1998 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9422593

RESUMO

Two genera of sepiolid squids--Euprymna, found primarily in shallow, coastal waters of Hawaii and the Western Pacific, and Sepiola, the deeper-, colder-water-dwelling Mediterranean and Atlantic squids--are known to recruit luminous bacteria into light organ symbioses. The light organ symbiont of Euprymna spp. is Vibrio fischeri, but until now, the light organ symbionts of Sepiola spp. have remained inadequately identified. We used a combination of molecular and physiological characteristics to reveal that the light organs of Sepiola affinis and Sepiola robusta contain a mixed population of Vibrio logei and V. fischeri, with V. logei comprising between 63 and 100% of the bacteria in the light organs that we analyzed. V. logei had not previously been known to exist in such symbioses. In addition, this is the first report of two different species of luminous bacteria co-occurring within a single light organ. The luminescence of these symbiotic V. logei strains, as well as that of other isolates of V. logei tested, is reduced when they are grown at temperatures above 20 degrees C, partly due to a limitation in the synthesis of aliphatic aldehyde, a substrate of the luminescence reaction. In contrast, the luminescence of the V. fischeri symbionts is optimal above 24 degrees C and is not enhanced by aldehyde addition. Also, V. fischeri strains were markedly more successful than V. logei at colonizing the light organs of juvenile Euprymna scolopes, especially at 26 degrees C. These findings have important implications for our understanding of the ecological dynamics and evolution of cooperative, and perhaps pathogenic, associations of Vibrio spp. with their animal hosts.


Assuntos
Decapodiformes/microbiologia , Medições Luminescentes , Simbiose/fisiologia , Vibrio/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Aldeídos/farmacologia , Animais , Evolução Biológica , Contagem de Colônia Microbiana , DNA Ribossômico/genética , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase/métodos , RNA Bacteriano/genética , RNA Ribossômico 16S/genética , Homologia de Sequência do Ácido Nucleico , Temperatura , Vibrio/genética , Vibrio/patogenicidade
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