Axelsson-Olsson Diana, Gubonin Nikolaj, Israelsson Stina, Pinhassi Jarone
Centre for Ecology and Evolution in Microbial model Systems - EEMiS, Linnaeus University, Kalmar, Sweden.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2025 Jun 18;91(6):e0092925. doi: 10.1128/aem.00929-25. Epub 2025 May 30.
Bacteria in aquatic environments are a principal food source for predatory protists. Whereas interactions between bacteria and protists are recognized to determine the pathogenesis and epidemiology of several human pathogens, few studies have systematically characterized the interactions between specific aquatic bacteria and protists beyond the prey-predator relation. We, therefore, surveyed individual co-cultures between 18 different genome-sequenced marine bacteria with known virulence gene repertoires and three model protist species widely used for assessing bacteria-protist interactions. Strikingly, 10, 5, and 3 bacterial isolates were capable of lysing the protists and , respectively. A majority of the bacteria were able to grow and/or maintain viable populations in the presence of viable protists. Some bacteria survived longer with viable protists but not heat-killed protists and were observed in protist vacuoles. In this respect, marine bacteria are similar to several protist-dependent human pathogens, including . Analyses of growth patterns in low-nutrient media showed that co-cultivation with allowed one bacterial strain to overcome nutritional stress and obtain active growth. Five isolates depended on viable amoebae to grow, notwithstanding nutrient media status. The remarkable capability of these marine bacteria to survive encounters with, and even actively kill, model predatory protists under laboratory conditions suggests that diverse bacterial defense strategies and virulence mechanisms to access nutrients may be important in shaping microbial interactions. If verified with native marine and freshwater populations, the diversity of interactions uncovered here has implications for understanding ecological and evolutionary consequences of population dynamics in bacteria and protists.IMPORTANCEThe microbiome constitutes the base of food webs in aquatic environments. Its composition partly reflects biotic interactions, where bacteria primarily are considered prey of predatory protists. However, studies that focus on one or a few species have shown that some bacteria have abilities to escape grazing and may even be capable of lysing their protist predators. In this study, we substantially extend these findings by systematically investigating interactions among multiple taxa of both bacteria and protists. Our results show that marine bacteria display a wider and more complex range of interactions with their predators than generally recognized-from growth dependency to protist lysis. Given that such interactions play key roles in the pathogenesis and epidemiology of several human pathogens, our findings imply that bacterial virulence traits can contribute to defining the structure and ecology of aquatic microbiomes.
水生环境中的细菌是捕食性原生生物的主要食物来源。虽然细菌与原生生物之间的相互作用被认为决定了几种人类病原体的发病机制和流行病学,但除了捕食关系外,很少有研究系统地描述特定水生细菌与原生生物之间的相互作用。因此,我们调查了18种不同的、具有已知毒力基因库的基因组测序海洋细菌与三种广泛用于评估细菌 - 原生生物相互作用的模式原生生物物种之间的单独共培养情况。令人惊讶的是,分别有10种、5种和3种细菌分离株能够裂解原生生物 、 和 。大多数细菌在有活力的原生生物存在的情况下能够生长和/或维持存活种群。一些细菌在有活力的原生生物存在时存活时间更长,但在热灭活的原生生物存在时则不然,并且在原生生物液泡中被观察到。在这方面,海洋细菌类似于几种依赖原生生物的人类病原体,包括 。在低营养培养基中对生长模式的分析表明,与 共培养使一种细菌菌株能够克服营养压力并实现活跃生长。尽管有营养培养基状态,仍有5种分离株依赖有活力的变形虫来生长。这些海洋细菌在实验室条件下与模式捕食性原生生物相遇时具有存活甚至主动杀死它们的显著能力,这表明不同的细菌防御策略和获取营养的毒力机制可能在塑造微生物相互作用中很重要。如果在天然海洋和淡水种群中得到验证,这里发现的相互作用的多样性对于理解细菌和原生生物种群动态的生态和进化后果具有重要意义。
重要性
微生物群构成了水生环境食物网的基础。其组成部分反映了生物相互作用,其中细菌主要被视为捕食性原生生物的猎物。然而,专注于一个或几个物种的研究表明,一些细菌有能力逃避捕食,甚至可能能够裂解它们的原生生物捕食者。在本研究中,我们通过系统地研究细菌和原生生物的多个分类群之间的相互作用,大大扩展了这些发现。我们的结果表明,海洋细菌与其捕食者之间的相互作用范围比一般认识的更广泛、更复杂——从生长依赖到原生生物裂解。鉴于这种相互作用在几种人类病原体的发病机制和流行病学中起关键作用,我们的发现意味着细菌毒力特征可能有助于定义水生微生物群的结构和生态。