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Microalgae and Bacteria Interaction—Evidence for Division of Diligence in the Alga Microbiota

Microalgae are one of the most dominant forms of life on earth that is tightly associated with a distinct and specialized microbiota. We have previously shown that the microbiota of Scenedesmus quadricauda harbors less than 10 distinct microbial species. Here, we provide evidence that dominant speci...

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Autores principales: Astafyeva, Yekaterina, Gurschke, Marno, Qi, Minyue, Bergmann, Lutgardis, Indenbirken, Daniela, de Grahl, Imke, Katzowitsch, Elena, Reumann, Sigrun, Hanelt, Dieter, Alawi, Malik, Streit, Wolfgang R., Krohn, Ines
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9430724/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35913168
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.00633-22
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author Astafyeva, Yekaterina
Gurschke, Marno
Qi, Minyue
Bergmann, Lutgardis
Indenbirken, Daniela
de Grahl, Imke
Katzowitsch, Elena
Reumann, Sigrun
Hanelt, Dieter
Alawi, Malik
Streit, Wolfgang R.
Krohn, Ines
author_facet Astafyeva, Yekaterina
Gurschke, Marno
Qi, Minyue
Bergmann, Lutgardis
Indenbirken, Daniela
de Grahl, Imke
Katzowitsch, Elena
Reumann, Sigrun
Hanelt, Dieter
Alawi, Malik
Streit, Wolfgang R.
Krohn, Ines
author_sort Astafyeva, Yekaterina
collection PubMed
description Microalgae are one of the most dominant forms of life on earth that is tightly associated with a distinct and specialized microbiota. We have previously shown that the microbiota of Scenedesmus quadricauda harbors less than 10 distinct microbial species. Here, we provide evidence that dominant species are affiliated with the genera of Variovorax, Porphyrobacter, and Dyadobacter. Experimental and transcriptome-based evidence implies that within this multispecies interaction, Dyadobacter is a key to alga growth and fitness and is highly adapted to live in the phycosphere. While presumably under light conditions the alga provides the energy source to the bacteria, Dyadobacter produces and releases mainly a large variety of polysaccharides modifying enzymes. This is coherent with high-level expression of the T9SS in alga cocultures. The transcriptome data further imply that quorum-quenching proteins (QQ) and biosynthesis of vitamins B(1), B(2), B(5), B(6), and B(9) are expressed by Dyadobacter at high levels in comparison to Variovorax and Porphyrobacter. Notably, Dyadobacter produces a significant number of leucine-rich repeat (LRR) proteins and enzymes involved in bacterial reactive oxygen species (ROS) tolerance. Complementary to this, Variovorax expresses the genes of the biosynthesis of vitamins B(2), B(5), B(6), B(7), B(9), and B(12), and Porphyrobacter is specialized in the production of vitamins B(2) and B(6). Thus, the shared currency between partners are vitamins, microalgae growth-promoting substances, and dissolved carbon. This work significantly enlarges our knowledge on alga-bacteria interaction and demonstrates physiological investigations of microalgae and associated bacteria, using microscopy observations, photosynthetic activity measurements, and flow cytometry. IMPORTANCE The current study gives a detailed insight into mutualistic collaboration of microalgae and bacteria, including the involvement of competitive interplay between bacteria. We provide experimental evidence that Gram-negative bacteria belonging to the Dyadobacter, Porphyrobacter, and Variovorax are the key players in a Scenedesmus quadricauda alga-bacteria interaction. We impart strong evidence that Dyadobacter produces and releases polysaccharides degradation enzymes and leucine-rich repeat proteins; Variovorax supplies the consortium with auxins and vitamin B(12), while Porphyrobacter produces a broad spectrum of B vitamins. We show not only that the microalgae collaborate with the bacteria and vice versa but also that the bacteria interact with each other via quorum-sensing and secretion system mechanisms. The shared currency between partners appears to be vitamins, microalgae growth-promoting substances, and dissolved carbon.
