Appl Environ Microbiol. 1997 Jan;63(1):77-83. doi: 10.1128/aem.63.1.77-83.1997.
Recent evidence suggests that viruses play an influential role within the marine microbial food web. To understand this role, it is important to determine rates and mechanisms of virus removal and degradation. We used plaque assays to examine the decay of infectivity in lab-grown viruses seeded into natural seawater. The rates of loss of infectivity of native viruses from Santa Monica Bay and of nonnative viruses from the North Sea in the coastal seawater of Santa Monica Bay were determined. Viruses were seeded into fresh seawater that had been pretreated in various ways: filtration with a 0.2-(mu)m-pore-size filter to remove organisms, heat to denature enzymes, and dissolved organic matter enrichment to reconstitute enzyme activity. Seawater samples were then incubated in full sunlight, in the dark, or under glass to allow partitioning of causative agents of virus decay. Solar radiation always resulted in increased rates of loss of virus infectivity. Virus isolates which are native to Santa Monica Bay consistently degraded more slowly in full sunlight in untreated seawater (decay ranged from 4.1 to 7.2% h(sup-1)) than nonnative marine bacteriophages which were isolated from the North Sea (decay ranged from 6.6 to 11.1% h(sup-1)). All phages demonstrated susceptibility to degradation by heat-labile substances, as heat treatment reduced the decay rates to about 0.5 to 2.0% h(sup-1) in the dark. Filtration reduced decay rates by various amounts, averaging 20%. Heat-labile, high-molecular-weight dissolved material (>30 kDa, probably enzymes) appeared responsible for about 1/5 of the maximal decay. Solar radiation was responsible for about 1/3 to 2/3 of the maximal decay of nonnative viruses and about 1/4 to 1/3 of that of the native viruses, suggesting evolutionary adaptation to local light levels. Our results suggest that sunlight is an important contributing factor to virus decay but also point to the significance of particles and dissolved substances in seawater.
最近的证据表明,病毒在海洋微生物食物网中起着重要的作用。为了了解这种作用,确定病毒的去除和降解的速度和机制是很重要的。我们使用噬菌斑分析来研究实验室培养的病毒在天然海水中感染性的衰减。确定了圣莫尼卡湾的本地病毒和北海的非本地病毒在圣莫尼卡湾沿海海水中丧失感染性的速度。将病毒接种到用 0.2-μm 孔径过滤器过滤以去除有机物、加热以变性酶和富含有机物以重建酶活性的新鲜海水中。然后将海水样品在全阳光、黑暗或玻璃下孵育,以允许病毒衰减的病原体进行分区。太阳辐射总是导致病毒感染性丧失的速度增加。与从北海分离的非本地海洋噬菌体相比,源自圣莫尼卡湾的病毒分离株在未处理的海水中在全阳光下的降解速度较慢(衰减范围为 4.1 至 7.2% h(sup-1))(衰减范围为 6.6 至 11.1% h(sup-1))。所有噬菌体都容易受到热不稳定物质的降解,因为热处理使黑暗中的衰减率降低到约 0.5 至 2.0% h(sup-1)。过滤以不同程度降低衰减率,平均降低 20%。热不稳定的高分子量溶解物质(>30 kDa,可能是酶)负责大约 1/5 的最大衰减。太阳辐射对非本地病毒最大衰减的约 1/3 到 2/3 以及对本地病毒最大衰减的约 1/4 到 1/3 负责,这表明了对当地光照水平的进化适应。我们的结果表明,阳光是病毒衰减的一个重要因素,但也指出了海水颗粒和溶解物质的重要性。