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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, November 2001, p. 4975-4983, Vol. 67, No. 11
0099-2240/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.67.11.4975-4983.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Antagonistic Interactions among Marine
Pelagic Bacteria
Richard A.
Long* and
Farooq
Azam
Marine Biology Research Division, Scripps
Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego,
La Jolla, California 92093
Received 16 April 2001/Accepted 31 July 2001
 |
ABSTRACT |
Recent studies suggest that bacterial abundance and species
diversity in the ocean's water column are variable at the millimeter scale, apparently in response to the small-scale heterogeneity in the
distribution of organic matter. We hypothesized that
bacterium-bacterium antagonistic interactions may contribute to
variations in community structure at the microscale. We examined each
of the 86 isolates for their inhibition of growth of the remaining 85 isolates by the Burkholder agar diffusion assay. More than one-half of
the isolates expressed antagonistic activity, and this trait was more common with particle-associated bacteria than with free-living bacteria. This was exemplified by members of the
subclass of the
class Proteobacteria (
-proteobacteria), in which
production of antagonistic molecules was dominated by attached
bacteria. We found that
-proteobacteria (members of the orders
Alteromonadales and Vibrionales) are the most
prolific producers of inhibitory materials and also the most resilient
to them, while members of the Bacteriodetes were the
organisms that were least productive and most sensitive to antagonistic
interactions. Widespread interspecies growth inhibition is consistent
with the role of this phenomenon in structuring bacterial communities
at the microscale. Furthermore, our results suggest that bacteria from
pelagic marine particles may be an underutilized source of novel antibiotics.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
The pelagic ocean is replete with
physical and chemical gradients at microscales that may be important in
creating microniches that maintain high species richness and diversity
(discussed in detail in reference 6; R. A. Long and F. Azam, submitted for publication). The detection of high levels of
colloids, submicrometer particles, and transparent organic particles
(2, 29, 32, 52) and the dynamic nature of polymers and
colloids that form a gel matrix (13) have changed our
perception of the aqueous environment that is the ocean's water
column. This matrix forms the physical context for bacterium-bacterium interactions.
The perception that microbes are homogeneously distributed in seawater
is changing to a perception that microbes are distributed heterogeneously (6). Bacterial abundance is now known to
vary at the millimeter scale (42). Bacterial species
richness is also variable at the millimeter scale (Long and Azam,
submitted), and the variability increases in response to increases in
the concentration of particulate organic matter in seawater. In light of the heterogeneous distribution and potential for spatial structuring of bacterial populations, we considered antagonistic interactions involving growth inhibition as one mechanism that may cause and maintain millimeter scale variations in the patterns of bacterial species composition.
Bacterium-bacterium antagonistic interactions involving antibiotics are
well documented in soils. In situ production of antibiotics in soil has
been detected only in association with organically rich
microenvironments (e.g., seeds, rhizospheres, and straw fragments in
soil) (9, 47, 55, 56). Organically rich microenvironments in the marine pelagial environment include phytoplankton and
zooplankton and their detritus, as well as marine snow particles that
range in size from millimeters to centimeters and are nutrient-rich microscale hot spots. Nair and Simidu (36) found that
isolates derived from marine particles were more effective than
free-living bacteria in inhibiting the growth of two human-pathogenic
bacteria. Studies examining the frequency of antagonistic interactions
of marine bacterial isolates have found that 5 to 8% of the isolates express some level of activity (30, 36, 37). While these studies focused on marine isolates as potential producers of
antibiotics, nonmarine bacteria, often human pathogens, were employed
as the target species. Similarly, our knowledge of the sensitivity of environmental isolates to antibiotics is more limited than our knowledge of production of antibiotics. Classical antibiotics (e.g.,
penicillin and kanamycin) have different levels of inhibition with
pigmented and nonpigmented marine bacteria (35). Plasmids carrying genes for resistance to antibiotics have been found in marine
Vibrio species and are thought to be laterally exchanged (31). However, previous studies relied on antibiotics that
were not derived from indigenous species, so we lack information
concerning interactions between marine bacteria and their potential
antagonistic products. As a result, the conclusions drawn from such
studies (e.g., that only 5 to 8% of marine isolates produce
antagonistic substances) cannot a priori be extrapolated to address our
question concerning the interactions in an ecological context (see below).
