Comparison of lysogeny (prophage induction) in heterotrophic bacterial and Synechococcus populations in the Gulf of Mexico and Mississippi river plume

被引:0
|
作者
Amy Long
Lauren D McDaniel
Jennifer Mobberley
John H Paul
机构
[1] Fish and Wildlife Research Institute,
[2] Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission,undefined
[3] College of Marine Science,undefined
[4] University of South Florida,undefined
来源
The ISME Journal | 2008年 / 2卷
关键词
FVIC; lysogeny; prophage induction; river plume;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Lysogeny has been documented as a fundamental process occurring in natural marine communities of heterotrophic and autotrophic bacteria. Prophage induction has been observed to be prevalent during conditions of low host abundance, but factors controlling the process are poorly understood. A research cruise was undertaken to the Gulf of Mexico during July 2005 to explore environmental factors associated with lysogeny. Ambient physical and microbial parameters were measured and prophage induction experiments were performed in contrasting oligotrophic Gulf and eutrophic Mississippi plume areas. Three of 11 prophage induction experiments in heterotrophic bacteria (27%) demonstrated significant induction in response to Mitomycin C. In contrast, there was significant Synechococcus cyanophage induction in seven of nine experiments (77.8%). A strong negative correlation was observed between lysogeny and log-transformed activity measurements for both heterotrophic and autotrophic populations (r=−0.876, P=0.002 and r=−0.815, P=0.025, respectively), indicating that bacterioplankton with low host growth favor lysogeny. Multivariate statistical analyses indicated that ambient level of viral abundance and productivity were inversely related to heterotrophic prophage induction and both factors combined were most predictive of lysogeny (ρ=0.899, P=0.001). For Synechococcus, low ambient cyanophage abundance was most predictive of lysogeny (ρ=0.862, P=0.005). Abundance and productivity of heterotrophic bacteria was strongly inversely correlated with salinity, while Synechococcus was not. This indicated that heterotrophic bacterial populations were well adapted to the river plume environments, thus providing a possible explanation for differences in prevalence of lysogeny observed between the two populations.
引用
收藏
页码:132 / 144
页数:12
相关论文
共 15 条
  • [1] Comparison of lysogeny (prophage induction) in heterotrophic bacterial and Synechococcus populations in the Gulf of Mexico and Mississippi river plume
    Long, Amy
    McDaniel, Lauren D.
    Mobberley, Jennifer
    Paul, John H.
    [J]. ISME JOURNAL, 2008, 2 (02): : 132 - 144
  • [2] Mississippi River Plume Enriches Microbial Diversity in the Northern Gulf of Mexico
    Mason, Olivia U.
    Canter, Erin J.
    Gillies, Lauren E.
    Paisie, Taylor K.
    Roberts, Brian J.
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY, 2016, 7
  • [3] Storm-induced injection of the Mississippi River plume into the open Gulf of Mexico
    Yuan, JC
    Miller, RL
    Powell, RT
    Dagg, MJ
    [J]. GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2004, 31 (09) : L093121 - 4
  • [4] Influence of Mississippi and Atchafalaya River plume in the winter coastal cooling of the Northwestern Gulf of Mexico
    Fernandez-Novoa, D.
    Costoya, X.
    Kobashi, D.
    Rodriguez-Diaz, L.
    deCastro, M.
    Gomez-Gesteira, M.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MARINE SYSTEMS, 2020, 209
  • [5] Mississippi River Plume Variability in the Gulf of Mexico From SMAP and MODIS-Aqua Observations
    da Silva, Carolina E.
    Castelao, Renato M.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS, 2018, 123 (09) : 6620 - 6638
  • [6] HETEROTROPHIC BACTERIAL MEDIATION OF AMMONIUM AND DISSOLVED FREE AMINO-ACID FLUXES IN THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER PLUME
    COTNER, JB
    GARDNER, WS
    [J]. MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES, 1993, 93 (1-2) : 75 - 87
  • [7] Seasonal abundance and distribution of chaetognaths in the northern Gulf of Mexico: The effects of the Loop Current and Mississippi River plume
    Gilmartin, Jillian
    Yang, Qing
    Liu, Hui
    [J]. CONTINENTAL SHELF RESEARCH, 2020, 203
  • [8] Phytoplankton community structure and productivity along the axis of the Mississippi River plume in oligotrophic Gulf of Mexico waters
    Wawrik, B
    Paul, JH
    [J]. AQUATIC MICROBIAL ECOLOGY, 2004, 35 (02) : 185 - 196
  • [9] Spatial and temporal trends of pesticide residues in water and particulates in the Mississippi River plume and the northwestern Gulf of Mexico
    McMillin, DJ
    Means, JC
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CHROMATOGRAPHY A, 1996, 754 (1-2) : 169 - 185
  • [10] Influence of the Mississippi River plume and non-bioavailable DMSP on dissolved DMSP turnover in the northern Gulf of Mexico
    Motard-Cote, Jessie
    Kieber, David J.
    Rellinger, Allison
    Kiene, Ronald P.
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL CHEMISTRY, 2016, 13 (02) : 280 - 292