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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Jan 1997, 77-83, Vol 63, No. 1
RT Noble and JA Fuhrman
Recent evidence suggests that viruses play an influential role within the
marine microbial food web. To understand this role, it is important to
determine rates and mechanisms of virus removal and degradation. We used
plaque assays to examine the decay of infectivity in lab-grown viruses
seeded into natural seawater. The rates of loss of infectivity of native
viruses from Santa Monica Bay and of nonnative viruses from the North Sea
in the coastal seawater of Santa Monica Bay were determined. Viruses were
seeded into fresh seawater that had been pretreated in various ways:
filtration with a 0.2-(mu)m-pore-size filter to remove organisms, heat to
denature enzymes, and dissolved organic matter enrichment to reconstitute
enzyme activity. Seawater samples were then incubated in full sunlight, in
the dark, or under glass to allow partitioning of causative agents of virus
decay. Solar radiation always resulted in increased rates of loss of virus
infectivity. Virus isolates which are native to Santa Monica Bay
consistently degraded more slowly in full sunlight in untreated seawater
(decay ranged from 4.1 to 7.2% h(sup-1)) than nonnative marine
bacteriophages which were isolated from the North Sea (decay ranged from
6.6 to 11.1% h(sup-1)). All phages demonstrated susceptibility to
degradation by heat-labile substances, as heat treatment reduced the decay
rates to about 0.5 to 2.0% h(sup-1) in the dark. Filtration reduced decay
rates by various amounts, averaging 20%. Heat-labile, high-molecular-weight
dissolved material (>30 kDa, probably enzymes) appeared responsible for
about 1/5 of the maximal decay. Solar radiation was responsible for about
1/3 to 2/3 of the maximal decay of nonnative viruses and about 1/4 to 1/3
of that of the native viruses, suggesting evolutionary adaptation to local
light levels. Our results suggest that sunlight is an important
contributing factor to virus decay but also point to the significance of
particles and dissolved substances in seawater.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Virus Decay and Its Causes in Coastal Waters
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California 90089-0371
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