In mesotrophic and eutrophic waters or during phytoplankton blooms,
heterotrophic bacteria on particles can account for large fractions of
the bacterial activity (e.g., ectoenzymatic hydrolysis of organic
particles and polymers and utilization of organic matter for
respiration and growth) (40, 43, 44). The cell-specific levels of activity of particle-attached bacteria are often 2 to 3 orders of magnitude greater than those of cooccurring,
free-living bacteria (44). Attached bacterial hydrolytic
enzymatic activity significantly influences the quantity and quality of
biogenic matter that sinks from the upper water column into the
ocean's depths (43). Since different bacteria express
different arrays of hydrolytic enzymatic activities (33),
changes in the bacterial species composition, such as those potentially
caused by microscale antagonism, could alter the hydrolytic activity
exerted by bacteria on organic particles. Furthermore, the species
richness and diversity on particles could be influenced by
bacterium-bacterium antagonisms, and in turn, this could affect the
nature and rates of biogeochemical transformation of the particles.
Thus, bacterium-bacterium antagonisms could be important variables in
the ecology of pelagic bacteria and in bacterium-mediated carbon
cycling in the ocean.
Recent studies in which small-subunit ribosomal gene sequence
comparison was used as the basis for phylogenetic analyses demonstrated that there are distinct differences in species composition between free-living and attached bacteria. DeLong et al. (15)
found that the marine snow population consisted predominately of
members of the phylum Bacteroidetes (20a) that
were distinct from the bacteria in the surrounding water. In the
Chesapeake Bay, the dominant particle-attached bacteria were found to
be different from the dominant free-living bacteria (8).
In this study, we examined whether bacterial antagonism is a common
phenomenon in the pelagic ocean. We also tried to determine whether
particle-attached bacteria are more likely than free-living bacteria to
use chemical antagonism as a potential mechanism to maintain distinct
microscale populations and/or to cause succession of species on
particles. Furthermore, we characterized isolates by 16S rRNA
phylogenetic analysis to determine if the ability to use chemical
antagonism is concentrated in a specific group(s) of cultivable pelagic
bacteria that may be specialized for antagonistic interactions.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Isolation and culture of bacteria.
Most bacterial isolates
were collected from southern California coastal waters (Table
1). The natural assemblage was sampled off the pier at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla, Calif.,
and approximately 1 km due west of the pier. Seawater was also
collected from these sites and from the ocean off the University of
California, Santa Barbara, and used for mesocosm enrichment with
phytoplankton nutrients (F/2 medium) (1, 24) to
stimulate diatom blooms. Bacterial strains were isolated after the peak
of the blooms, when aggregates were readily visible. We operationally
defined attached or particle-associated bacteria as bacteria that were
isolated from visible particles in our samples; thus, this situation
met the definition of marine snow (3). The particles were
individually picked and rinsed with filtered (pore size, 0.22 µm)
seawater several times prior to plating of the samples (see below).
Free-living bacteria were defined as either bacteria that were gravity
filterable through a 1.0-µm-pore-size filter or bacteria that were
isolated in bulk or unfiltered seawater that contained no visible
particles. As stated above, the distinction between attached bacteria
and free-living bacteria was operational; it is possible that the
free-living isolates included some attached isolates that were
dislodged from particles during sampling or were progeny of attached
bacteria released into seawater. It is less likely that the reverse
occurred since particles were individually picked and thoroughly rinsed
to remove free-living contaminants.
Pelagic bacteria were isolated on ZoBell 2216E plates. Each liter of
seawater was filtered with GF/F glass fiber filters (nominal pore size,
0.7 µm; Whatman, Maidstone, England) and contained 5 g of
peptone, 1 g of yeast extract, and 15 g of of Bacto
Agar; FeCl3 was not included in the medium. Isolates were
initially grown at the ambient sea surface temperature at the time of
isolation, which ranged from 12.5 to 25°C. Colonies were picked after
1 to 3 days of incubation. Bacterial isolates were streaked a minimum of three times until a monospecific culture was obtained, based on
uniform colony morphology and color. Isolates were maintained as frozen
stock preparations. The bacterial isolates used for the Burkholder
assay (see below) were taken from the frozen stock preparations and
streaked on ZoBell 2216E plates. The isolates were then grown in ZoBell
2216E broth (containing [per liter of GF/F-filtered seawater] 5 g of peptone and 1 g of yeast extract) without FeCl3
at room temperature (20 ± 2°C) on a rotary shaker at 100 rpm.
