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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, March 2002, p. 1468-1472, Vol. 68, No. 3
0099-2240/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.68.3.1468-1472.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Higher Abundance of Bacteria than of Viruses in Deep Mediterranean Sediments
Roberto Danovaro,* Elena Manini, and Antonio Dell'Anno
Institute of Marine Sciences, Marine Biology Section, Faculty of Science, University of Ancona, 60131 Ancona, Italy
Received 5 July 2001/
Accepted 28 November 2001

ABSTRACT
The interactions between viral abundance and bacterial density,
biomass, and production were investigated along a longitudinal
transect consisting of nine deep-sea stations encompassing the
entire Mediterranean basin. The numbers of viruses were very
low (range, 3.6
x 10
7 to 12.0
x 10
7 viruses g
-1) and decreased
eastward. The virus-to-bacterium ratio was always < 1.0,
indicating that the deep-sea sediments of the Mediterranean
Sea are the first example of a marine ecosystem not numerically
dominated by viruses. The lowest virus numbers were found where
the lowest bacterial metabolism and turnover rates and the largest
cell size were observed, suggesting that bacterial doubling
time might play an important role in benthic virus development.

INTRODUCTION
Viruses are considered the numerically dominant component in
all aquatic systems, and viral densities exceed bacterial densities
by 1 to 2 orders of magnitude (
25). Due to their abundance (10
9 to 10
10 viruses liter
-1) and their ability to infect bacteria
and phytoplankton, viruses may have profound effects on microbial
loop dynamics and biogeochemical cycling of organic matter (
13).
Epidemiological models predict that viral infection increases as host cell density increases (28). In this regard, marine sediments could represent the optimal environment for viral development. In fact, marine sediments are characterized by high organic matter concentrations (ca. 3 to 5 orders of magnitude higher than those in the water column) and high bacterial densities (108 to 109 cells ml-1 in sediment, compared to 105 to 106 cells ml-1 in the water column); in addition, the distances between the cells of benthic bacteria are very small. All these factors exponentially enhance the probability of virus-bacterium contact in marine sediments. However, surprisingly, studies dealing with viral abundance and distribution have been restricted to the plankton domain (see references 13 and 29 for reviews), and very limited information concerning sediments is available (7, 11, 25). Therefore, factors that affect viral abundance and distribution in marine sediments are still largely unknown.
In this study we examined interactions between viral abundance and bacterial density, biomass, and production along a longitudinal transect encompassing the entire deep-sea Mediterranean basin. Our sampling strategy was designed to include a gradient of trophic conditions (in terms of pelagic primary production [26] and particle fluxes [5]), from the more productive western basin to the highly oligotrophic Levantine Sea of the eastern Mediterranean. The specific aims of this investigation were (i) to identify the possible interactions of viruses with benthic bacteria and (ii) to identify environmental factors that control viral distribution and the ratio of viruses to bacteria in deep-sea systems.

Study area and sampling.
Sediment samples were collected in the Mediterranean Sea between
8 June 1999 and 1 July 1999 with the R/V
Aegaeo. Sediment sampling
was carried out at nine stations in the Mediterranean basin
(Fig.
1). Undisturbed sediment cores were collected with a multicorer
equipped with eight liners (internal diameter, 9.5 cm). The
station depth ranged from 1,290 m (station S7) to 4,000 m (station
S6) (Table
1). For comparative analysis, the sampling stations
were grouped based on the pelagic primary productivity (
26),
as follows: stations S1 to S5, eastern Mediterranean; and stations
S6 to S8 and S10, central and western basin (referred to below
as the western basin).
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TABLE 1. Station location, depth, water content, porosity, grain size, and soluble carbohydrate and soluble protein concentrations in surface sediment, (depth, 0 to 0.5 cm) at different locations in the Mediterranean Sea
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To obtain bacterial and viral counts, replicate subsamples (ca.
0.5 ml) of the top 1 cm of sediment (
n = 3) were added to 5
ml of prefiltered (pore size, 0.02 µm) seawater containing
2% formalin and were stored at 4°C until analysis (within
4 weeks of collection). Additional sediment subsamples were
analyzed immediately after retrieval on board to determine bacterial
production. Finally, for analysis of grain size, water content,
and biochemical composition of the sedimentary organic matter,
additional cores were collected and the top 1 cm of sediment
was frozen at -20°C.

