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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Dec 1997, 4778-4783, Vol 63, No. 12
J Pernthaler, A Alfreider, T Posch, S Andreatta and R Psenner
We describe a procedure to measure the cell sizes of pelagic bacteria after
determinative hybridization with rRNA-targeted fluorescently labeled
oligonucleotide probes. Our approach is based on established image analysis
techniques modified for objects simultaneously stained with two fluorescent
dyes. It allows the estimation of biomass and cell size distribution and
the morphological characterization of different bacterial taxa in plankton
samples. The protocol was tested in a study of the bacterioplankton
community of a high mountain lake during and after the ice break period.
Cells that hybridized with a probe for the domain Bacteria accounted for
70% of the bacterial abundance (range, 49 to 83%) as determined by
4(prm1),6(prm1)-diamidino-2-phenylindole staining (K. G. Porter and Y. S.
Feig, Limnol. Oceanogr. 25:943-948, 1980), but for >85% of the total
biomass (range, 78 to 99%). The size distribution for members of the beta
subclass of the Proteobacteria shifted toward larger cells and clearly
distinguished this group from the total bacterial assemblage. In the
surface water layer beneath the winter cover, bacteria belonging to the
beta 1 subgroup constituted about one-half of the beta subclass abundance.
The mean cell volume of the beta 1 subgroup bacteria was significantly less
than that of the beta subclass proteobacteria, and the beta 1 subgroup
accounted for less than 30% of the total beta subclass biovolume. Two weeks
later, the biovolume of the beta Proteobacteria had decreased to the level
of the beta 1 subgroup, and both the biovolume size distributions and cell
morphologies of the beta Proteobacteria and the beta 1 subgroup were very
similar. We could thus quantify the disappearance of large, morphologically
distinct beta subclass proteobacteria which were not members of the beta 1
subgroup during the ice break period. Our results demonstrate that changes
in biovolumes and cell size distributions of different bacterial taxa, and
eventually of individual populations, reveal hitherto unknown processes
within aquatic bacterial assemblages and may open new perspectives for the
study of microbial food webs.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
In Situ Classification and Image Cytometry of Pelagic Bacteria from a High Mountain Lake (Gossenkollesee, Austria)
Institute of Zoology and Limnology, University of Innsbruck, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria
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