Isolate suspensions were adjusted to an optical density at 600 nm
(OD600) of 1 with GF/F-filtered autoclaved seawater.
Screening of isolates for inhibitory interactions.
We used
the Burkholder agar diffusion assay (10) to screen for
inhibitory interactions. A lawn of a target isolate was prepared by
mixing 2.5 ml of molten (44°C) 0.6% ZoBell agar with 30 µl of a
suspension of the isolate (OD600, ~1), immediately
vortexing the preparation for ~1 s, and pouring the agar onto a
ZoBell plate. In a 3 × 3 matrix, 10-µl portions
(OD600, ~0.1) of nine potential producers were then
spotted on the lawn. The plates were incubated face up for 6 days at
room temperature (20 to 24°C) and examined daily for zones of
inhibition (areas where the target isolate failed to grow). Potential
producers were considered positive when the diameter of the zone of
inhibition was at least 4 mm greater than the diameter of the colony
formed by the potential producer. Isolates that were positive were
tested again to confirm the initial observation. If ambiguous results
were observed in the first two assays, a third set of assays was
performed. In all such cases the third assay failed to detect
inhibition; therefore, the isolates in these cases were not considered producers.
Sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene of bacterial isolates.
One
microliter of a bacterial suspension was transferred to a sterile
thin-wall PCR tube. Five microliters of Lyse-N-Go (Pierce, Rockford, Ill.) was added to the PCR tube, and the thermocycling protocol for lysis was carried out according to the
manufacturer's instructions (65°C for 30 s, 8°C for 30 s, 65°C for 90 s, 97°C for 180 s, 8°C for 60 s,
65°C for 180 s, 97°C for 60 s, and 65°C for 60 s,
followed by incubation at 80°C until the PCR reagents were added).
Upon completion of the lysis cycle, 44 µl of a PCR master mixture (2 U of Qiagen Taq DNA polymerase, each primer at a
concentration of 1 µM, each deoxynucleoside triphosphate at a final
concentration of 0.8 mM) was added to the tube, and a touchdown PCR was
performed with universal primer 27F (5'-AGAGTTTGATCMTGGCTCAG-3') and eubacterium-specific primer 1492R
(5'-TACGGYTACCTTGTTACGACTT-3') to amplify the majority of
the 16S rRNA gene (51).
An approximately 1,460-bp segment of the 16S rRNA gene was amplified by
using a modification of the touchdown PCR protocol (16).
An initial denaturing step consisting of 94°C for 5 min was followed
by 30 cycles of amplification (3 min of denaturation at 94°C; 1 min
of annealing with a temperature of 65°C for the first cycle which was
then reduced 0.5°C per cycle to 50°C; 3 min of extension at 72°C)
and then by five additional cycles of amplification (3 min at 94°C, 1 min at 50°C, 3 min at 72°C) and a final extension step consisting
of 10 min at 72°C. The PCR products were separated by electrophoresis
on a 0.8% agarose gel and stained with ethidium bromide to confirm
that the approximately 1,460-bp product was present. Sequencing was
performed by using ABI BigDye chemistry with an automated ABI DNA
sequencer and 27F primer. This resulted in data for approximately 500 bp. The sequences obtained were aligned with those in the Ribosome
Database Project by using BLAST (4). A phylogenetic tree
was generated by using the neighbor-joining method with NJPlot, based
on alignments from CLUSTAL W (48). The bootstrap
values obtained were from 100 iterations.
Statistics.