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spelling pubmed-94307242022-09-01 Microalgae and Bacteria Interaction—Evidence for Division of Diligence in the Alga Microbiota Astafyeva, Yekaterina Gurschke, Marno Qi, Minyue Bergmann, Lutgardis Indenbirken, Daniela de Grahl, Imke Katzowitsch, Elena Reumann, Sigrun Hanelt, Dieter Alawi, Malik Streit, Wolfgang R. Krohn, Ines Microbiol Spectr Research Article Microalgae are one of the most dominant forms of life on earth that is tightly associated with a distinct and specialized microbiota. We have previously shown that the microbiota of Scenedesmus quadricauda harbors less than 10 distinct microbial species. Here, we provide evidence that dominant species are affiliated with the genera of Variovorax, Porphyrobacter, and Dyadobacter. Experimental and transcriptome-based evidence implies that within this multispecies interaction, Dyadobacter is a key to alga growth and fitness and is highly adapted to live in the phycosphere. While presumably under light conditions the alga provides the energy source to the bacteria, Dyadobacter produces and releases mainly a large variety of polysaccharides modifying enzymes. This is coherent with high-level expression of the T9SS in alga cocultures. The transcriptome data further imply that quorum-quenching proteins (QQ) and biosynthesis of vitamins B(1), B(2), B(5), B(6), and B(9) are expressed by Dyadobacter at high levels in comparison to Variovorax and Porphyrobacter. Notably, Dyadobacter produces a significant number of leucine-rich repeat (LRR) proteins and enzymes involved in bacterial reactive oxygen species (ROS) tolerance. Complementary to this, Variovorax expresses the genes of the biosynthesis of vitamins B(2), B(5), B(6), B(7), B(9), and B(12), and Porphyrobacter is specialized in the production of vitamins B(2) and B(6). Thus, the shared currency between partners are vitamins, microalgae growth-promoting substances, and dissolved carbon. This work significantly enlarges our knowledge on alga-bacteria interaction and demonstrates physiological investigations of microalgae and associated bacteria, using microscopy observations, photosynthetic activity measurements, and flow cytometry. IMPORTANCE The current study gives a detailed insight into mutualistic collaboration of microalgae and bacteria, including the involvement of competitive interplay between bacteria. We provide experimental evidence that Gram-negative bacteria belonging to the Dyadobacter, Porphyrobacter, and Variovorax are the key players in a Scenedesmus quadricauda alga-bacteria interaction. We impart strong evidence that Dyadobacter produces and releases polysaccharides degradation enzymes and leucine-rich repeat proteins; Variovorax supplies the consortium with auxins and vitamin B(12), while Porphyrobacter produces a broad spectrum of B vitamins. We show not only that the microalgae collaborate with the bacteria and vice versa but also that the bacteria interact with each other via quorum-sensing and secretion system mechanisms. The shared currency between partners appears to be vitamins, microalgae growth-promoting substances, and dissolved carbon. American Society for Microbiology 2022-08-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9430724/ /pubmed/35913168 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.00633-22 Text en Copyright © 2022 Astafyeva et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Astafyeva, Yekaterina
Gurschke, Marno
Qi, Minyue
Bergmann, Lutgardis
Indenbirken, Daniela
de Grahl, Imke
Katzowitsch, Elena
Reumann, Sigrun
Hanelt, Dieter
Alawi, Malik
Streit, Wolfgang R.
Krohn, Ines
Microalgae and Bacteria Interaction—Evidence for Division of Diligence in the Alga Microbiota
title Microalgae and Bacteria Interaction—Evidence for Division of Diligence in the Alga Microbiota
title_full Microalgae and Bacteria Interaction—Evidence for Division of Diligence in the Alga Microbiota
title_fullStr Microalgae and Bacteria Interaction—Evidence for Division of Diligence in the Alga Microbiota
title_full_unstemmed Microalgae and Bacteria Interaction—Evidence for Division of Diligence in the Alga Microbiota
title_short Microalgae and Bacteria Interaction—Evidence for Division of Diligence in the Alga Microbiota
title_sort microalgae and bacteria interaction—evidence for division of diligence in the alga microbiota
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9430724/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35913168
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.00633-22
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