Gantar Miroslav, Sekar Raju, Richardson Laurie L
Department of Biological Sciences, Florida International University, University Park, Miami, FL 33199, USA.
Microb Ecol. 2009 Nov;58(4):856-64. doi: 10.1007/s00248-009-9540-x. Epub 2009 Jun 26.
Many cyanobacteria produce cyanotoxins, which has been well documented from freshwater environments but not investigated to the same extent in marine environments. Cyanobacteria are an obligate component of the polymicrobial disease of corals known as black band disease (BBD). Cyanotoxins were previously shown to be present in field samples of BBD and in a limited number of BBD cyanobacterial cultures. These toxins were suggested as one of the mechanisms contributing to BBD-associated coral tissue lysis and death. In this work, we tested nine cyanobacterial isolates from BBD and additionally nine isolated from non-BBD marine sources for their ability to produce toxins. The presence of toxins was determined using cell extracts of laboratory grown cyanobacterial cultures using ELISA and the PP2A assay. Based on these tests, it was shown that cyanobacterial toxins belonging to the microcystin/nodularin group were produced by cyanobacteria originating from both BBD and non-BBD sources. Several environmental factors that can be encountered in the highly dynamic microenvironment of BBD were tested for their effect on both cyanobacterial growth yield and rate of toxin production using two of the BBD isolates of the genera Leptolyngbya and Geitlerinema. While toxin production was the highest under mixotrophic conditions (light and glucose) for the Leptolyngbya isolate, it was highest under photoautotrophic conditions for the Geitlerinema isolate. Our results show that toxin production among marine cyanobacteria is more widespread than previously documented, and we present data showing three marine cyanobacterial genera (Phormidium, Pseudanabaena, and Spirulina) are newly identified as cyanotoxin producers. We also show that cyanotoxin production by BBD cyanobacteria can be affected by environmental factors that are present in the microenvironment associated with this coral disease.
许多蓝细菌会产生蓝藻毒素,这在淡水环境中已有充分记录,但在海洋环境中的研究程度尚不及淡水环境。蓝细菌是珊瑚多菌种疾病——黑带病(BBD)的一个必需组成部分。此前已证明蓝藻毒素存在于黑带病的野外样本以及数量有限的黑带病蓝细菌培养物中。这些毒素被认为是导致与黑带病相关的珊瑚组织溶解和死亡的机制之一。在这项研究中,我们测试了从黑带病中分离出的9株蓝细菌菌株,另外还测试了从非黑带病海洋来源分离出的9株蓝细菌菌株产生毒素的能力。使用酶联免疫吸附测定法(ELISA)和PP2A测定法,通过实验室培养的蓝细菌培养物的细胞提取物来确定毒素的存在。基于这些测试结果表明,来自黑带病和非黑带病来源的蓝细菌都会产生属于微囊藻毒素/节球藻毒素组的蓝细菌毒素。使用Leptolyngbya属和Geitlerinema属的两株黑带病分离菌株,测试了在黑带病高度动态的微环境中可能遇到的几种环境因素对蓝细菌生长产量和毒素产生速率的影响。对于Leptolyngbya分离菌株,在混合营养条件(光照和葡萄糖)下毒素产量最高,而对于Geitlerinema分离菌株,在光合自养条件下毒素产量最高。我们的研究结果表明,海洋蓝细菌产生毒素的情况比之前记录的更为普遍,并且我们提供的数据表明,有三个海洋蓝细菌属(席藻属、假鱼腥藻属和螺旋藻属)被新确定为蓝藻毒素生产者。我们还表明,与这种珊瑚疾病相关的微环境中存在的环境因素会影响黑带病蓝细菌产生蓝藻毒素。