To test for heterogeneous production of
inhibitory molecules by isolates, we used the Fisher exact test
(20) for analysis of a 2 × 2 contingency table:
where f is the observed characteristics, R1 = f11 + f12, C1 = f11 + f21, and n = R1 + R1 = C1 + C2. P is the probability that
the table is random, as calculated by:
The two-sided t test with unequal variance was used
to compare means for production and sensitivity of the various classes.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The nucleotide
sequences of the isolates sequenced in this study have been deposited
in the GenBank database under the following accession numbers: N67,
AF365990; BB2AT3, AF365991; BBAT1, AF365992; BBAT2, AF365993; BBAT3,
AF365994; BBAT4, AF365995; BBFL1, AF365996; BB2AT1, AF365997; SB11,
AF365998; N43, AF365999; S3, AF366000; SB15, AF366001; SB12, AF366002; SB9, AF366003; SB17, AF366004; BBFL7, AF366005; LHAT9, AF366006; SWFL2,
AF366007; AF1, AF366008; DC, AF366009; JSL61, AF366010; LHAT1A,
AF366011; LHAT4, AF366012; LHAT5, AF366013; LHFL4, AF366014; SB10,
AF366015; SB13, AF366016; SB16, AF366017; SB3, AF366018; SB5, AF366019;
SB7, AF366020; SWAT2, AF366021; SWAT3, AF366022; SWAT8, AF366023;
SWAT4, AF366024; SWFL1, AF366025; LHAT7, AF366026; LHAT2, AF366027; JSL101, AF366028; LHFL1, AF366029; JSL91, AF366030; BB2FL1, AF366031;
BBFL4, AF366032; JSL121, AF366033; JSL122, AF366034; S5, AF366035;
SB18, AF366036; SB2, AF366037; SWAT1, AF366038; SWAT7, AF366039; SWAT9,
AF366040; LHAT3, AF366041; BB2AT2, AF366042; BB2FL3, AF366043; BB2FL2, AF366044; SB6, AF366045; SB8, AF366046; SB14, AF366047; BBFL3,
AF366048; SB4, AF366049; and SWAT5, AF366050.
Nucleotide sequences of the following organisms were obtained
from other studies (22; L. B. Fandino and F. Azam,
unpublished data): GAI5 (accession number AF007256), GAI21 (AF007257), GAI16 (AF007258), EE36 (AF007254), SP18 (AJ276036), SP25 (D88520), EL1
(AB010981), EL2 (AF025556), 5.3.10 (AF367849), AA (AF025554), AC
(AB008046), AG (AF367853), B12 (AF125327), BA (AF367854), BD
(AY030102), BE (AY030102), Cytophaga lytica (M62796),
D8 (AF125323), F12 (AF125325), F27 (AY030100), and G20 (AF125324).
 |
RESULTS |
Eighty-six unique bacterial isolates representing four classes of
cultivable marine bacteria were examined to determine their production
of antibiotics and their sensitivity to antibiotics produced by one
another. Thus, we used an 86 × 86 array of tests (7,396 tests) to
study inhibitory interactions. The isolates were grouped in the
subclass of the class Proteobacteria (
-Proteobacteria), the Bacteroidetes (primarily the class
Sphingobacterium), and the orders Alteromonadales
and Vibrionales (the latter two groups are orders in the
-proteobacteria) based on 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis data (Fig.
1). These groups represent the
predominant cultivable marine pelagic bacteria (21). The
bacteria isolated were either free-living or attached. Comparisons were
made on the basis of source of isolation (i.e., free-living versus
particle) and on the basis of phylogenetic relationships.

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FIG. 1.
Phylogenetic tree of isolates. Phylogenetic
relationships of isolates were inferred from a comparison of an
approximately 500-bp region of the 16S rRNA gene sequence by using
CLUSTAL W for multiple alignments and NJPlot for construction of the
tree. The bootstrap values at the nodes are based on 1,000 iterations. Boldface type indicates producers that inhibited 10 or more
isolates, lightface uppercase type indicates nonproducers that
inhibited one to nine isolates; and lightface lowercase type
indicates nonproducers.
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Production of inhibitory compounds was found in 53.5% of the isolates.
The producers inhibited a mean of 6.4 isolates per producer. While the
majority of producers inhibited only one or two isolates, there were
nine isolates that inhibited 10 or more isolates (Fig.
2). The zones of inhibition varied and
had diameters that ranged from 4 to 30 mm.

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FIG. 2.
Range of inhibitor producers. Eighty-six marine bacteria
were examined to determine their inhibitory interactions with one
another by using the Burkholder assay on ZoBell 2216E plates.
Inhibition was considered to be positive if the diameter of the zone of
inhibition was at least 4 mm greater than the diameter of the colony of
the producer. Inhibition had to be observed at least twice to be
considered positive. Solid columns, particle-attached bacteria;
cross-hatched columns, free-living bacteria.
