首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
The medicinal leech, Hirudo verbana, is one of the simplest naturally occurring models for digestive-tract symbioses, where only two bacterial species, Aeromonas veronii bv. sobria (gamma-Proteobacteria) and a Rikenella-like bacterium (Bacteroidetes), colonize the crop, the largest compartment of the leech digestive tract. In this study, we investigated spatial and temporal changes of the localization and microcolony structure of the native symbionts in the crop, after ingestion of a sterile blood meal, by fluorescence in situ hybridization. The population dynamics differed between the two symbiotic bacteria. A. veronii was detected mainly as individual cells inside the intraluminal fluid (ILF) during 14 days after feeding (daf) unless it was found in association with Rikenella microcolonies. The Rikenella-like bacteria were observed not only inside the ILF but also in association with the luminal surface of the crop epithelium. The sizes of Rikenella microcolonies changed dynamically through the 14-day period. From 3 daf onward, mixed microcolonies containing both species were frequently observed, with cells of both species tightly associating with each other. The sizes of the mixed microcolonies were consistently larger than the size of either single-species microcolony, suggesting a synergistic interaction of the symbionts. Lectin staining with succinylated wheat germ agglutinin revealed that the planktonic microcolonies present in the ILF were embedded in a polysaccharide matrix containing N-acetylglucosamine. The simplicity, symbiont-symbiont interaction, and mixed microcolonies of this naturally occurring, digestive-tract symbiosis lay the foundation for understanding the more complex communities residing in most animals.  相似文献   

2.
Culture-based studies of the microbial community within the gut of the medicinal leech have typically been focused on various Aeromonas species, which were believed to be the sole symbiont of the leech digestive tract. In this study, analysis of 16S rRNA gene clone libraries confirmed the presence of Aeromonas veronii and revealed a second symbiont, clone PW3, a novel member of the Rikenellaceae, within the crop, a large compartment where ingested blood is stored prior to digestion. The diversity of the bacterial community in the leech intestinum was determined, and additional symbionts were detected, including members of the α-, γ-, and δ-Proteobacteria, Fusobacteria, Firmicutes, and Bacteroidetes. The relative abundances of the clones suggested that A. veronii and the novel clone, PW3, also dominate the intestinum community, while other clones, representing transient organisms, were typically present in low numbers. The identities of these transients varied greatly between individual leeches. Neither time after feeding nor feeding on defibrinated blood caused a change in identity of the dominant members of the microbial communities. Terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis was used to verify that the results from the clone libraries were representative of a larger data set. The presence of a two-member bacterial community in the crop provides a unique opportunity to investigate both symbiont-symbiont and symbiont-host interactions in a natural model of digestive-tract associations.  相似文献   

