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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 2004, p. 7288-7294, Vol. 70, No. 12
0099-2240/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.70.12.7288-7294.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Seafood Research, Danish Institute for Fisheries Research, Kongens Lyngby, Denmark,1 Stolt Sea Farms SA, Ponta de los Remedios, LIRA, Carnota, La Coruña, Spain2
Received 19 May 2004/ Accepted 27 July 2004
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The proliferation and/or infection site of fish pathogens is often not known, and the mechanisms of antagonism by a probiotic culture towards a fish pathogen are often not understood. All these parameters would influence the choice of a probiotic bacterium. For instance, probiotic bacteria isolated from the gut would appear promising if the target pathogenic bacteria infect via the gastrointestinal tract. Some fish pathogens may proliferate on the skin surface (40), and probiotic bacteria adapted to the outer surfaces could limit pathogen proliferation. Moriarty (31) suggested that probiotic cultures could also originate from the general rearing environments, and since Bacillus spp. are generally present in the sediment from which shrimp are feeding, he added a commercialized Bacillus product to the water in shrimp culture and successfully prevented infection by pathogenic vibrios (30). Also, Marco-Noales et al. (28) recently demonstrated that levels of Vibrio vulnificus in water were influenced (suppressed) by the presence of other bacteria.
Based on the above-mentioned investigations (28, 30), it is plausible that health-beneficial organisms in a fish rearing system may be found in several other niches than the fish itself. Indeed, we (21) recently isolated potential probiotic bacteria from a turbot rearing unit, and bacteria that were inhibitory towards turbot larval pathogens in vitro were specifically isolated from tank walls and rotifer feeding on Rhinomonas. The inhibitory strains were identified as either Roseobacter spp. or Vibrio spp. Small-scale in vivo trials of adding Roseobacter strains to the water of egg yolk sac larvae demonstrated a disease-preventing effect of Roseobacter sp. strain 27-4. These findings underline the idea that probiotic bacteria may be present and exert their effects from the general environment (water, tank walls, etc.) and may not need to originate from, and be able to colonize, the fish (larvae). Large differences are seen in survival performance between lots of fish larvae and between tanks or units, and one could hypothesize that such differences could be explained partly by differential colonization of pathogen-antagonizing bacteria in the system.
It is not known if particular niches or seasons select for bacteria antagonizing fish-pathogenic bacteria or if different bacterial species appear at different seasons. These aspects would be important when applying probiotic cultures as a disease management strategy. The purpose of the present study was therefore to determine if bacteria with antagonistic activity against turbot larval pathogens were present in turbot larval rearing units at specific sites and/or times and whether these were the same species or changed according to season.
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Sampling.
Samples for microbiological analyses were taken once a month from two turbot rearing fish farms in northwestern Spain. Water samples, swabs from tank walls, and samples of larvae at different feeding stages (i.e., fed on rotifer, rotifer and Artemia, or Artemia only) were taken from larval rearing tanks. Also rotifers fed on different types of algae (Isochrysis and Rhinomonas) and Artemia nauplii (disinfected or nondisinfected) were sampled. Sterile gloves, bags, swabs, and plastic beakers were used for sampling. All samples were 10-fold diluted in sterile phosphate-buffered saline (PBS; 8.0 g of NaCl, 0.3 g of KCl, 0.73 g of NaH2PO4, and 0.2 g of K2HPO4 to 1 liter of deionized water, pH 7.4) and spread plated onto MA. Water samples and rotifer fed on algae were diluted directly. Cotton swabs were placed in stomacher bags and squeezed by hand with 5 ml of PBS (constituting a 100 dilution) for a few minutes and diluted. Artemia samples were left to settle, and approximately 1 g of aggregate was mixed with PBS and regarded as a 101 dilution. After incubation at 20°C for 3 to 4 days, plates with between 5 and 400 colonies were selected and sent by courier to Denmark in a polystyrene box, arriving within 24 h. Plates were stored at 10°C until replica plating.
Replica plating.