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Production of inhibitory compounds by attached and free-living
bacteria.
A significantly greater percentage of attached bacteria
than of free-living bacteria produced inhibitory compounds (66.7 and 40.9%; Fisher exact test, P = 0.01). Not only did more
attached bacteria cause inhibition, but these bacteria tended to
inhibit more isolates. Attached bacteria accounted for all of the
isolates that inhibited 10 or more isolates (Fig. 2). The mean number
of isolates inhibited by attached bacteria was 8.5, compared to 3.2 for
free-living bacteria.
When we examined individual isolate-isolate interactions between
attached bacteria (n = 42) and free-living bacteria
(n = 44), we found that the attached bacteria inhibited
the free-living bacteria in 161 of 1,848 cases (8.7%) (Table
2). However, many fewer cases of
free-living bacteria that inhibited attached bacteria were observed (7 of 1,848 cases [0.4%]) (Table 2). Attached isolates were derived
from several different systems or sources. All seawater attached (SWAT)
isolates from particles found in the mesotrophic water column had some
capacity to inhibit the growth of other isolates. The SWAT isolates
inhibited an average of 16.8 isolates, and these isolates accounted for
five of the nine isolates that inhibited 10 or more isolates. One
isolate, SWAT3, inhibited nearly one-half of the isolates examined. All
of the SWAT isolates were found to be
-proteobacteria (Fig. 1).
The attached isolates from mesocosms that had been enriched with F/2
medium (22) to generate diatom blooms (BBAT and
BB2AT isolates) were predominately
-proteobacteria. Five of seven of these isolates inhibited other isolates and inhibited a mean of 10.2 targets. Three of the isolates inhibited 10 or more isolates (Fig. 2).
The bacteria isolated from abandoned larvacean houses (LHAT isolates)
included a similar percentage of producers; however, the producers were
not as potent, inhibiting a mean of 5.8 targets. One LHAT isolate
inhibited 10 or more targets.
The last group of attached isolates (SB isolates) came from a
1,200-liter mesocosm (1). Only 8 of 18 isolates had
inhibitory properties, and they inhibited a mean of 2.8 targets. These
isolates were distributed throughout the phylogenetic groups examined.
Production of inhibitory compounds: phylogenetic comparison.
Bacterial isolates were placed into phylogenetic groups based on the
16S rRNA gene sequence analysis. Additional phylogenetically identified
isolates from our culture collection of pelagic bacteria were added to
the test pool in order to balance the distribution of isolates in the
four phylogenetic groups. Inhibitory activity was not equally spread
throughout the four groups. Members of the Alteromonadales
and Vibrionales were the dominant producers, while members
of the Bacteroidetes were not as prolific (Fig. 3).

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FIG. 3.
Production of inhibitory molecules by members of
different phylogenetic groups. Eighty-six marine bacterial
isolates belonging to the -proteobacterial ( -Proteo),
Bacteroidetes (Bactero.), Alteromonadales
(Altero.), and Vibrionales (Vibirio.) groups were
examined for production of inhibitory molecules that were active
against at least one other isolate. Cross-hatched columns, free-living
bacteria; solid columns, particle-associated bacteria.
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Isolates belonging to the Alteromonadales and
Vibrionales expressed inhibitory activity against members of
all four groups examined (Table 2). When the data were expressed as
percentages of producers, there was no difference between the
free-living and attached isolates belonging to these groups (Fisher
exact test; P = 0.31 and P = 0.35 for
the Alteromonadales and Vibrionales, respectively). However, the attached bacteria belonging to these groups
inhibited more targets than the free-living bacteria (Fig. 4). Inhibition by attached members of the
Alteromonadales was nearly four times more common than
inhibition by free-living members of the Alteromonadales
when isolate-isolate interactions were examined. For the
Vibrionales the relationship was similar, and the ratio
approached 2:1 (Table 2). Members of the Vibrionales accounted for 67% of the broad-range inhibitors (Fig. 2).

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FIG. 4.
