Myers Jamie L, Sekar Raju, Richardson Laurie L
Department of Biological Sciences, Florida International University, Miami, FL 33199, USA.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2007 Aug;73(16):5173-82. doi: 10.1128/AEM.00900-07. Epub 2007 Jun 29.
Black band disease (BBD) is a pathogenic, sulfide-rich microbial mat dominated by filamentous cyanobacteria that infect corals worldwide. We isolated cyanobacteria from BBD into culture, confirmed their presence in the BBD community by using denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE), and demonstrated their ecological significance in terms of physiological sulfide tolerance and photosynthesis-versus-irradiance values. Twenty-nine BBD samples were collected from nine host coral species, four of which have not previously been investigated, from reefs of the Florida Keys, the Bahamas, St. Croix, and the Philippines. From these samples, seven cyanobacteria were isolated into culture. Cloning and sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene using universal primers indicated that four isolates were related to the genus Geitlerinema and three to the genus Leptolyngbya. DGGE results, obtained using Cyanobacteria-specific 16S rRNA primers, revealed that the most common BBD cyanobacterial sequence, detected in 26 BBD field samples, was related to that of an Oscillatoria sp. The next most common sequence, 99% similar to that of the Geitlerinema BBD isolate, was present in three samples. One Leptolyngbya- and one Phormidium-related sequence were also found. Laboratory experiments using isolates of BBD Geitlerinema and Leptolyngbya revealed that they could carry out sulfide-resistant oxygenic photosynthesis, a relatively rare characteristic among cyanobacteria, and that they are adapted to the sulfide-rich, low-light BBD environment. The presence of the cyanotoxin microcystin in these cultures and in BBD suggests a role in BBD pathogenicity. Our results confirm the presence of Geitlerinema in the BBD microbial community and its ecological significance, which have been challenged, and provide evidence of a second ecologically significant BBD cyanobacterium, Leptolyngbya.
黑带病(BBD)是一种致病性的、富含硫化物的微生物席,主要由丝状蓝细菌组成,在全球范围内感染珊瑚。我们将来自黑带病的蓝细菌分离培养,通过变性梯度凝胶电泳(DGGE)证实它们在黑带病群落中的存在,并从生理硫化物耐受性和光合作用与辐照度值方面证明了它们的生态意义。从佛罗里达礁岛群、巴哈马、圣克罗伊岛和菲律宾的珊瑚礁中,采集了29份来自9种宿主珊瑚物种的黑带病样本,其中4种此前未被研究过。从这些样本中,分离出7种蓝细菌进行培养。使用通用引物对16S rRNA基因进行克隆和测序表明,4个分离株与鞘丝藻属相关,3个与细鞘丝藻属相关。使用蓝细菌特异性16S rRNA引物获得的DGGE结果显示,在26份黑带病野外样本中检测到的最常见的黑带病蓝细菌序列与一种颤藻属物种的序列相关。下一个最常见的序列与鞘丝藻属黑带病分离株的序列相似度为99%,存在于3个样本中。还发现了一个与细鞘丝藻属和一个与席藻属相关的序列。使用黑带病鞘丝藻属和细鞘丝藻属分离株进行的实验室实验表明,它们能够进行抗硫化物的产氧光合作用,这在蓝细菌中是一种相对罕见的特性,并且它们适应了富含硫化物、低光照的黑带病环境。这些培养物和黑带病中存在蓝藻毒素微囊藻毒素,表明其在黑带病致病性中起作用。我们的结果证实了鞘丝藻属在黑带病微生物群落中的存在及其生态意义,这一点此前曾受到质疑,并提供了第二种具有生态意义的黑带病蓝细菌——细鞘丝藻属的证据。