3.
The European medicinal leech, Hirudo verbana, harbors simple microbial communities in the digestive tract and bladder. The colonization history, infection frequency, and growth dynamics of symbionts through host embryogenesis are described using diagnostic PCR and quantitative PCR. Symbiont species displayed diversity in temporal establishment and proliferation through leech development.The hermaphroditic European medicinal leech (Hirudo spp.) is one of the most extensively examined animal models in neurophysiological, developmental, and behavioral studies (14) and has recently been used as a naturally occurring simple model for beneficial symbioses (5, 13). A fundamental question of microbial symbioses is how to determine the transmission mode of the symbionts between generations. Hirudo verbana reproduces by depositing eggs, which are surrounded by a cocoon. The cocoon is secreted from glandular cells of the parental mouth and usually contains 5 to 25 eggs. Each individual egg is encased by a self-enclosed vitelline membrane, referred to as the larval sac, and is bathed in a nutritious albumenous fluid (14). Complete embryonic development occurs within the cocoon and is composed of two distinct life stages, cryptolarva and juvenile. The cryptolarva transitions into a juvenile approximately midway into embryogenesis. The temporal acquisition of morphological attributes during embryonic development have been well described (3, 12, 16) (Fig. (Fig.11).Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Paradigm of percent embryonic development (% ED) of the European medicinal leech, H. verbana, relative to the acquisition of digestive tract features. At 20 ± 1°C, 24 h is equivalent to 3.33% ED, with complete embryogenesis (spanning from cocoon deposition to the emergence of adult-like juveniles) requiring approximately 30 h. Staging scheme based on references 3 and 12. *, sampling time point; PD, days postcocoon deposition; prs, pairs; d, days. (Adapted from reference 12 with permission of John Wiley & Sons. Copyright 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.)The medicinal leech houses distinct microbial communities within its digestive tract and secretory bladders. Culturing and culture-independent profiling of the European medicinal leech, H. verbana, through fluorescence in situ hybridization, study of 16S rRNA gene clone libraries, and terminal restric-tion length polymorphism, revealed a simple and stable microbial community within the adult midgut (2, 4, 7, 8, 18). The gammaproteobacterium Aeromonas veronii and a member of the Bacteroidetes, Rikenella, were identified as consistent and dominant extracellular residents of the medicinal leech crop and intestinum. An early culture-based study detected a bacterium that is now considered to be A. veronii in the cocoon albumen and in young leeches after hatching (1). In previous electron microscopy work investigating the embryonic development of the bladders, intracellular bacteria were detected within the bladder wall and extracellular bacteria within the lumen (2, 16, 17). A recent study revealed that this microbiota is organized in distinct layers and is composed of the deltaproteobacterium Bdellovibrio, betaproteobacteria Comamonas and Sterolibacterium, members of the Bacteroidetes, Sphingobacterium and Niabella, and alphaproteobacterium Ochrobactrum spp. (10). Although the microbial constituents of the adult H. verbana digestive tract have been previously characterized, the succession, inoculum sizes, frequency of infection, and growth dynamics of these symbiont species during embryogenesis remain to be described.Putative functional roles for the crop/intestinum symbionts of the leech host include aiding in digestion, provisioning essential nutrients to the host, which are lacking in the blood meal (14), and preventing the establishment of foreign microbiota (1, 15). The symbionts localized in the bladders are suspected to play a role in the recycling of host metabolic waste into ammonia (10). The digestive tract symbionts may also display nutritional syntrophy, and possibly, A. veronii primes the host''s digestive tract to enable the establishment and persistence of the obligate anaerobic Rikenella-like bacterium, thereby contributing to the selection of the future microbiota (reviewed in reference 13). This paper details the microbial colonization patterns relative to H. verbana embryogenesis using a combination of species-specific diagnostic PCR and quantitative PCR (qPCR) analyses.  相似文献   

4.
Most animals harbour symbiotic microorganisms inside their body, where intimate interactions occur between the partners. The medicinal leech, Hirudo verbana, possesses 17 pairs of excretory bladders that harbour a large number of intracellular and extracellular symbiotic bacteria. In this study, we characterized the bladder symbionts using molecular phylogenetic analyses, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). Restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) and sequence analyses of 16S rRNA gene clone libraries suggested that six bacterial species co‐colonize the leech bladders. Phylogenetic analyses revealed that these species belong to the α‐Proteobacteria (Ochrobactrum symbiont), β‐Proteobacteria (Beta‐1 and Beta‐2 symbionts), δ‐Proteobacteria (Bdellovibrio symbiont) and Bacteroidetes (Niabella and Sphingobacterium symbionts). Species‐specific PCR detection and FISH confirmed the localization of the symbiotic bacteria in the bladders. The Ochrobactrum, Beta‐1, Bdellovibrio and Sphingobacterium symbionts were consistently detected in 13 leeches from two populations, while infection rate of the other symbionts ranged between 20% and 100% in the two leech populations. Transmission electron microscopy observations of the bladders revealed epithelial cells harbouring a number of intracellular bacilli and an additional type of extracellular, rod‐shaped bacteria in the luminal region. Fluorescence in situ hybridization with group‐specific oligonucleotide probes revealed the spatial organization of the bacterial species in the bladder: the Ochrobactrum symbiont was located intracellularly inside epithelial cells; the Bacteroidetes were localized close to the epithelium in the lumen of the bladder; and the Bacteroidetes layer was covered with dense β‐proteobacterial cells. These results clearly demonstrate that a simple but organized microbial community exists in the bladder of the medicinal leech.  相似文献   

5.
Culture-based studies of the microbial community within the gut of the medicinal leech have typically been focused on various Aeromonas species, which were believed to be the sole symbiont of the leech digestive tract. In this study, analysis of 16S rRNA gene clone libraries confirmed the presence of Aeromonas veronii and revealed a second symbiont, clone PW3, a novel member of the Rikenellaceae, within the crop, a large compartment where ingested blood is stored prior to digestion. The diversity of the bacterial community in the leech intestinum was determined, and additional symbionts were detected, including members of the alpha-, gamma-, and delta-Proteobacteria, Fusobacteria, Firmicutes, and Bacteroidetes. The relative abundances of the clones suggested that A. veronii and the novel clone, PW3, also dominate the intestinum community, while other clones, representing transient organisms, were typically present in low numbers. The identities of these transients varied greatly between individual leeches. Neither time after feeding nor feeding on defibrinated blood caused a change in identity of the dominant members of the microbial communities. Terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis was used to verify that the results from the clone libraries were representative of a larger data set. The presence of a two-member bacterial community in the crop provides a unique opportunity to investigate both symbiont-symbiont and symbiont-host interactions in a natural model of digestive-tract associations.  相似文献   

