Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of Aquatic Environmental Science, Faculty of Agriculture, Kochi University, Kochi 783-8502
2. Harmful Algal Bloom Division, National Research Institute of Fisheries and Environment of Seto Inland Sea, Fisheries Agency of Japan, Ohno, Saeki, Hiroshima 739-0452, Japan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A total of 31 bacterial isolates that have potential
Alexandrium
cyst formation-promoting activity (Alex-CFPB) were isolated from Hiroshima Bay (Japan), which is characterized by seasonal blooms of the toxic dinoflagellate
Alexandrium tamarense
. The population structure of Alex-CFPB was analyzed by means of restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis of the 16S rRNA genes (16S rDNA). Fourteen ribotypes, A to N, were observed among the 31 isolates of Alex-CFPB by using four restriction enzymes,
Mbo
I,
Hha
I,
Rsa
I and
Bst
UI. Among them, seven isolates, which were obtained from the seawater samples taken during the peak and termination periods of the
A. tamarense
bloom in 1998, belonged to ribotype A. This result suggests that bacterial strains of ribotype A may be dominant in the Alex-CFPB assemblages during these periods. The partial 16S rDNA-based phylogenetic tree of 10 ribotypes studied showed that nine of them fell into the
Rhodobacter
group of the α subclass of the
Proteobacteria
. Eight of nine ribotypes of the
Rhodobacter
group fell into the lineage of the
Roseobacter
subgroup, and one fell into the
Rhodobacter
subgroup. The non-
Rhodobacter
group type fell into the
Marinobacterium
-
Neptunomonas
-
Pseudomonas
group of the γ-
Proteobacteria
. Isolates of Alex-CFPB ribotypes A and C do not have clear growth-promoting activities but have strong cyst formation-promoting activities (CFPAs) under our laboratory conditions. These results show that the Alex-CFPB assemblage may consist of various bacteria that belong mainly to the
Roseobacter
group and have strong CFPAs. These results suggest that not only the
Alexandrium
cyst formation-inhibiting bacteria (Alex-CFIB) reported previously but also Alex-CFPB, especially bacteria of ribotype A, may play significant roles in the process of encystment and bloom dynamics of
Alexandrium
in the natural environment.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
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