Inhibition of free-living and particle-attached bacteria
according to phylogenetic groups. Eighty-six marine bacterial
isolates belonging to the -proteobacterial (Alpha),
Bacteroidetes (Bactero.),
Alteromonadales (Altero.), and Vibrionales
(Vibrio.) groups were examined for sensitivity to inhibitory
molecules produced by at least one other isolate. (A) Free-living
targets; (B) particle-associated targets. Cross-hatched columns,
free-living producers (F); solid columns, particle-associated producers
(P).
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-Proteobacterial isolates were predominantly active against
-proteobacteria and members of the Bacteroidetes. The
producers belonging to this group were predominately
particle-associated bacteria (Fisher exact test, P = 0.04) which inhibited large numbers of the other isolates. When
producers and nonproducers were placed in a phylogenetic tree, there
was no clear clustering of producers and nonproducers (Fig. 1). In the
case of individual interactions, attached
-proteobacteria were 13 times more likely to have antagonistic interactions than free-living
-proteobacteria were (Table 2).
The Bacteroidetes group had the lowest percentage of
producers as determined by our assay system. The inhibitory
activity was similar to that of the
-proteobacteria and was
effective against
-proteobacteria, members of the
Bacteroidetes, and two members of the
Alteromonadales (Table 2). There was no discernible difference between the percentages of producers when attached and
free-living members of the Bacteroidetes were compared
(Table 2).
Sensitivity to inhibitory compounds.
Nearly 84% of all
isolates were sensitive to one or more producers. There was no
significant difference in the sensitivities of attached and free-living
isolates in terms of the percentages of bacteria inhibited (79.5 and
88.1%, respectively) (Table 2) (Fisher exact test, P = 0.61). This general relationship was also true within each
phylogenetic group.
Members of the Bacteroidetes were the most sensitive
bacteria; they were inhibited by members of all four groups. On
average, each Bacteroidetes isolate was sensitive to 8.2 producers. Free-living members of the Bacteroidetes were
significantly more sensitive than attached members of the
Bacteroidetes were; on average, members of these two groups
were inhibited by 9.8 and 4.0 producers, respectively (two-sided
t test with unequal variance, P = 0.045).
-Proteobacteria were less sensitive than members of the
Bacteroidetes. Similar percentages (90.1 and 85.7%) of
free-living and attached
-proteobacteria were sensitive to one or
more producers. However, attached
-proteobacteria were sensitive to
fewer producers than free-living
-proteobacteria (2.0 and 6.4 producers, respectively; two-sided t test with unequal
variance, P = 0.001).
The Alteromonadales and Vibrionales groups were
the least sensitive groups; 73.7 and 75.0% of the isolates were
sensitive. When the particle-attached members of these two groups were
examined, 76.9 and 87.5% were sensitive to one or more isolates that
produced an inhibitory compound. These values were not significantly
different from the values for the free-living members, 66.7 and 58.3%
of which were sensitive (Fisher exact test, P > 0.05).
The levels of sensitivity as determined by the number of isolates that
inhibited a target showed that attached members of the
Alteromonadales were more sensitive than free-living
isolates (2.5 versus 1.3 isolates; t test, P = 0.005). There was no significant difference within the
Vibrionales group. It should also be noted that none of the Bacteroidetes or
-proteobacterial isolates affected any
member of the Vibrionales group (Table 2).
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DISCUSSION |
Comparison with previous studies.
A remarkably large fraction
(53.5%) of our marine bacterial isolates exhibited antagonistic
properties against other pelagic bacteria. Thus, bacterium-bacterium
antagonism is potentially very common in the pelagic ocean. In contrast
to our study, previous studies found much lower percentages of
bacterial antagonism (5 to 8%) (30, 36). This may be
because we used a wide array of marine bacterial isolates as target
organisms, while in previous studies the initial screening was often
limited to few target species. Also, unlike previous studies, we
examined the distribution of antibiotic production and the sensitivity
of marine bacteria in the context of 16S rRNA phylogenetic
relationships. We also note that it is not necessary for an inhibitor
to be an antibiotic. For instance, some inhibitors may be involved in
bacterium-bacterium communication (e.g., quorum sensing)
(38) that regulates metabolism or physiology
(53) and can alter the species composition of the
bacterial community on particles. Quorum- sensing molecules are known
to exert not only intraspecies control but also interspecies control on
growth and the expression of specific phenotypes (7). Inhibition may also reflect changes in the availability of nutrients (e.g., iron through production of siderophores) or alteration of the pH
of the environment.
