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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 2005, p. 8531-8536, Vol. 71, No. 12
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.12.8531-8536.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Antagonistic Interactions among Marine Bacteria Impede the Proliferation of Vibrio cholerae
Richard A. Long,1*
David C. Rowley,2
Eric Zamora,1
Jiayuan Liu,2
Douglas H. Bartlett,1 and
Farooq Azam1
Marine Biology Research Division, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla, California 92093-0202,1
Departments of Biomedical and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Rhode Island, Kingston, Rhode Island 028812
Received 10 May 2005/
Accepted 11 September 2005

ABSTRACT
Changes in global climate have raised concerns about the emergence
and resurgence of infectious diseases.
Vibrio cholerae is a
reemerging pathogen that proliferates and is transported on
marine particles. Patterns of cholera outbreaks correlate with
sea surface temperature increases, but the underlying mechanisms
for rapid proliferation of
V. cholerae during ocean warming
events have yet to be fully elucidated. In this study, we tested
the hypothesis that autochthonous marine bacteria impede the
spread of
V. cholerae in the marine environment. It was found
that some marine bacteria are capable of inhibiting the growth
of
V. cholerae on surfaces and that bacterial isolates derived
from pelagic particles show a greater frequency of
V. cholerae inhibition than free-living bacteria.
Vibrio cholerae was less
susceptible to antagonism at higher temperatures, such as those
measured during El Niño-Southern Oscilliation and monsoonal
events. Using a model system employing green fluorescent protein-labeled
bacteria, we found that marine bacteria can directly inhibit
V. cholerae colonization of particles. The mechanism of inhibition
in our model system was linked to the biosynthesis of andrimid,
an antibacterial agent. Antibiotic production by the model antagonistic
strain decreased at higher temperatures, thereby explaining
the increased competitiveness of
V. cholerae under warmer conditions.
These findings suggest that bacterium-bacterium antagonism is
a contributing mechanism in regulating the proliferation of
V. cholerae on marine particles.

INTRODUCTION
Vibrio cholerae is a ubiquitous member of the bacterial community
in temperate and tropical marine coastal waters. Pathogenic
biotypes of
V. cholerae are annually responsible for more than
300,000 cases of cholera, 6,500 of which are lethal, in over
50 countries worldwide (
40,
41). Numerous studies have established
a seasonal pattern for cholera outbreaks (
6,
21,
31).
V.cholerae abundance (
22,
23) and cholera outbreaks increase with warming
sea surface temperatures such as are observed during El Niño-Southern
Oscillation events (
30,
38). Thus, there is concern that global
climate warming will increase the frequency and geographical
distribution of cholera epidemics (
7,
10,
15).
The ecology of V. cholerae is intimately coupled with its attachment to particles, and these interactions are considered important in its transmission from aqueous environments to humans (7, 8). The association of V. cholerae with both phytoplankton (17, 19, 20) and zooplankton (18, 24) is well documented. V. cholerae can reach such high abundance (104 to 105) on larger particles that a single particle is sufficient to provide an infectious dose to humans (7). Chironomid egg masses can harbor high concentrations of V. cholerae and serve as reservoirs for the bacterium (4).
Marine particles are hot spots for microbial activity, and molecular phylogenetic analysis has established that the dominant species of particle-attached bacteria are different from those free living in the surrounding seawater (3, 9, 34). The intense enzymatic activity of these "particle specialists" on organic matter creates high-nutrient plumes that help support heterotrophic bacterial growth (2, 25, 37). Particle-associated bacteria also aggressively employ antagonistic interactions against other bacteria, perhaps to limit competition in these nutrient-rich microenvironments (14, 26). Considering the pervasive nature of antibiosis, we tested the hypotheses that antagonistic interactions between marine bacteria and V. cholerae impede the latter from colonizing and proliferating on organic-rich surfaces and that elevated water temperatures affect such interactions.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Source of organisms.
Vibrio cholerae isolates Vc N16961 and Vc 0395 were gifts from
John J. Mekalanos (Harvard Medical School). Isolates Vc O1,
Vc O139, Vc NonO1, and Vc 1st case in Mexico are all part of
an unpublished strain collection of Marcial Leonardo Lizzaraga-Partida
(CICSESE, Ensenada, Mexico). Isolates Vc SIO and Vc TP are environmental
strains isolated from coastal waters in La Jolla, CA (
33). The
serogroup, serotype, and biotype for each isolate are presented
in Table
1. All other marine bacterial isolates, representing
a phylogenetically diverse group of cultivable marine bacteria
including
Bacteroidetes,
Alphaproteobacteria, and
Gammaproteobacteria,
were from the bacterial culture collection of Farooq Azam (Scripps
Institution of Oceanography) and are described elsewhere (
26).
GFP mutagenesis.
Wild-type SWAT3 (SWAT3-wt) (GenBank accession no.
AF366022),
a particle-derived
Vibrio strain, was mutagenized using the
protocol of Stretton and coworkers (
39). Briefly, a triparental
conjugation with SWAT3-wt Rif
+,
Escherichia coli SM10(pLOFKm
gfp),
and
E. coli 2073 was performed, and screening for green fluorescent
protein (GFP) fluorescence was conducted on ZoBell 2216 (
42)
plates supplemented with rifampin (50 µg ml
1).
Approximately 2,000 mutants were examined by epifluorescence
microscopy (excitation, 480 nm; emission, 520 nm), leading to
the identification of 150 isolates with strong GFP signals on
surfaces. Picked GFP mutants were tested in antagonism assays
(see below) to identify mutants that retained or lost inhibitory
effects against the growth of
V. cholerae.
Antagonism assays.
Cultures of V. cholerae and marine bacterial isolates were grown overnight at 20°C in ZoBell 2216 medium (1.5% Bacto Peptone and 0.5% yeast extract in 100-kDa-filtered seawater). Cultures were diluted in fresh ZoBell 2216 to an optical density (OD) at 600 nm of 1. Soft agar lawns of V. cholerae (3 ml 0.6% ZoBell agar inoculated with 30 µl of diluted V. cholerae cultures) were overlaid onto firm ZoBell plates (1.5% agar). Ten microliters of diluted marine bacterial cultures was spotted in a three-by-three grid on top of the lawns, and the plates were incubated at either 20°C or 30°C overnight. Antagonistic interactions were scored when zones of inhibition were observed. Assays were performed in triplicate, and only when inhibition was observed in all three assays were isolates scored as positive for inhibition.
Particle colonization assay.
Six model particles were prepared by spotting 6 µl of 1% agarose amended with ZoBell 2216 onto Teflon-coated glass microscope slides (Cell-Line, Portsmouth, NH). The agarose had been first inoculated with either an antagonistic GFP mutant (SWAT3-4) or a nonantagonistic GFP mutant (SWAT3-111). Slides were submersed in 100-kDa-filtered seawater (tangential flow filtration) (0.1-µm Supor Membrane LV Centramate; Pall Corp, EastHills, NY) inoculated with or without V. cholerae N16961. Replicate slides were removed after 0, 5, and 16 h; fixed with 2% borate-buffered formalin; and DAPI (4',6'-diamidino-2-phenylindole) stained. V. cholerae abundance was determined by subtracting SWAT3 (GFP) counts from total bacterial (DAPI) counts for all six particles by epifluorescence microscopy. A second set of experiments was conducted with agarose particles amended with freeze-thaw-killed cells of the dinoflagellate Lingulodinium polyedrum in place of ZoBell 2216. Replicate slides were removed after 0, 5, 16, 24, and 32 h.
Determination of SWAT3 allelochemicals.
SWAT3-wt was cultured in ZoBell 2216 medium (39 1-liter cultures) at 23°C on a rotary shaker for 4 days. Ethyl acetate extraction of the whole culture broths yielded 1.95 g of extract that potently inhibited V. cholerae growth (a paper disk impregnated with 500 µg extract provided a 27-mm zone of inhibition). Purification of the active substance was achieved by bioassay-guided fractionation using column chromatography (Amberchrom CG-161m; gradient, methanol [MeOH]-H2O) and reverse-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) (45 to 80% MeOH in H2O over 20 min at 10 ml min1; Waters Xterra RP18 5-µm, 19- by 100-mm column). The purified antibiotic (34 mg) was identified as andrimid by comparison of 1H and 13C nuclear magnetic resonance and mass spectra to previously published data (11).
Andrimid production by SWAT3 mutants.
SWAT3-4, SWAT3-111, and SWAT3-wt were cultured in 1 liter of ZoBell 2216 broth at 23°C on a rotary shaker for 4 days. Each culture broth was extracted with two 500-ml portions of ethyl acetate. The organic layers were dried over Na2SO4, filtered, and concentrated in vacuo to yield 84.3 mg (SWAT3-wt), 85.8 mg (SWAT3-4), and 74.7 mg (SWAT3-111). Extracts were dissolved at 3.3 mg ml1 in MeOH, and the andrimid concentration was measured by comparing analytical HPLC peak areas to a standard curve (10-µl injections, 45 to 80% MeOH in H2O over 20 min at 1 ml min1, UV detection at
= 292; Waters Xterra RP18 5 µm, 3.0- by 100-mm column). To create the standard curve, serial dilutions of pure andrimid in methanol (three replicates per concentration) were analyzed by analytical HPLC (same conditions as described above). Averaged andrimid peak areas were then plotted versus concentration.
Broth dilution assay.
