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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 2003, p. 7527-7530, Vol. 69, No. 12
0099-2240/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.69.12.7527-7530.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Alan J. Wolfe, and Karen L. Visick*
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Loyola University Chicago, Maywood, Illinois 60153
Received 23 June 2003/ Accepted 19 August 2003
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Motile cells inoculated onto a soft agar medium containing two attractants form an outermost ring in response to a spatial gradient that results from the consumption and subsequent diffusion of the preferred attractant (14). Similarly, an inner ring forms to the second attractant (11 and B. M. Pruss and A. J. Wolfe, unpublished data). When inoculated onto TB-SW soft agar plates (1% tryptone, 0.88% NaCl, 0.62% MgSO4, 0.072% CaCl2, 0.038% KCl, 0.25% agar), cells of V. fischeri strain ES114 (2) formed two concentric rings (Fig. 1A). Cells of Escherichia coli also form two rings on tryptone-based soft agar, with the outer and inner rings sensing serine and aspartate, respectively (1). We therefore tested whether V. fischeri also migrated to serine and aspartate. While the bacterium did not respond to aspartate (data not shown), the addition of increasing concentrations of serine to the soft agar slowed the migration of the inner ring of V. fischeri, indicating that the cells present in that ring consume, sense, and migrate to serine (Fig. 1B and C). We used an excess of serine to disrupt the gradient and found that serine perturbed migration of the inner ring (arrows in Fig. 1 depict the location of the spot of serine). Closer inspection of the rings revealed that a doublet we occasionally observed (e.g., Fig. 1B) consisted of faster-migrating cells on the surface of the plate and slower-migrating cells deeper in the agar, both of which responded to serine. Because the doublet responded as a unit to the addition of serine, we believe it should be considered a single, serine-responsive ring. Serine can be metabolized anaerobically by organisms such as E. coli (1); thus, the separation may result from a lag in migration due to the less-oxygenated environment deep in the plate. This would explain the apparent discrepancy between this report of two migrating rings and a recent report that mentions three (8).
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FIG. 1. (A-C)
Migration of V. fischeri to serine. V. fischeri cells
were inoculated onto TB-SW plates in the absence (A) or
presence of increasing concentrations of serine (0.75 mM [B]
or 2 mM [C]). Plates were incubated at 28°C for
5 h. Arrows indicate where an excess of serine was spotted
directly onto the plate just beyond the migrating rings. (D-F) Cells of
V. fischeri (V) and E. coli (E)
were coinoculated on TBS soft agar plates. (D) E.
coli strain RP437, wild-type for chemotaxis. (E) E.
coli strain RP5854, tar. (F) E. coli
strain RP5714, tsr. E. coli cells were inoculated at
28°C for 7 to 12 h prior to inoculation with V.
fischeri, followed by incubation for an additional 5 h.
Arrows indicate where an excess of serine was spotted directly onto the
plate just beyond the migrating
rings.
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To identify the substrate sensed by the outer ring of V. fischeri, we spotted each of the other 18 amino acids onto Tris-buffered TB-SW soft agar plates just beyond the migrating rings. Although alanine, arginine, asparagine, histidine, and threonine slightly perturbed the inner ring, no amino acid perturbed the outer ring (data not shown), suggesting that the cells in the outer ring do not recognize an amino acid. We therefore investigated the ability of V. fischeri to migrate toward other components of tryptone and found that the outer ring of cells responded to the nucleoside thymidine (Fig. 2A). Increasing concentrations of thymidine added to Tris-buffered TB-SW plates caused cells in the outer ring to migrate more slowly, and an excess of thymidine perturbed that migration (data not shown). This suggests that in TB-SW this organism preferentially consumes and senses thymidine over serine. Indeed, V. fischeri cells grew with thymidine as a sole carbon source (data not shown). Supplementation with other ribonucleosides (adenosine, guanosine, uridine, and cytodine) similarly slowed the migration of the outer ring of V. fischeri cells, and spotting with an excess of these ribonucleosides just beyond the rings formed on TB-SW perturbed only the outer ring (Fig. 2B and C and data not shown), indicating that these cells could respond to any ribonucleoside. We also spotted with deoxynucleotide triphosphates (dATP, dCTP, dGTP, dTTP), which similarly perturbed only the outer ring (data not shown). Because deoxynucleoside triphosphates differ from ribonucleosides in two ways, the sugar moiety (deoxyribose versus ribose) and the phosphorylation state (triphosphate versus unphosphorylated), these data suggest that neither the sugar component nor the phosphorylation state constitutes a critical component of recognition.
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FIG. 2. Migration
of V. fischeri to nucleosides and their components. V.
fischeri cells were inoculated onto Tris-buffered TB-SW soft agar
plates for 5 h at 28°C. (A) Aliquots (10
µl) of 0.121 M thymidine (T) and 2 M serine
(S) were spotted just beyond the migrating rings of V.
fischeri. (B) Serine (2 M) (S) and cytidine
(0.171 M) (C) were spotted just beyond the migrating rings
formed on Tris-buffered TB-SW plates containing 1 mM cytidine. Note
that the ring perturbed by serine is now located on the outside of the
ring perturbed by cytidine. (C) Aliquots (10 µl) of
equimolar concentrations (0.066 M) of uridine (U), uracil (u), ribose
(R), and deoxyribose (dR) were spotted onto plates just beyond the
migrating rings. Serine (2 mM) was added to all plates to provide a
better separation of the inner and outer rings for visualization of the
response to nucleoside or nucleoside component addition. An excess of
serine (S) was spotted at the top of each plate as a
comparison.
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In addition to serine and nucleosides and nucleotides, V. fischeri may perform chemotaxis to sugars. Surface molecules of host cells frequently contain sugar moieties, and the mucus secreted by E. scolopes contains the sugars NANA and NAGal. We therefore tested the ability of V. fischeri to migrate in response to a variety of sugars and other substrates. Potential chemoattractants were either added to or spotted on one of two media: TB-SW and HEPES minimal medium (12) containing 25 mM mannitol (MM-M). Mannitol serves as a carbon source but not as an attractant for V. fischeri (Fig. 3, first row, column A). As shown in Table 1, V. fischeri migrated toward a variety of substrates (13 of 18 tested), including glucose, cellobiose, and to a lesser extent, ribose. Ribose caused a faint additional inner ring to form but did not slow migration of the outer ring, implying that the receptors for thymidine and ribose are distinct. The same was true for cyclic AMP (3).
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FIG. 3. Migration
of various Vibrio strains to NANA and other sugars. Cells of
V. fischeri (V.f.), V. anguillarum strain
PKJ (V.a.), and V. parahaemolyticus strain KNH1
(V.p.) were inoculated near the center of MM-M soft agar
plates (column A) or MM-M soft agar plates containing either 1 mM NANA
(column B), 1 mM glucose (column C), or 1 mM NAG (column D). Plates
were incubated at 28°C for approximately 24 h. Arrows
indicate where an excess of the respective carbon source was spotted
onto the plate just beyond the migrating
rings.
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View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Response
of V. fischeri to various substrates added to TB-SW or MM-M
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Given the absolute requirement for motility in symbiotic colonization (5), the data reported here provide an important first step in assessing the contribution of chemotaxis to colonization. V. fischeri apparently encodes an unusually large number of chemoreceptors; over 40 genes contain putative chemotaxis signaling motifs (C. R. DeLoney-Marino, unpublished observations). We are presently working to identify receptors specific for the identified attractants by constructing and characterizing chemotaxis mutants. These mutants will permit more direct testing of a potential role for chemotaxis in establishing the Vibrio-squid symbiosis.
This work was supported by NIH grant GM59690 awarded to K.L.V. and by the National Science Foundation under a Research Fellowship in Microbial Biology awarded in 2001 to C.R.D.
Present address: University of Southern Indiana, Department of Biology, Evansville, IN 47712. ![]()
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