Environmental parameters.
Grain size analysis was carried out by using a dry sieve technique.
Sediment water content (wc) was calculated by determining the
difference between the wet and dry weights and was expressed
as a percentage. Sediment porosity was determined with the following
equation: (wc/1.02)/{[(1 - wc)/2.64] + wc/1.02}, where wc is
(wet sediment weight - dry sediment weight)/wet sediment weight
(
6). Soluble protein and carbohydrate contents were determined
as described by Dell'Anno et al. (
9) and Danovaro et al. (
4).
For each biochemical analysis, blanks were prepared by using
the same previously calcinated sediments (450°C, 2 h). All
biochemical data were normalized to sediment dry weight after
desiccation (60°C, 24 h).

Viral and bacterial parameters.
Benthic bacteria and viruses were detached from sediment by
using pyrophosphate (final concentration, 5 mM) and ultrasound
(three 1-min treatments, Branson 2200 Sonifier, 60 W) to increase
the extraction efficiency (
8). For bacterial counting, subsamples
were diluted 100- to 500-fold, stained with acridine orange
(final concentration, 0.01%), and filtered on black Nuclepore
0.2-µm-pore-size filters (
12). Acridine orange was used
instead of SYBR Green I for bacterial analysis because it provided
similar counts but did not result in the overestimation of biovolume
which we observed when SYBR Green I was used. For viral counting,
samples were shaken manually for 1 min and then centrifuged
(800
x g, 1 min) to reduce interference due to suspended particles.
Aliquots of the supernatant were diluted 100- to 500-fold and
filtered through 0.02-µm-pore-size Anodisc 25 membrane
filters (pressure, <100 mm of Hg). The filters were then
stained with 20 µl of SYBR Green I (lot no. 4967-30; diluted
20-fold in MilliQ water) for 15 min in the dark and subsequently
rinsed twice with 1 ml of MilliQ water in order to eliminate
background fluorescence. All filters were analyzed by epifluorescence
microscopy using a Zeiss Axioplan microscope equipped with a
50-W lamp. Ten to 50 fields were viewed at a magnification of
x1,000, and a minimum of 400 bacterial cells or viruses were
counted. Viruses were discriminated from bacteria on the basis
of their dimensions (
21). Bacterial biovolume was measured as
described by Danovaro et al. (
4) and was converted to carbon
content (bacterial biomass) by using a conversion factor of
310 fg of C µm
-3 (
12). Bacterial cell size was calculated
by dividing bacterial biomass by bacterial abundance. Viral
counts were corrected for loss due to sampling, storage, and
fixation (
8). Viral and bacterial counts were normalized to
sediment dry weight after desiccation (60°C, 24 h).
Bacterial production was measured by determining [3H]leucine incorporation (24) using the procedure described by van Duyl and Kop (27) for sediments. Sediment subsamples supplemented with an aqueous solution of [3H]leucine (final concentration, 0.1 nmol; specific activity, 68 Ci mmol-1) were incubated for 1 h in the dark at the in situ temperature. After incubation, samples were supplemented with ethanol (80%) and were processed as described by van Duyl and Kop (27) before scintillation counting. Sediment blanks were prepared by adding ethanol immediately after [3H]leucine was added. Bacterial production was normalized to sediment dry weight after desiccation (60°C, 24 h).

Environmental parameters.
Water content, sediment porosity, and grain size data are shown
in Table
1. The water content ranged from 64.9% at station S8
to 37.3% at station S3. The porosity ranged from 0.61 at station
S3 to 0.83 at station S8. The proportion of the silt-clay fraction
(diameter, <0.0625 mm), which was dominant at all stations,
ranged from 78.8% at station S10 to 98.3% at station S1.
Concentrations of soluble carbohydrates and soluble proteins are also shown in Table 1. The concentrations of soluble proteins and carbohydrates exhibited similar longitudinal patterns, and values were at least twofold higher at stations in the western Mediterranean basin.

