Affiliation:
1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109
2. School of Marine Science and Technology, Tokai University, Orido, Shimizu, Shizuoka 424-8610, Japan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Many marine fish harbor luminous bacteria as bioluminescent symbionts. Despite the diversity, abundance, and ecological importance of these fish and their apparent dependence on luminous bacteria for survival and reproduction, little is known about developmental and microbiological events surrounding the inception of their symbioses. To gain insight on these issues, we examined wild-caught larvae of the leiognathid fish
Nuchequula nuchalis
, a species that harbors
Photobacterium leiognathi
as its symbiont, for the presence, developmental state, and microbiological status of the fish's internal, supraesophageal light organ. Nascent light organs were evident in the smallest specimens obtained, flexion larvae of 6.0 to 6.5 mm in notochord length (NL), a developmental stage at which the stomach had not yet differentiated and the nascent gasbladder had not established an interface with the light organ. Light organs of certain of the specimens in this size range apparently lacked bacteria, whereas light organs of other specimens of 6.5 mm in NL and of all larger specimens harbored large populations of bacteria, representatives of which were identified as
P. leiognathi
. Bacteria identified as
Vibrio harveyi
were also present in the light organ of one larval specimen. Light organ populations were composed typically of two or three genetically distinct strain types of
P. leiognathi
, similar to the situation in adult fish, and the same strain type was only rarely found in light organs of different larval, juvenile, or adult specimens. Light organs of larvae carried a smaller proportion of strains merodiploid for the
lux-rib
operon, 79 of 249 strains, than those of adults (75 of 91 strains). These results indicate that light organs of
N. nuchalis
flexion and postflexion larvae of 6.0 to 6.7 mm in NL are at an early stage of development and that inception of the symbiosis apparently occurs in flexion larvae of 6.0 to 6.5 mm in NL. Ontogeny of the light organ therefore apparently precedes acquisition of the symbiotic bacteria. Furthermore, bacterial populations in larval light organs near inception of the symbiosis are genetically diverse, like those of adult fish.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
25 articles.
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