MA plates were replica plated on agar plates mixed with V. anguillarum, and colonies causing a zone of clearing in the fish pathogen agar layer were selected for further analysis (21). Ten milliliters of M9 minimal medium (37) containing M9 salts, 3% NaCl, 0.4% glucose, 0.3% Casamino Acids (Bacto 223050; Becton Dickinson, Sparks, Md.), 2 mM MgSO4, and 0.1 mM CaCl2 and 1.2% agar (hereafter called M9GC-3) was mixed with 10 µl of 108 to 109 CFU of V. anguillarum/ml grown in MB for 24 h at 20°C. After solidification, MA plates were replica plated using Whatman filter paper (no. 4) to transfer colonies to M9GC-3 plates. Vibrionaceae strain T3 was 10-fold diluted, and plates with 10 to 30 colonies were replica plated as a positive control. After incubation for 24 h at 20°C, colonies causing clearing zones were isolated from the primarily MA plates (1 to 12 colonies from each sample), pure cultured, and stored at 80°C.
Well diffusion agar assay.
Strains isolated as causing zones of clearing in the replica-plating procedure were subsequently tested in a well diffusion assay to confirm inhibitory activity against V. anguillarum and V. splendidus. Ten and 600 µl, respectively, were mixed into 10 ml of warm (43.5°C for V. splendidus and 44°C for V. anguillarum) M9GC-3 substrate. Pure cultured strains from 80°C were grown for 3 days in MB at 20°C and recultured for 2 days, and then 10 µl was transferred into wells (3-mm diameter) in the solidified M9GC-3 substrate. Plates were incubated at 20°C for 1 day and read for zones of clearing (indicating inhibition of the fish pathogen) in the turbid agar. Only strains inhibitory to the fish pathogens in the well diffusion assay were selected for further studies. P. fluorescens AH2 and Roseobacter sp. strain 27-4 were used as positive-control strains.
Identification of bacteria.
Bacterial strains were tentatively identified using a set of biochemical-phenotypic tests. Gram reaction was tested using Bactident aminopeptidase strips (Merck catalog no. 1.13301). Motility and shape were assessed by phase-contrast microscopy (1,000x magnification) on cultures grown in MB at 20°C. Catalase (3% H2O2) and oxidase (BBL Dryslide oxidase slides; Becton Dickinson) were tested on cultures grown on MA. Ability to metabolize glucose by fermentation or oxidation (22) was tested in oxidation-fermentation basal medium (Merck catalog no. 1.10282) supplemented with 2% Instant Ocean (IO; Aquarium Systems Inc., Sarrebourg, France).
Strains tentatively identified as Vibrionaceae (gram-negative, motile, fermentative rods with positive oxidase and catalase reactions) were tested for sensitivity to vibriostaticum O/129 (150 µg; Oxoid catalog no. 129150) and for the ability to grow without NaCl (10 g of tryptone, 5 g of yeast extract per liter) and in the API system (Biomerieux API 20 NE 20 050). Since many of the marine isolates require a mixture of marine salts to grow, 0.35 ml of a sterile 20% IO solution was added to the 7-ml API dilution tubes, leading to a final concentration in the diluent of 1.85% salts.
Gram-negative, motile rod-shaped bacteria, which did not ferment or oxidize glucose in oxidation-fermentation tubes and were positive in catalase and oxidase tests, were further grouped according to tentative identification procedures as in the work of Hjelm et al. (21). The ability of Shewanella to reduce trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO) was tested according to the method of Gram et al. (19), and the presence of arginine dihydrolase activity (decarboxylase base Moeller; Difco catalog no. 289010; supplemented with 2% IO) was tested according to the work of Alsina and Blanch (2). A minimal medium (7, 8) was used to test assimilation of D-sorbitol or DL-malate (10 g/liter) in microtiter plates. Prior to inoculation, strains were grown on MA. Colonies were suspended in 10 ml of saline (1.5% NaCl) to produce visible turbidity. Twenty-five microliters was added to 225 µl each of the assimilation substrate (in duplicate), and plates were incubated at 20°C. Glucose was used as positive control (except for Alcaligenes). The medium without a carbon source served as a negative control. Growth was determined as an increase in optical density of
0.05 at 600 nm for up to 4 weeks. For several strains growth was not detected until after 3 weeks.
The identity of three selected strains was verified by partial sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene (by Deutche Sammlung von Mikroorganismen und Zellkulturen, Braunschweig, Germany).
RAPD analysis.