Benthic bacteria and viruses.
Table
2 shows data for bacterial direct counts, viral abundance,
virus-to-bacterium ratios, bacterial biomass, bacterial size,
and bacterial carbon production (BCP) in the deep-sea sediments
of the Mediterranean Sea. Benthic bacteria did not exhibit a
clear spatial pattern, and the concentrations of bacteria were
similar at the western and eastern basin stations (averages,
4.34
x 10
8 and 4.53
x 10
8 cells g
-1, respectively). Similar
patterns were observed for bacterial biomass. In contrast, bacterial
size exhibited a clear increasing gradient eastward; the average
values ranged from 38.0 fg of C cell
-1 in the western basin
to 52.9 fg of C cell
-1 at the eastern Mediterranean stations.
BCP doubled from the eastern Mediterranean stations (average,
0.03 µg of C g
-1 h
-1) to the western Mediterranean stations
(0.06 µg of C g
-1 h
-1), and BCP per cell also doubled
from the eastern stations to the western basin stations (0.057
and 0.114 fg of C cell
-1 h
-1, respectively) (Table
2). On average,
viral abundance was ca. 10-fold lower than bacterial abundance
and decreased from western stations to eastern stations (averages,
0.82
x 10
8 and 0.58
x 10
8 viruses g
-1, respectively). The low
viral abundance which we observed in the deep Mediterranean
Sea sediments cannot be explained by problems with storage (
8).
Due to the much lower viral abundance, the virus-to-bacterium
ratios were very low, ranging from 0.11 (at stations S4 and
S7) to 0.20 (at station S10); the only exception was station
S6, where the ratio was 0.47.
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TABLE 2. Benthic bacterial and viral parameters in surface sediments (depth, 0 to 0.5 cm) in the deep Mediterranean Sea
|
Data obtained in the present study indicate that deep-sea sediments
of the Mediterranean basin are the first example of a marine
ecosystem that is not numerically dominated by viruses. The
ratio of viruses to bacteria has been used to investigate relationships
between virioplankton and bacterioplankton populations. Previous
studies carried out in marine environments revealed that even
in highly oligotrophic systems, the viral number exceeded the
bacterial number by a factor of 3 to 10, and much higher values
for the virus-to-bacterium ratio (up to >100) have been reported
for nutrient-rich and highly productive environments (
29). This
simple observation suggests that greater numbers of viruses
are released by bacterioplankton host populations under environmental
conditions that enhance bacterial growth and productivity (
29).
The ratios of viral abundance to bacterial abundance in deep Mediterranean sediments are the lowest values reported so far (Table 3) (7, 11). Similar low values have been reported only for lake sediments (18, 19) and for pelagic deep-sea environments (14, 21).
In this study, the benthic bacterial densities were in the range
of densities generally reported for deep-sea sediments (
10),
including the deep Mediterranean Sea sediments (
3,
6,
7). Consequently,
the low ratio of viruses to bacteria was due exclusively to
low viral abundance. Viral abundance depends upon the number
of potential host cells (
28), and a direct relationship between
bacterial density and viral count has been reported in most
studies of pelagic environments (
29). However, the levels of
bacteria present in the sediments of the deep Mediterranean
Sea (>10
8 cells g
-1) were far greater than the minimum threshold
level required for viral infection (
28), and bacterial abundance
and viral abundance were not significantly correlated.
Virus replication depends on the growth and turnover rates of bacterial cells (29), so information on functional properties of benthic bacterial assemblages (i.e., bacterial size and biomass, as well as carbon production and turnover) is important (22). This is particularly true in deep-sea benthic environments, where bacterial dynamics are affected by a number of biotic variables (such as the availability of organic sources and grazing rates) and abiotic factors (temperature, redox potential, pressure, grain size, sediment compactness, turbulence), which can directly or indirectly affect virus dynamics.
In this study bacterial abundance and biomass did not exhibit a clear spatial pattern, and on average, almost identical values were obtained for the two basins (the differences were not significant, as determined by analysis of variance [ANOVA]). By contrast, bacterial secondary production was higher (ca. double [P < 0.05, as determined by ANOVA]) in the western basin. Data for deep-sea benthic BCP obtained previously indicated that the BCP values in Mediterranean sediments are comparable to those reported for other deep-sea oligotrophic environments at similar depths (1, 20), but higher BCP values have been obtained for more productive deep-sea systems (2, 17, 27).