Particle-attached versus free-living bacteria.
Our findings
suggest that particle-attached bacteria are more likely to produce
inhibitory compounds than their free-living counterparts. This agrees
qualitatively with the results of Nair and Simidu (36),
who found that a greater percentage of particle-derived bacteria than
of free-living bacteria produced inhibitory compounds (6.9 to 12.9 and
3.2 to 5.6%, respectively). However, we found 5- to 10-fold-higher
frequencies of inhibition than those found in the study of Nair and
Simidu (36). The high frequency of producers among the
particle-attached isolates suggests that bacterium-bacterium antagonism
in the pelagic ocean may be more common on particles. This possibility
has implications for strategies for searching for new antibiotics of
marine bacterial origin.
In addition to being more likely to produce inhibitory molecules,
particle-attached isolates either produced more inhibitory compounds
than free-living bacteria or produced compounds that inhibited more
species than the compounds produced by free-living bacteria. While we
have not characterized the inhibitory molecules, it is not uncommon for
a single species to produce multiple inhibitory compounds
(54). Thus, our attached bacterial isolates produced all
of the broad-range inhibitors, and the mean number of isolates inhibited by the attached bacteria was greater than the mean
number of isolates inhibited by the free-living bacteria.
Whether particle-attached bacteria use inhibitory molecules to prevent
other bacteria from colonizing particles is an important ecological and
biogeochemical question. Our results show that the ability of
particle-attached bacteria to chemically inhibit free-living bacteria
is greater than the ability of free-living bacteria to chemically
inhibit particle-attached bacteria. Antibiotic production may be a
mechanism used by particle specialists to dominate the particle phase
by deterring other potential colonizers. This is consistent with the
conclusion, based on 16S rRNA sequence analyses, that marine snow
displays bacterial species dominance distinct from that in the
surrounding seawater (15). Variations in bacterial species
dominance can strongly influence the nature and rate of degradation of
sinking organic matter (e.g., through variations in species-specific
ectohydrolase profiles) (33). Thus, bacterium-bacterium
antagonisms on particles may be important variables in the ecology of
marine bacteria, as well as in oceanic carbon cycling.
The specific particle source from which the bacteria were isolated also
influenced the level of bacterium-bacterium antagonism. While the
majority of isolates from seawater enrichment mesocosms produced
inhibitors, it was the SWAT isolates, which were obtained from
particles collected directly from the ocean, that appeared to have the
most potent arsenal. All of these isolates were inhibitory, and they
accounted for the majority of the broad-range inhibitors. While
interesting, our data are too limited to make a generalization or to
offer an explanation for the differences.
Phylogenetic relationship.
A novel aspect of this study was
that we used 16S rRNA-based phylogeny, as well as a large number of
marine target isolates, to examine whether members of certain
phylogenetic groups were more likely to be antibiotic producers or
particularly sensitive to inhibition. The
-proteobacteria (the
Alteromonadales and Vibrionales groups) in our
study were found to be the dominant producers. This is consistent with
most previous studies which showed that production of antibiotics by
marine bacterial isolates from seawater is due to
-proteobacteria
(26). Members of the Bacteroidetes were the
least prolific producers in our study. Most noticeably absent among the
producers in our study were members of the Actinobacteridae. While these organisms are common antibiotic producers in soil and
marine sediment (26), they are not commonly found in the water column (21).
Members of the
-proteobacterial groups Vibrionales and
Alteromonadales (which were the dominant producers) were the
least sensitive to inhibition in our study. Thus, they may dominate the
particle phase and biofilms in the ocean. This observation may also be
relevant to the discussion of the culturability of marine bacteria.
Giovannoni and Rappé (21) noted that
-proteobacteria are the dominant cultivable marine bacteria. Their
resilience to antibiotics and their ability to produce antibiotics may
account for the bias towards these groups observed in marine isolate
libraries. One might speculate that the production of antibiotics on
isolation plates by
-proteobacteria may, in part, limit the
formation of colonies of other bacteria. A number of mechanisms of
bacterial resistance to antibiotics have been documented, including
hydrolytic inactivation of inhibitors (e.g.,
-lactamases)
(11), alteration of the target molecule (46),
prevention of inhibitor influx into the cell, and the efflux of
inhibitor from the cell. Multidrug transporters are pumps that
remove a variety of toxic molecules (for a review, see reference
41). While these mechanisms have not been studied in the
marine environment sufficiently to understand their distribution or
occurrence, the last two have been reported for the marine bacteria
Vibrio parahaemolyticus and Vibrio cholerae (14, 34). Whether marine
-proteobacteria are better
equipped with these or other antibiotic resistance mechanisms has not
been examined.
