Soil and Water Science Department, University of Florida, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, Gainesville, FL 32610, USA.
ISME J. 2011 Oct;5(10):1609-20. doi: 10.1038/ismej.2011.45. Epub 2011 Apr 21.
Interactions within microbial communities associated with marine holobionts contribute importantly to the health of these symbiotic organisms formed by invertebrates, dinoflagellates and bacteria. However, mechanisms that control invertebrate-associated microbiota are not yet fully understood. Hydrophobic compounds that were isolated from surfaces of asymptomatic corals inhibited biofilm formation by the white pox pathogen Serratia marcescens PDL100, indicating that signals capable of affecting the associated microbiota are produced in situ. However, neither the origin nor structures of these signals are currently known. A functional survey of bacteria recovered from coral mucus and from cultures of the dinoflagellate Symbiodinium spp. revealed that they could alter swarming and biofilm formation in S. marcescens. As swarming and biofilm formation are inversely regulated, the ability of some native α-proteobacteria to affect both behaviors suggests that the α-proteobacterial signal(s) target a global regulatory switch controlling the behaviors in the pathogen. Isolates of Marinobacter sp. inhibited both biofilm formation and swarming in S. marcescens PDL100, without affecting growth of the coral pathogen, indicative of the production of multiple inhibitors, likely targeting lower level regulatory genes or functions. A multi-species cocktail containing these strains inhibited progression of a disease caused by S. marcescens in a model polyp Aiptasia pallida. An α-proteobacterial isolate 44B9 had a similar effect. Even though ∼4% of native holobiont-associated bacteria produced compounds capable of triggering responses in well-characterized N-acyl homoserine lactone (AHL) biosensors, there was no strong correlation between the production of AHL-like signals and disruption of biofilms or swarming in S. marcescens.
与海洋全动物共生体相关的微生物群落内部相互作用对这些由无脊椎动物、甲藻和细菌形成的共生生物的健康非常重要。然而,控制无脊椎动物相关微生物群的机制尚未完全了解。从无症状珊瑚表面分离出的疏水性化合物抑制了白痘病原体粘质沙雷氏菌 PDL100 的生物膜形成,表明原位产生了能够影响相关微生物群的信号。然而,这些信号的来源和结构目前尚不清楚。从珊瑚粘液和甲藻共生体 Symbiodinium spp. 的培养物中回收的细菌的功能调查显示,它们可以改变粘质沙雷氏菌的群集和生物膜形成。由于群集和生物膜形成是反向调节的,一些本土α-变形菌能够影响这两种行为,这表明α-变形菌信号针对的是控制病原体行为的全局调控开关。海洋杆菌属的分离株抑制了粘质沙雷氏菌 PDL100 的生物膜形成和群集,而不影响珊瑚病原体的生长,表明产生了多种抑制剂,可能针对较低水平的调控基因或功能。含有这些菌株的多物种混合物抑制了粘质沙雷氏菌在模型息肉 Aiptasia pallida 中引起的疾病的进展。α-变形菌分离株 44B9 也有类似的效果。尽管约 4%的天然全动物共生体相关细菌产生的化合物能够触发经过充分表征的 N-酰基高丝氨酸内酯 (AHL) 生物传感器的反应,但在粘质沙雷氏菌中,AHL 样信号的产生与生物膜或群集的破坏之间没有很强的相关性。