Differences in BCP values observed in this study reflect the higher organic matter quality and availability of the western Mediterranean sediments. In this regard, significant relationships between BCP and labile organic components (soluble protein concentration [R = 0.69, P < 0.05] and soluble carbohydrate concentration [R= 0.74, P < 0.01]) were found. Therefore, it is possible to conclude that input and availability of the organic sources in the deep-sea sediments of the Mediterranean largely controlled variations in BCP.
Differences between the two basins were also evident in terms of the significantly higher bacterial turnover and BCP per cell in the western basin (Table 2) (P < 0.01, as determined by ANOVA). Conversely, bacterial cell size increased eastward, indicating that there were small active cells in the western Mediterranean stations and larger slowly growing cells in the eastern basin. The lowest viral numbers were observed at stations S1 to S3, where the largest cell sizes and the lowest bacterial growth and turnover rates were observed. We also observed a significant relationship between bacterial turnover (BT) (expressed as the ratio of BCP to bacterial biomass) and log-transformed viral abundance (TVN), as follows: TVN = 0.186 ln(BT) + 8.397 (r = 0.749). This finding allowed us to hypothesize that bacterial doubling time may play an important role in limiting virus development in deep-sea sediments and may influence the life strategies of benthic viruses.
Fuhrman (13) reported that the lytic cycle is the most common development strategy in pelagic environments, but in some studies of oligotrophic environments characterized by low densities of slowly growing bacterioplankton, a greater incidence of lysogeny was observed (15, 16). The occurrence of a large fraction of dormant or slowly growing bacteria, generally observed in deep-sea sediments (10) and also reported in the present study, could be an important factor favoring the increase in lysogeny of benthic viruses. This factor could account, at least in part, for the lower viral numbers encountered in oligotrophic deep-sea sediments.
Previous studies have shown that viruses might be adsorbed to sinking particles and transported to the sea floor (23) so that sediments receiving higher particle fluxes might receive larger inputs of viruses from the water column. In this study the levels of soluble proteins and carbohydrates, assumed to be tracers of the labile organic matter input from the photic zone to the deep-sea floor (4), were significantly higher at the western basin stations, where higher viral abundance was also observed. We are not in a position to conclude that there is a pelagic-benthic coupling between virus distribution and particle fluxes, but the data can be the basis for future investigations of this possibility.
Results obtained in this study suggest that the number of viruses in deep-sea sediments might be dependent upon complex interactions with both abiotic factors (such as pressure, physical disturbance, and redox conditions) and biotic factors, including bacterial metabolic state and virus supply from the water column. Further studies are needed to clarify the causes of the low viral density, to estimate the actual impact of viruses on benthic microbial functioning, and to assess possible implications for biogeochemical cycles.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was carried out within the framework of TransMediterranean
Cruise of the MATER program, which was financially supported
by the European Union.
D. Marrale (University of Genoa), V. Lykoussis (NCMR, Athens, Greece), and the crew of the R/V Aegaeo are gratefully acknowledged for support provided during the cruise. We thank M. L. Mei for contributing to laboratory analyses.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institute of Marine Science, University of Ancona, Via Brecce Bianche, 60131 Ancona, Italy. Phone: 39 71 220 4654. Fax: 39 71 220 4650. E-mail:
danovaro{at}popcsi.unian.it.


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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, March 2002, p. 1468-1472, Vol. 68, No. 3
0099-2240/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.68.3.1468-1472.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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