Of a total of 173 strains, 132 were tentatively identified as Roseobacter species. To determine if the strains isolated constituted a permanent colonization of the rearing unit or if a constant flux of new strains were coming in, the strains were subtyped using randomly amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) analysis (12) with primers UBC 104 (5' GGG CAA TGA T) and UBC 106 (5' CGT CTG CCC G) (synthesized by DNA Technology, Aarhus, Denmark). Briefly, DNA was extracted from 400 µl of bacterial culture by using magnetic beads (Dynabeads, DNA direct, Universal; Dynal ASA, Oslo, Norway). One Ready-To-Go RAPD analysis bead (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech catalog no. 27-9500-01; Piscataway, N.J.) was added to each sample followed by 23 µl of primer (1.0 µM). The PCR was run in a thermocycler (Perkin-Elmer 9600; Norwalk, Conn.) with the template DNA. After denaturation for 2 min at 95°C, the next 10 cycles were of 1 min of denaturation at 95°C followed by annealing at 45°C and reduction to 36°C by 1°C for each cycle and then by extension for 2 min at 72°C. The last 30 cycles used denaturation at 95°C for 1 min followed by annealing at 35°C and extension at 72°C for 2 min. Electrophoresis of 24 µl of product in a 2% agarose gel at 90 V for 4 h was followed by visualization by staining with 3 µg of ethidium bromide per ml for 30 min and viewing with a transilluminator. A 100-bp ladder (catalog no. 24-40001-01; Pharmacia Biotech Inc.) was included three times in each gel.
Nucleotide sequence accession number.
The 16S rRNA gene sequence for V. splendidus strain DMC-1 has been deposited with GenBank under accession no. AY227706. Partial sequences of the 16S rRNA genes from three strains from the Roseobacter group have been deposited in GenBank under the accession numbers AY583736 to AY583738.
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From farm I, 31 of 73 samples had bacterial colonies that were able to inhibit V. anguillarum in the replica-plating assay, but when strains were tested for antibacterial activity in the well diffusion assay, the number was reduced to 24 samples (Table 1). At farm II, 20 of 62 samples caused clearing zones in the replica-plating assay. Subsequent testing of pure cultures reduced this to 12 samples, from which bacteria with sustained antibacterial activity were isolated. Sampling was conducted once a month, and the type and number of samples depended on the actual ongoing production, which explains the variation in the number of samples.
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TABLE 1. Numbers of samples taken at two turbot larva rearing farms over a 1-year period
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Identification of potential probionts.
A total of 173 strains were antagonistic against the two larval pathogenic bacteria in the well diffusion assay (Table 2). All were gram-negative, rod-shaped motile bacteria with positive catalase and oxidase reactions. Of the 173 strains, 142 did not ferment or oxidize glucose and were tentatively grouped as Pseudomonas (alkali-producing), Pseudoalteromonas, Roseobacter, Shewanella, or Alcaligenes (marine) strains. The majority of these (132) were identified as Roseobacter spp. according to the work of Hjelm et al. (21). All strains produced a brown pigment when plated on MA. None of the strains reduced TMAO to trimethylamine, and none hydrolyzed arginine. All strains assimilated malate, and 121 assimilated sorbitol. The lack of assimilation of sorbitol does not distinguish within the group of Roseobacter strains.
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TABLE 2. Numbers and types of samples from two turbot larva rearing farms and the identification of antagonistic bacteria from different samples
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Of the remaining 10 nonfermentative strains, 3 were arginine dihydrolase positive and assimilated malate. Two of these did not assimilate sorbitol, but the metabolism is variable within the group. Thus, the strains were grouped as alkali-producing Pseudomonas strains. Five strains were able to reduce TMAO to trimethylamine, did not assimilate sorbitol, and were identified as Shewanella. Two strains could not be identified.
Thirty-one strains fermented glucose, categorizing them as Vibrionaceae. All strains were sensitive to vibriostaticum, 29 of the strains were unable to grow in tryptone medium with 0% NaCl, and all were therefore grouped as Vibrio spp. Eighteen of the strains had similar colony morphology and were arginine dihydrolase positive but negative in ornithine and lysine decarboxylase. They were positive in the indole, o-nitrophenyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside, and Voges-Proskauer reactions. This profile identified the strains as V. anguillarum, and a subset of two strains were serotyped. One strain was serotype O4 positive, and the other was nontypeable with a weak cross-reaction to O3, O7, and O10 sera which is typical of environmental V. anguillarum (25).
