Affiliation:
1. Max-Planck-Institut für Marine Mikrobiologie, D-28359 Bremen, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Enrichment experiments with North Sea bacterioplankton were performed to test if rapid incubation-induced changes in community structure explain the frequent isolation of members of a few particular bacterial lineages or if readily culturable bacteria are common in the plankton but in a state of dormancy. A metabolic inhibitor of cell division (nalidixic acid [NA]) was added to substrate-amended (S+) and unamended (S−) grazer-free seawater samples, and shifts in community composition and per cell DNA and protein content were compared with untreated controls. In addition, starvation survival experiments were performed on selected isolates. Incubations resulted in rapid community shifts towards typical culturable genera rather than in the activation of either dormant cells or the original DNA-rich bacterial fraction.
Vibrio
spp. and members of the
Alteromonas/Colwellia
cluster (A/C) were selectively enriched in S+ and S−, respectively, and this trend was even magnified by the addition of NA. These increases corresponded with the rise of cell populations with distinctively different but generally higher protein and DNA content in the various treatments. Uncultured dominant γ-proteobacteria affiliating with the SAR86 cluster and members of the culturable genus
Oceanospirillum
were not enriched or activated, but there was no indication of substrate-induced cell death, either. Strains of
Vibrio
and A/C maintained high ribosome levels in pure cultures during extended periods of starvation, whereas
Oceanospirillum
spp. did not. The life strategy of rapidly enriched culturable γ-proteobacteria could thus be described as a “feast and famine” existence involving different activation levels of substrate concentration.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
221 articles.
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