6.
Hirudo medicinalis, the medicinal leech, usually carries in its digestive tract a pure culture of Aeromonas veronii bv. sobria. Such specificity is unusual for digestive tracts that are normally colonized by a complex microbial consortium. Important questions for the symbiotic interaction and for the medical application after microvascular surgery are whether other bacteria can proliferate or at least persist in the digestive tract of H. medicinalis and what factors contribute to the reported specificity. Using a colonization assay, we were able to compare experimentally the ability of clinical isolates and of a symbiotic strain to colonize H. medicinalis. The symbiotic A. veronii bv. sobria strain proliferated well and persisted for at least 7 days inside the digestive tract. In contrast, the proliferation of Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus was inhibited inside the animal compared to growth in the in vitro control, indicating that the ingested blood was modified within the digestive tract. However, both strains were able to persist in the digestive tract for at least 7 days. For an Escherichia coli strain, the viable counts decreased approximately 1,000-fold within 42 h. The decrease of viable E. coli could be prevented by interfering with the activation of the membrane-attack complex of the complement system that is present in blood. This suggests that the membrane-attack complex remained active inside H. medicinalis and prevented the proliferation of sensitive bacteria. Thus, antimicrobial properties of the ingested vertebrate blood contribute to the specificity of the A. veronii-H. medicinalis symbiosis, in addition to modifications of the blood inside the digestive tract of H. medicinalis.  相似文献   

7.
UV radiation (UVR) has different effects on prokaryotic cells, such as, for instance, filamentation and aggregation in bacteria. Here we studied the effect of UVR on microcolony formation in two freshwater Synechococcus strains of different ribotypes (group B and group I) and phycobiliprotein compositions (phycoerythrin [PE] and phycocyanin [PC]). Each strain was photoacclimated at two light intensities, low light (LL) (10 μmol m−2 s−1) and moderate light (ML) (100 μmol m−2 s−1). The cultures were exposed for 6 days to treatments with UVR or without UVR. PE-rich Synechococcus acclimated to LL had a low carotenoid/chlorophyll a (car/chl) ratio but responded faster to UVR treatment, producing the highest percentages of microcolonies and of cells in microcolonies. Conversely, the same strain acclimated to ML, with a higher car/chl ratio, did not aggregate significantly. These results suggest that microcolony formation by PE-rich Synechococcus is induced by UVR if carotenoid levels are low. PC-rich Synechococcus formed a very low percentage of microcolonies in both acclimations even with low car/chl ratio. The different responses of the two Synechococcus strains to UVR depend on their pigment compositions. On the other hand, this study does not exclude that UVR-induced microcolony formation could also be related to specific ribotypes.  相似文献   

8.

Background

The echinocandins are lipopeptides that can be employed as antifungal drugs that inhibit the synthesis of 1,3-β-glucans within the fungal cell wall. Anidulafungin and caspofungin are echinocandins used in the treatment of Candida infections and have activity against other fungi including Aspergillus fumigatus. The echinocandins are generally considered fungistatic against Aspergillus species.

Methods

Culture of A. fumigatus from conidia to microcolonies on a support of porous aluminium oxide (PAO), combined with fluorescence microscopy and scanning electron microscopy, was used to investigate the effects of anidulafungin and caspofungin. The PAO was an effective matrix for conidial germination and microcolony growth. Additionally, PAO supports could be moved between agar plates containing different concentrations of echinocandins to change dosage and to investigate the recovery of fungal microcolonies from these drugs. Culture on PAO combined with microscopy and image analysis permits quantitative studies on microcolony growth with the flexibility of adding or removing antifungal agents, dyes, fixatives or osmotic stresses during growth with minimal disturbance of fungal microcolonies.

