Beiralas Roni, Ozer Noy, Segev Einat
Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences, The Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel.
ISME Commun. 2023 Sep 22;3(1):100. doi: 10.1038/s43705-023-00311-y.
Emiliania huxleyi is a unicellular micro-alga that forms massive oceanic blooms and plays key roles in global biogeochemical cycles. Mounting studies demonstrate various stimulatory and inhibitory influences that bacteria have on the E. huxleyi physiology. To investigate these algal-bacterial interactions, laboratory co-cultures have been established by us and by others. Owing to these co-cultures, various mechanisms of algal-bacterial interactions have been revealed, many involving bacterial pathogenicity towards algae. However, co-cultures represent a significantly simplified system, lacking the complexity of bacterial communities. In order to investigate bacterial pathogenicity within an ecologically relevant context, it becomes imperative to enhance the microbial complexity of co-culture setups. Phaeobacter inhibens bacteria are known pathogens that cause the death of E. huxleyi algae in laboratory co-culture systems. The bacteria depend on algal exudates for growth, but when algae senesce, bacteria switch to a pathogenic state and induce algal death. Here we investigate whether P. inhibens bacteria can induce algal death in the presence of a complex bacterial community. We show that an E. huxleyi-associated bacterial community protects the alga from the pathogen, although the pathogen occurs within the community. To study how the bacterial community regulates pathogenicity, we reduced the complex bacterial community to a five-member synthetic community (syncom). The syncom is comprised of a single algal host and five isolated bacterial species, which represent major bacterial groups that are naturally associated with E. huxleyi. We discovered that a single bacterial species in the reduced community, Sulfitobacter pontiacus, protects the alga from the pathogen. We further found that algal protection from P. inhibens pathogenicity is a shared trait among several Sulfitobacter species. Algal protection by bacteria might be a common phenomenon with ecological significance, which is overlooked in reduced co-culture systems.
赫氏颗石藻是一种单细胞微藻,能形成大规模的海洋水华,在全球生物地球化学循环中发挥着关键作用。越来越多的研究表明,细菌对赫氏颗石藻的生理机能具有多种刺激和抑制作用。为了研究这些藻菌相互作用,我们和其他研究人员建立了实验室共培养体系。通过这些共培养体系,揭示了藻菌相互作用的多种机制,其中许多机制涉及细菌对藻类的致病性。然而,共培养体系是一个显著简化的系统,缺乏细菌群落的复杂性。为了在生态相关背景下研究细菌致病性,增强共培养体系的微生物复杂性变得势在必行。抑制杆菌属细菌是已知的病原体,在实验室共培养系统中会导致赫氏颗石藻死亡。这些细菌依靠藻类分泌物生长,但当藻类衰老时,细菌会转变为致病状态并诱导藻类死亡。在此,我们研究了在存在复杂细菌群落的情况下,抑制杆菌属细菌是否能诱导藻类死亡。我们发现,尽管病原体存在于群落中,但与赫氏颗石藻相关的细菌群落能保护藻类免受病原体侵害。为了研究细菌群落如何调节致病性,我们将复杂的细菌群落简化为一个由五个成员组成的合成群落(syncom)。该合成群落由单一的藻类宿主和五个分离的细菌物种组成,这些细菌物种代表了自然情况下与赫氏颗石藻相关的主要细菌类群。我们发现,简化群落中的单一细菌物种——庞蒂亚克硫杆菌,能保护藻类免受病原体侵害。我们进一步发现,细菌对抑制杆菌属致病性的保护作用是几种硫杆菌属物种的共同特征。细菌对藻类的保护作用可能是一种具有生态意义的普遍现象,而在简化的共培养系统中被忽视了。