Affiliation:
1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan
2. Fisheries Research Laboratory, Mie University, Shima, Mie 517-0703, Japan
3. Laboratory of Marine Biology, Kochi University, Kochi 780-8520, Japan
4. Tropical Biosphere Research Center, University of the Ryukyus, Motobu, Okinawa 905-0227, Japan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
“
Photobacterium mandapamensis
” (proposed name) and
Photobacterium leiognathi
are closely related, phenotypically similar marine bacteria that form bioluminescent symbioses with marine animals. Despite their similarity, however, these bacteria can be distinguished phylogenetically by sequence divergence of their luminescence genes,
luxCDAB
(
F
)
E
, by the presence (
P. mandapamensis
) or the absence (
P. leiognathi
) of
luxF
and, as shown here, by the sequence divergence of genes involved in the synthesis of riboflavin,
ribBHA
. To gain insight into the possibility that
P. mandapamensis
and
P. leiognathi
are ecologically distinct, we used these phylogenetic criteria to determine the incidence of
P. mandapamensis
as a bioluminescent symbiont of marine animals. Five fish species,
Acropoma japonicum
(Perciformes, Acropomatidae),
Photopectoralis panayensis
and
Photopectoralis bindus
(Perciformes, Leiognathidae),
Siphamia versicolor
(Perciformes, Apogonidae), and
Gadella jordani
(Gadiformes, Moridae), were found to harbor
P. mandapamensis
in their light organs. Specimens of
A. japonicus
,
P. panayensis
, and
P. bindus
harbored
P. mandapamensis
and
P. leiognathi
together as cosymbionts of the same light organ. Regardless of cosymbiosis,
P. mandapamensis
was the predominant symbiont of
A. japonicum
, and it was the apparently exclusive symbiont of
S. versicolor
and
G. jordani
. In contrast,
P. leiognathi
was found to be the predominant symbiont of
P. panayensis
and
P. bindus
, and it appears to be the exclusive symbiont of other leiognathid fishes and a loliginid squid. A phylogenetic test for cospeciation revealed no evidence of codivergence between
P. mandapamensis
and its host fishes, indicating that coevolution apparently is not the basis for this bacterium's host preferences. These results, which are the first report of bacterial cosymbiosis in fish light organs and the first demonstration that
P. leiognathi
is not the exclusive light organ symbiont of leiognathid fishes, demonstrate that the host species ranges of
P. mandapamensis
and
P. leiognathi
are substantially distinct. The host range difference underscores possible differences in the environmental distributions and physiologies of these two bacterial species.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology