Affiliation:
1. Department of Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The bacterium
Xenorhabdus nematophila
is a mutualist of the entomopathogenic nematode
Steinernema carpocapsae
. During its life cycle, the bacterium exists both separately from the nematode and as an intestinal resident of a nonfeeding nematode form, the infective juvenile (IJ). The progression of
X. nematophila
from an ex vivo existence to a specific and persistent colonization of IJs is a model to understand the mechanisms mediating the initiation and maintenance of benign host-microbe interactions. To help characterize this process, we constructed an
X. nematophila
strain that constitutively expresses green fluorescent protein, which allowed its presence to be monitored within IJs. Using this strain, we showed that few bacterial cells initiate colonization of an individual IJ and that these grow inside the lumen of the IJ intestine in a reproducible polyphasic pattern during colonization. In accordance with these two observations, we demonstrated that the final population of bacteria in a nematode is of predominantly monoclonal origin, suggesting that only one or two bacterial clones initiate or persist during colonization of an individual nematode. These data suggest that
X. nematophila
initiates IJ colonization by competing for limited colonization sites or resources within the nematode intestine. This report represents the first description of the biological interactions occurring between
X. nematophila
and
S. carpocapsae
during the early stages of the colonization process, provides insights into the physiology of
X. nematophila
in its host niche, and will facilitate interpretation of future data regarding the molecular events mediating this process.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
129 articles.
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