Marine Science Institute, The University of Texas at Austin, Port Aransas, Texas 78373-1267.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 1994 Sep;60(9):3167-74. doi: 10.1128/aem.60.9.3167-3174.1994.
Cyanophages infecting marine Synechococcus cells were frequently very abundant and were found in every seawater sample along a transect in the western Gulf of Mexico and during a 28-month period in Aransas Pass, Tex. In Aransas Pass their abundance varied seasonally, with the lowest concentrations coincident with cooler water and lower salinity. Along the transect, viruses infecting Synechococcus strains DC2 and SYN48 ranged in concentration from a few hundred per milliliter at 97 m deep and 83 km offshore to ca. 4 x 10 ml near the surface at stations within 18 km of the coast. The highest concentrations occurred at the surface, where salinity decreased from ca. 35.5 to 34 ppt and Synechococcus concentrations were greatest. Viruses infecting strains SNC1, SNC2, and 838BG were distributed in a similar manner but were much less abundant (<10 to >5 x 10 ml). When Synechococcus concentrations exceeded ca. 10 ml, cyanophage concentrations increased markedly (ca. 10 to > 10 ml), suggesting that a minimum host density was required for efficient viral propagation. Data on the decay rate of viral infectivity d (per day), as a function of solar irradiance I (millimoles of quanta per square meter per second), were used to develop a relationship (d = 0.2610I - 0.00718; r = 0.69) for conservatively estimating the destruction of infectious viruses in the mixed layer of two offshore stations. Assuming that virus production balances losses and that the burst size is 250, ca. 5 to 7% of Synechococcus cells would be infected daily by viruses. Calculations based on contact rates between Synechococcus cells and infectious viruses produce similar results (5 to 14%). Moreover, balancing estimates of viral production with contact rates for the farthest offshore station required that most Synechococcus cells be susceptible to infection, that most contacts result in infection, and that the burst size be about 324 viruses per lytic event. In contrast, in nearshore waters, where ca. 80% of Synechococcus cells would be contacted daily by infectious cyanophages, only ca. 1% of the contacts would have to result in infection to balance the estimated virus removal rates. These results indicate that cyanophages are an abundant and dynamic component of marine planktonic communities and are probably responsible for lysing a small but significant portion of the Synechococcus population on a daily basis.
感染海洋聚球藻细胞的噬藻体通常非常丰富,在墨西哥湾西部的一条横断线上的每个海水样本以及德克萨斯州阿兰萨斯港的 28 个月期间都有发现。在阿兰萨斯港,它们的丰度随季节变化,在水温较低和盐度较低时浓度最低。在横断线上,感染聚球藻菌株 DC2 和 SYN48 的病毒浓度从 97 米深处和 83 公里外的每毫升几百个到近表面处的每个毫升约 4 x 10 个不等,在离海岸 18 公里范围内的站点。最高浓度出现在表面,那里的盐度从约 35.5 下降到 34 ppt,聚球藻浓度最大。感染 SNC1、SNC2 和 838BG 菌株的病毒以类似的方式分布,但丰度要低得多(<10 到 >5 x 10 个/ml)。当聚球藻浓度超过约 10 ml 时,噬藻体浓度显著增加(约 10 到 > 10 ml),表明有效病毒繁殖需要最低宿主密度。作为太阳辐射 I(每平方米每秒毫摩尔量子)的函数,病毒感染力衰减率 d(每天)的数据被用来建立一个关系(d = 0.2610I - 0.00718;r = 0.69),用于保守估计两个近海站点混合层中传染性病毒的破坏。假设病毒产生与损失平衡,且爆发大小为 250,则每天约有 5%至 7%的聚球藻细胞受到病毒感染。基于聚球藻细胞与传染性病毒之间的接触率的计算产生了类似的结果(5%至 14%)。此外,在最偏远的近海站点,根据病毒产生的平衡估计和接触率要求,大多数聚球藻细胞必须易受感染,大多数接触都必须导致感染,并且爆发大小约为每个裂解事件 324 个病毒。相比之下,在近岸水域,每天约有 80%的聚球藻细胞会被传染性噬藻体接触,只有约 1%的接触必须导致感染,才能平衡估计的病毒去除率。这些结果表明,噬藻体是海洋浮游群落中丰富且活跃的组成部分,并且可能每天都负责裂解聚球藻种群的一小部分但却具有重要意义的部分。