Sites with potential probiotic bacteria.
Bacteria with antagonistic properties were found only on tank walls, in tank water, and in larvae feeding on rotifers or Artemia in farm I. More than 50% of tank wall and water samples contained pathogen-antagonizing bacteria. From farm II, antagonistic bacteria were detected in all types of samples (i.e., tank walls, tank water, and larvae fed with rotifer and/or Artemia) except from "rotifers fed on Isochrysis." A total of 29 samples from both farms were taken from "rotifer feeding on algae" (Rhinomonas or Isochrysis), and none of these samples contained antagonistic bacteria. Culturable counts in water samples ranged from 102 to 104 CFU ml1, and antagonistic bacteria were isolated from 11 of 28 samples. Based on counts of brown-pigmented bacteria, Roseobacter constituted between 1 and 40% of the population in these samples.
Roseobacter spp. were isolated primarily from tank walls, and 82 of the 132 strains originated from such sites (Table 2). A smaller number (23 strains) were detected from tank water, and the remaining 27 Roseobacter strains were associated with larvae fed on rotifers and/or Artemia. Vibrionaceae strains were detected in several sample types but were most prominent in larvae feeding on rotifers in farm II (Table 2).
RAPD profiling of Roseobacter spp.
RAPD profiles of Roseobacter spp. were generated using two primers, and both resulted in almost the same subgrouping. The profiles were very homogeneous, and of the 132 strains analyzed with primer UBC 104, 123 strains had almost identical profiles (profile I) (Fig. 1). Two strains (codes 658-2 and 659-1) had profiles similar to profile I but lacked a 1,000-bp band on repeated testing (Table 3). With the use of primer UBC 106, 127 strains had identical profiles.
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FIG. 1. Profiling of Roseobacter strains by RAPD analysis with primer UCB 104. Lanes: S, standard; 1, 255-1 = 8-1; 2, 256-8 = 27-4; 3, 270-3; 4, 234-2 (RAPD type I); 5, 243-5(T) (RAPD type I); 6, 628-19 (RAPD type I); 7, 629-5a (RAPD type I); 8, 632-1 (RAPD type I); 9, Roseobacter 8-1; 10, Roseobacter 27-4; 11, R. gallaeciensis.
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TABLE 3. RAPD profile of Roseobacter strains isolated from sample sites on two turbot larva rearing farms
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Roseobacter strains were detected in 7 of the 11 months sampled at farm I and in 4 of the 11 months sampled at farm II but were especially prominent in March and April (Table 1). RAPD profile I appeared at each sampling.
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Hjelm et al. (21) identified all antagonistic strains as either Roseobacter or Vibrio spp. In our present study covering significantly more samples and a wider time span, Roseobacter and Vibrio spp. were again the dominant antagonistic species. The finding of an alphaproteobacterium (Roseobacter spp.) as the dominant antagonist could indicate a selective pressure of the rearing environment. Thus, Long and Azam (26) reported that bacteria belonging to the gammaproteobacteria (Alteromonadales and Vibrionales) were the most prolific producers of an inhibitory substance(s) and also the most resilient.
A large proportion of the antagonistic bacteria were found on tank walls (15 out of 28 samples positive). Also, Long and Azam (26) found that attached and/or particle-associated bacteria displayed a higher degree of antibacterial activity than did free-living bacteria, indicating that attaching-persisting bacteria living in an environment of high bacterial density may be more antagonistic than free-living bacteria. Our finding that Roseobacter strains especially were associated with surfaces mirrors the finding by Dang and Lovell (9), who found that organisms belonging to the Roseobacter subgroup were ubiquitous and rapidly colonized surfaces in coastal environments. When surfaces were submerged in a salt marsh estuary tidal creek for 24 and 72 h, 22 clones out of 26 of the most abundant and most common in the library were affiliated with the Roseobacter subgroup (9). Also, dinoflagellates appear to be a niche area for Roseobacter in the marine environment (1, 11), and during algal blooms, Roseobacter may account for more than half of the rRNA gene sequence pool (16).