We did not expect to find that members of the Bacteroidetes
are so sensitive to inhibition by other marine bacteria. Members of
this taxon are typically selected based on their resistance to
kanamycin, and marine members are also kanamycin resistant. Members of
the Bacteroidetes are perceived to be particle specialists (15), and a recent study showed that they were a
significant component of both the particle-attached and
free-living communities during a dinoflagellate bloom
(18). Thus, it is interesting that members of the
Bacteroidetes manage to become significant in
organically enriched microenvironments despite the fact that they are
very sensitive to inhibition by other pelagic bacteria. Factors other
than bacterium-bacterium antagonism (e.g., heavy metal accumulation,
pH, and oxygen concentration) may play a role in structuring
communities on particles. Members of the Bacteroidetes were
found to accumulate and grow in the presence of high concentrations of
zinc and cadmium (17), and pigmented bacteria (members of the Bacteroidetes are typically pigmented) were found to be
more tolerant to heavy metals (e.g., Zn, Cd, and Hg) (35)
than nonpigmented bacteria.
The particle-derived
-proteobacteria strongly inhibited free-living
-proteobacteria and members of the Bacteroidetes, yet none of these organisms was effective against any of the other groups.
The strong inhibitory activity of
-proteobacteria against members of
the Bacteroidetes may in part explain the observations of
Gonzalez et al. (23), who found that there was an inverse abundance relationship between the two groups with depth during an
algal bloom. However, many other ecological factors that affect bacterial community structure (25, 39; Long and Azam,
submitted) could also have caused the pattern observed by Gonzalez et
al. (23) and should be considered when our hypothesis is tested.
Understanding antibiosis at the phylogenetic level may allow a more
focused search for antibiotics that are active against a bacterial
species or group. Such an understanding may also help workers devise
strategies for pathogen control in aquatic environments. One example is
in aquaculture, where members of the Bacteroidetes and
Vibrio spp. are often associated with a number of fish and shellfish diseases (5, 12, 45, 50, 57). One method employed to protect aquaculture stocks involves the use of probiotics; a bacterial species is added to inhibit growth or colonization of the
pathogenic species of concern. Our study suggests that
-proteobacteria derived from particles might be potential sources of
probiotic species that are active against members of the
Bacteroidetes. On the other hand, members of the
Vibrionales and Alteromonadales may be good
probiotics that are active against pathogenic Vibrio spp.,
and this has been recognized previously (49).
The approach used to search for antibiotics derived from bacteria in
the ocean was an approach used in soil ecology. Emphasis was initially
placed on members of the Actinobacteridae from marine sediments, and this was fruitful (27, 28). However, the
approaches now used may have reached their apex in terms of the rate of
discovery of novel molecules (19), and the emphasis has
shifted to symbiotic bacteria associated with eukaryotes. However, it
is probable that the full wealth of microbial diversity in the sea is
yet to be revealed. A large fraction of marine bacteria have not been
cultured yet, and novel cultivation methods need to be developed in
order to culture them. We emphasize that not only should new
cultivation techniques be developed, but the complex nature of the
microenvironments that exist in the marine water column
(6; Long and Azam, submitted) should also be taken into
account. These microenvironments, including the highly diverse
particles in the ocean, are a rich potential source of
antibiotic-producing bacteria and include phylogenetic branches that
have not been well explored.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
This work was supported by NSF grant OCE-9819603 and NIAID grant
A146600 to F. Azam.
We thank M. Haygood and J. M. Gonzalez for donating several of the
isolates. We thank two anonymous reviewers for their comments and insight.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Marine Biology
Research Division, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093. Phone: (858) 534-3196. Fax:
(858) 534-7313. E-mail: ralong{at}ucsd.edu.
 |
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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, November 2001, p. 4975-4983, Vol. 67, No. 11
0099-2240/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.67.11.4975-4983.2001
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