Affiliation:
1. Secondary Metabolism of Predatory Bacteria Junior Research Group, Leibniz Institute for Natural Product Research and Infection Biology, Hans-Knöll-Institute, Jena, Germany
2. Experimental Ecology and Evolution Research Group, Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology, Jena, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Bacteria of the genus
Lysobacter
are considered to be facultative predators that use a feeding strategy similar to that of myxobacteria. Experimental data supporting this assumption, however, are scarce. Therefore, the predatory activities of three
Lysobacter
species were tested in the prey spot plate assay and in the lawn predation assay, which are commonly used to analyze myxobacterial predation. Surprisingly, only one of the tested
Lysobacter
species showed predatory behavior in the two assays. This result suggested that not all
Lysobacter
strains are predatory or, alternatively, that the assays were not appropriate for determining the predatory potential of this bacterial group. To differentiate between the two scenarios, predation was tested in a CFU-based bioassay. For this purpose, defined numbers of
Lysobacter
cells were mixed together with potential prey bacteria featuring phenotypic markers, such as distinctive pigmentation or antibiotic resistance. After 24 h, cocultivated cells were streaked out on agar plates and sizes of bacterial populations were individually determined by counting the respective colonies. Using the CFU-based predation assay, we observed that
Lysobacter
spp. strongly antagonized other bacteria under nutrient-deficient conditions. Simultaneously, the
Lysobacter
population was increasing, which together with the killing of the cocultured bacteria indicated predation. Variation of the predator/prey ratio revealed that all three
Lysobacter
species tested needed to outnumber their prey for efficient predation, suggesting that they exclusively practiced group predation. In summary, the CFU-based predation assay not only enabled the quantification of prey killing and consumption by
Lysobacter
spp. but also provided insights into their mode of predation.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
51 articles.
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