The Roseobacter group is attracting increasing attention among marine microbiologists as an important group of aerobic anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria (4, 38). It is estimated that, in some marine areas, Roseobacter clade-affiliated organisms account for 7 to 30% of the microbial population (14, 38), but they may also be present in lower proportions (i.e., 1%) (10). We found that brown-pigmented colonies similar to Roseobacter accounted for between 1 and 40% of the culturable bacteria in some water samples (data not shown). The Roseobacter clade consists of 12 or 13 genera (1, 29) such as Sulfitobacter, Roseovarius, Marinosulfomonas, and Silicibacter. All isolates, except one, have been isolated from marine or high-salt environments such as seawater, marine sediments, and surfaces of marine organisms (see the work of Moran et al. [29] for a review). As opposed to many other marine organisms (3, 28), Roseobacter strains are often culturable (29). The consistent finding in our study of Roseobacter as the dominant antagonistic bacterium in the larval rearing environment may hence be a logical reflection of its presence in high proportions in marine waters, its ability to be favored selectively by surface structures, and its preference for association with algal organisms. Many marine microorganisms are inhibitory to other organisms (26), and it was recently demonstrated that a Roseobacter isolate produced tropodithietic acid, which inhibited several gammaproteobacteria (6). This isolate was closely related to R. gallaeciensis, and it is not unlikely that the inhibitory activity of our isolates is caused by the same mechanism.
Vibrio spp. were isolated from several sites, notably in larvae feeding on rotifer (Table 2). Vibrionaceae are the most common members of the gut flora of feeding larvae (5, 20, 32), and Maeda et al. (27) found that rotifer cultures were favorable environments for Vibrio spp., probably due to the microaerophilic conditions selecting for fermentative organisms. Several other studies have also demonstrated that Vibrio spp. may be antagonistic towards fish-pathogenic bacteria (5, 44).
Vibrionaceae strains were present almost year round, and also Roseobacter strains were isolated at several sampling times. However, the number of isolated Roseobacter strains was especially high in March and April. This could indicate either that temperature, salinity, or soluble nutrients were particularly favorable during these months or that a common introduction, e.g., via the feed, occurred during that period. Moran et al. (29) indicated that temperature did not appear to limit distribution of Roseobacter strains; however, Selje et al. (38) concluded that the Roseobacter clade affiliates were predominantly found in polar and temperate waters and were rarely isolated in waters with temperatures above 20 to 25°C. Being a marine organism, Roseobacter is dependent on a saline environment, and numbers decrease as salinity decreases (15). The rearing environment is run at constant temperature and salinity; however, water is taken directly from the sea. Blooms of dinoflagellates often occur in spring months, and since Roseobacter is an especially common associate of dinoflagellates (1, 11, 16), such blooms could cause an increase in Roseobacter levels or water conditions could be particularly favorable, e.g., being rich in nutrients.
The subtyping procedure demonstrated that the population of Roseobacter was very stable during the 1-year survey, and this could indicate that a permanent population has been established, e.g., on the tank walls, reflecting the excellent biofilm-forming ability of the organism (9). Although the tanks are cleaned between rearing cycles, the attached state may render microorganisms more resistant to cleaning and disinfecting agents (35) and facilitate their survival. Alternatively, since Roseobacter strains are present in seawater at a level of up to 105 CFU/ml (38) and among the initial biofilm formers (9), they may enter the tanks and rapidly reestablish themselves.
Several studies have evaluated characteristics of potential probiotic bacteria and have studied the ability of the bacteria to adhere to intestine or skin mucus (24, 33, 34). However, most studies have found that added probiotic cultures are only transient and do not colonize the fish host (36, 42). Although this can be circumvented by daily additions of the probiotic culture, a more persistent establishment is likely to result in a more stable barrier towards the pathogen. Our finding that a pathogen-antagonizing bacterium has established itself in high densities in a larval rearing environment indicates that this could be a novel way of applying probiotic cultures. We believe that it is a simpler task to establish the culture on inert surfaces, where the colonization resistance of the live host need not be overcome.
Valuable comments on the manuscript were provided by T. H. Birkbeck and Ph.D. student Jesper B. Bruhn, and we thank Jens Laurits Larsen and Morten Bruun for serotyping of V. anguillarum strains.
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-subclass of the class Proteobacteria in coastal seawater. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 63:4237-4242.[Abstract]
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