Significance

Anidulafungin and caspofungin reduced but did not halt growth at the microcony level; additionally both drugs killed individual cells, particularly at concentrations around the MIC. Intact but not lysed cells showed rapid recovery when the drugs were removed. The classification of these drugs as either fungistatic or fungicidal is simplistic. Microcolony analysis on PAO appears to be a valuable tool to investigate the action of antifungal agents.  相似文献   

9.
10.
We characterized the intracellular symbiotic bacteria of the hematophagous glossiphoniid leeches Placobdelloides siamensis and a Parabdella sp. These leeches have a specialized structure called an “esophageal organ,” the cells of which harbor bacterial symbionts. From the esophageal organ of each species, a 1.5-kb eubacterial 16S rRNA gene segment was amplified by PCR, cloned, and sequenced. Diagnostic PCR detected the symbiont in the esophageal organ and intestine. Phylogenetic analysis of the 16S rRNA gene(s) demonstrated that the symbionts from the leeches formed a monophyletic group in a well-defined clade containing endosymbiotic bacteria of plant sap-feeding insects in the γ-subdivision of the Proteobacteria. The nucleotide compositions of the 16S rRNA gene from the leech symbionts were highly AT biased (53.7%).  相似文献   

11.
Bacterial populations can display heterogeneity with respect to both the adaptive stress response and growth capacity of individual cells. The growth dynamics of Bacillus cereus ATCC 14579 during mild and severe salt stress exposure were investigated for the population as a whole in liquid culture. To quantitatively assess the population heterogeneity of the stress response and growth capacity at a single-cell level, a direct imaging method was applied to monitor cells from the initial inoculum to the microcolony stage. Highly porous Anopore strips were used as a support for the culturing and imaging of microcolonies at different time points. The growth kinetics of cells grown in liquid culture were comparable to those of microcolonies grown upon Anopore strips, even in the presence of mild and severe salt stress. Exposure to mild salt stress resulted in growth that was characterized by a remarkably low variability of microcolony sizes, and the distributions of the log10-transformed microcolony areas could be fitted by the normal distribution. Under severe salt stress conditions, the microcolony sizes were highly heterogeneous, and this was apparently caused by the presence of both a nongrowing and growing population. After discriminating these two subpopulations, it was shown that the variability of microcolony sizes of the growing population was comparable to that of non-salt-stressed and mildly salt-stressed populations. Quantification of population heterogeneity during stress exposure may contribute to an optimized application of preservation factors for controlling growth of spoilage and pathogenic bacteria to ensure the quality and safety of minimally processed foods.  相似文献   

12.
Confined spatial patterns of microbial distribution are prevalent in nature, such as in microbial mats, soil communities, and water stream biofilms. The symbiotic two-species consortium of Pseudomonas putida and Acinetobacter sp. strain C6, originally isolated from a creosote-polluted aquifer, has evolved a distinct spatial organization in the laboratory that is characterized by an increased fitness and productivity. In this consortium, P. putida is reliant on microcolonies formed by Acinetobacter sp. C6, to which it attaches. Here we describe the processes that lead to the microcolony pattern by Acinetobacter sp. C6. Ecological spatial pattern analyses revealed that the microcolonies were not entirely randomly distributed and instead were arranged in a uniform pattern. Detailed time-lapse confocal microscopy at the single-cell level demonstrated that the spatial pattern was the result of an intriguing self-organization: small multicellular clusters moved along the surface to fuse with one another to form microcolonies. This active distribution capability was dependent on environmental factors (carbon source and oxygen) and historical contingency (formation of phenotypic variants). The findings of this study are discussed in the context of species distribution patterns observed in macroecology, and we summarize observations about the processes involved in coadaptation between P. putida and Acinetobacter sp. C6. Our results contribute to an understanding of spatial species distribution patterns as they are observed in nature, as well as the ecology of engineered communities that have the potential for enhanced and sustainable bioprocessing capacity.  相似文献   

13.
Bacterial infections targeting the bloodstream lead to a wide array of devastating diseases such as septic shock and meningitis. To study this crucial type of infection, its specific environment needs to be taken into account, in particular the mechanical forces generated by the blood flow. In a previous study using Neisseria meningitidis as a model, we observed that bacterial microcolonies forming on the endothelial cell surface in the vessel lumen are remarkably resistant to mechanical stress. The present study aims to identify the molecular basis of this resistance. N. meningitidis forms aggregates independently of host cells, yet we demonstrate here that cohesive forces involved in these bacterial aggregates are not sufficient to explain the stability of colonies on cell surfaces. Results imply that host cell attributes enhance microcolony cohesion. Microcolonies on the cell surface induce a cellular response consisting of numerous cellular protrusions similar to filopodia that come in close contact with all the bacteria in the microcolony. Consistent with a role of this cellular response, host cell lipid microdomain disruption simultaneously inhibited this response and rendered microcolonies sensitive to blood flow–generated drag forces. We then identified, by a genetic approach, the type IV pili component PilV as a triggering factor of plasma membrane reorganization, and consistently found that microcolonies formed by a pilV mutant are highly sensitive to shear stress. Our study shows that bacteria manipulate host cell functions to reorganize the host cell surface to form filopodia-like structures that enhance the cohesion of the microcolonies and therefore blood vessel colonization under the harsh conditions of the bloodstream.  相似文献   

14.
A new chemiluminescent in situ hybridization (CISH) method provides simultaneous detection, identification, and enumeration of culturable Escherichia coli cells in 100 ml of municipal water within one working day. Following filtration and 5 h of growth on tryptic soy agar at 35°C, individual microcolonies of E. coli were detected directly on a 47-mm-diameter membrane filter using soybean peroxidase-labeled peptide nucleic acid (PNA) probes targeting a species-specific sequence in E. coli 16S rRNA. Within each microcolony, hybridized, peroxidase-labeled PNA probe and chemiluminescent substrate generated light which was subsequently captured on film. Thus, each spot of light represented one microcolony of E. coli. Following probe selection based on 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) sequence alignments and sample matrix interference, the sensitivity and specificity of the probe Eco16S07C were determined by dot hybridization to RNA of eight bacterial species. Only the rRNA of E. coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa were detected by Eco16S07C with the latter mismatch hybridization being eliminated by a PNA blocker probe targeting P. aeruginosa 16S rRNA. The sensitivity and specificity for the detection of E. coli by PNA CISH were then determined using 8 E. coli strains and 17 other bacterial species, including closely related species. No bacterial strains other than E. coli and Shigella spp. were detected, which is in accordance with 16S rDNA sequence information. Furthermore, the enumeration of microcolonies of E. coli represented by spots of light correlated 92 to 95% with visible colonies following overnight incubation. PNA CISH employs traditional membrane filtration and culturing techniques while providing the added sensitivity and specificity of PNA probes in order to yield faster and more definitive results.  相似文献   

15.
Counts of bacterial microcolonies attached to deep-sea sediment particles showed 4-, 8-, 16-, and 32-celled microcolonies to be very rare. This was investigated with a mathematical model in which microcolonies grew from single cells at a constant growth rate (), detached from particles at constant rate (), and reattached as single cells. Terms for attachment of foreign bacteria (a) and death of single cells (d) were also included. The best method of fitting the model to the microcolony counts was a weighted least-squares approach by which(0.83 hour–1) was estimated to be about 20 times greater than(0.038 hour–1). This showed that the bacteria were very mobile between sediment particles and this mobility was explained in terms of attachment by reversible sorption. The implications of the results for the frequency of dividing cell method for estimating growth rates of sediment bacteria are discussed. The ratio of and was found to be very robust both in terms of the errors associated with the microcolony counts and the range of microcolony sizes used to obtain the solution.  相似文献   

16.
When fresh whole leaves of six different species of forage legumes were suspended in an artificial rumen medium and inoculated with rumen bacteria, bacterial adhesion and proliferation were noted at the stomata, and penetration of the stomate by these bacteria was documented by electron microscopy. The invading bacteria adhered to surfaces within the intercellular space of the leaf and produced very extensive exopolysaccharide-enclosed microcolonies. After some of the legume leaf cell walls were disorganized and ruptured by bacterial digestion, these cells (notably, parenchyma and epidermal cells) were invaded by bacteria, with subsequent formation of intracellular microcolonies. However, other cells were neither ruptured nor colonized (notably, stomata guard cells and vascular tissue). At all stages of the digestion of intact legume leaves, the rumen bacteria grew in microcolonies composed of cells of single or mixed morphological types, and a particular ecological niche was often completely and consistently occupied by a very large microcolony of cells of single or mixed morphological types.  相似文献   

17.
The architecture of a Sphingomonas biofilm was studied during early phases of its formation, using strain L138, a gfp-tagged derivative of Sphingomonas sp. strain LB126, as a model organism and flow cells and confocal laser scanning microscopy as experimental tools. Spatial and temporal distribution of cells and exopolymer secretions (EPS) within the biofilm, development of microcolonies under flow conditions representing varied Reynolds numbers, and changes in diffusion length with reference to EPS production were studied by sequential sacrificing of biofilms grown in multichannel flow cells and by time-lapse confocal imaging. The area of biofilm in terms of microscopic images required to ensure representative sampling varied by an order of magnitude when area of cell coverage (2 × 105 μm2) or microcolony size (1 × 106 μm2) was the biofilm parameter under investigation. Hence, it is necessary to establish the inherent variability of any biofilm metric one is attempting to quantify. Sphingomonas sp. strain L138 biofilm architecture consisted of microcolonies and extensive water channels. Biomass and EPS distribution were maximal at 8 to 9 μm above the substratum, with a high void fraction near the substratum. Time-lapse confocal imaging and digital image analysis showed that growth of the microcolonies was not uniform: adjacently located colonies registered significant growth or no growth at all. Microcolonies in the biofilm had the ability to move across the attachment surface as a unit, irrespective of fluid flow direction, indicating that movement of microcolonies is an inherent property of the biofilm. Width of water channels decreased as EPS production increased, resulting in increased diffusion distances in the biofilm. Changing hydrodynamic conditions (Reynolds numbers of 0.07, 52, and 87) had no discernible influence on the characteristics of microcolonies (size, shape, or orientation with respect to flow) during the first 24 h of biofilm development. Inherent factors appear to have overriding influence, vis-à-vis environmental factors, on early stages of microcolony development under these laminar flow conditions.  相似文献   

18.
Hemiclepsis quadrata, which is the only representative of the genus so far reported in Africa, is redescribed. Illustrations showing the diagnostic features of the taxon are provided for the first time. A thorough study of the holotype and one of the paratypes, as well as additional specimens, revealed that Moore overlooked certain important taxonomic features when he described the leech as a Batracobdella species. The transfer of this species to the genus Hemiclepsis is based on the following features exhibited by this leech: dilated head region, three pairs of eyes, central proboscis pore, ten pairs of crop caeca and small genital atria.  相似文献   

19.
Bacterial populations can display heterogeneity with respect to both the adaptive stress response and growth capacity of individual cells. The growth dynamics of Bacillus cereus ATCC 14579 during mild and severe salt stress exposure were investigated for the population as a whole in liquid culture. To quantitatively assess the population heterogeneity of the stress response and growth capacity at a single-cell level, a direct imaging method was applied to monitor cells from the initial inoculum to the microcolony stage. Highly porous Anopore strips were used as a support for the culturing and imaging of microcolonies at different time points. The growth kinetics of cells grown in liquid culture were comparable to those of microcolonies grown upon Anopore strips, even in the presence of mild and severe salt stress. Exposure to mild salt stress resulted in growth that was characterized by a remarkably low variability of microcolony sizes, and the distributions of the log(10)-transformed microcolony areas could be fitted by the normal distribution. Under severe salt stress conditions, the microcolony sizes were highly heterogeneous, and this was apparently caused by the presence of both a nongrowing and growing population. After discriminating these two subpopulations, it was shown that the variability of microcolony sizes of the growing population was comparable to that of non-salt-stressed and mildly salt-stressed populations. Quantification of population heterogeneity during stress exposure may contribute to an optimized application of preservation factors for controlling growth of spoilage and pathogenic bacteria to ensure the quality and safety of minimally processed foods.  相似文献   

20.
Bacterial symbionts play a critical role in the physiology, ecology and evolution of a diverse range of insects. Such symbionts with unknown roles in the ecology and evolution of their hosts have been reported from archaeococcoid scale insects of family Coelostomidiidae. We examine in detail the bacterial community associated with the remaining species of this family, and calculate the cophylogenetic relationship between the hosts and their symbionts. The 28S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) and mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I genes were used to reconstruct the host phylogeny while the 16S rRNA gene was used for the bacterial phylogeny. Three well-supported clades were detected within the phylogeny of the monophyletic family Coelostomidiidae. Besides the known symbionts, a novel Sodalis-like symbiont was detected from three of the species. The primary bacteriome inhabiting B-symbiont (Bacteroidetes; ‘Candidatus Hoataupuhia coelostomidicola’) was widespread across the host family. Cophylogenetic comparison using Jungles-based reconciliation analysis and ParaFit statistical test revealed a strongly congruent phylogeny of this symbiont with the host family, with no host-switches and few losses and duplications. A similar pattern was observed across a relatively unrelated neococcoid family that exhibits a different physiology and symbiont community, besides a related Bacteroidetes symbiont. We reconfirm that the B-symbiont is a primary symbiont, owing to its strongly congruent evolution with the host and its bacteriome-inhabiting nature. Our analysis affirms recent suggestions that the Bacteroidetes-affiliated symbionts may have driven the hyper-diversification of scale insects worldwide.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号