Overnight cultures of V. cholerae N16961 were diluted (OD at 450 nm of 0.043) and treated with fourfold serial dilutions of andrimid. Tetracycline and methanol served as an antibiotic standard and a solvent control, respectively. The treated cultures (n = 10 each) were incubated at 24°C, 28°C, or 30°C, and optical density was measured at 630 nm after 24 h. Percent inhibition was calculated based on the following equation: percent growth = 100% x (ODsample ODblank)/(ODsolvent control ODblank).
Temperature dependence of SWAT3-wt antibiotic biosynthesis.
SWAT3-wt was cultured in 100 ml ZoBell 2216 broth on a rotary shaker for 4 days at either 24°C (n = 5) or 30°C (n = 5). SWAT3-wt entered stationary phase after approximately 20 h at both temperatures. The whole culture broths were then extracted with ethyl acetate, dried over Na2SO4, filtered, and concentrated in vacuo. Each extract was dissolved at 3.3 mg ml1 in methanol and analyzed by C18 HPLC as described above. Andrimid peak areas were averaged and then compared to a standard curve to calculate compound production at each temperature.

RESULTS
Inhibitory interactions.
Direct competition assays performed on agar plates with 66 marine
bacterial isolates (representing a phylogenetically diverse
group of cultivable marine bacteria including
Bacteroidetes,
Alphaproteobacteria, and
Gammaproteobacteria) against eight
strains of
V. cholerae showed that a range of bacteria could
impede the growth
V. cholerae (Table
2). At 20°C, a mean
of 23% of the marine bacteria derived from particles inhibited
the growth of
V. cholerae, while only 6% of free-living bacteria
showed such antagonistic behavior. Clinical and environmental
strains of
V. cholerae were equally inhibited, including both
the classical and El Tor serotypes. Far fewer antagonistic interactions
were observed at 30°C (Table
2). An exception to this trend
was observed with an environmental isolate, Vc SIO, which was
more susceptible to growth inhibition at the higher temperature.
SWAT3, a particle-derived marine
Vibrio strain, was selected
as a model organism for a detailed study of its temperature-dependent
mechanism of bacterium-bacterium antagonism against
V. cholerae.
SWAT3 was chosen due to its potent growth inhibition against
the panel of
V. cholerae strains at 25°C but markedly diminished
effects at 30°C (Table
3).
Mechanism of antagonism.
Bioassay-guided fractionation of SWAT3 culture extracts led
to the identification of andrimid (
11,
12) as the responsible
antagonistic agent against
V. cholerae. Andrimid potently inhibits
V. cholerae growth (50% inhibitory concentration of 80 nM at
24°C). To investigate the temperature dependence of
the observed antagonism, SWAT3-wt was cultured for 4 days in
100 ml ZoBell 2216 medium at 24°C or 30°C. SWAT3-wt
produced an average of 5.8 mg liter
1 andrimid at 24°C,
while its biosynthesis decreased to 0.7 mg liter
1 at
30°C. Growth rates of SWAT3 were not significantly different
at these two temperatures (by analysis of variance, df = 1,
F = 0.032, and
P = 0.874). The sensitivity of
V. cholerae to
andrimid over the same temperature range was not significantly
different (Fig.
1). Therefore, the variable SWAT3 antagonism
toward
V. cholerae is due to decreased antibiotic production
at the warmer temperature.
Mutant generation and characterization.
Since particles are focal points for
V. cholerae proliferation
in the environment, the effects of bacterium-bacterium antagonism
on the ability of
V. cholerae strain N16961 to colonize model
particles was examined. SWAT3 was again selected as the model
strain in these studies. SWAT3 was first mutagenized with a
transposon Tn
10 derivative containing a promoterless green fluorescent
protein in order to both microscopically distinguish it from
V. cholerae and knock out one of the genes necessary for antagonistic
interactions (
39). Of the 2,000 mutants screened, 150 had a
strong GFP signal when grown on surfaces. GFP mutants SWAT3-4
and SWAT3-111 have growth characteristics comparable to those
of the wild type, but only the former retained the antagonistic
behavior of the wild type (Fig.
2A). Analysis of SWAT3-4 and
SWAT3-111 culture extracts by analytical HPLC showed that SWAT3-111
no longer produced andrimid (Fig.
2B). Therefore, SWAT3-111
served as a control for bacterium-bacterium antagonism in our
model system.
Colonization assay.
Nutrient-enriched, 6-µl agarose particles were inoculated
with one of the SWAT3 mutants and incubated overnight in petri
dishes containing sterilized seawater.
V. cholerae was then
inoculated into the seawater surrounding the particles. The
density of SWAT3 on the particles at the time of
V. cholerae inoculation was 10
8 ml
1, which falls within the range
of bacterial density on marine particles (10
7 to 10
10 ml
1 [
1]).
V. cholerae was also inoculated into a control petri dish
with unseeded agarose particles. The antagonistic mutant (SWAT3-4)
completely inhibited the colonization of particles by
V. cholerae,
while particles inoculated with the nonantagonistic mutant (SWAT3-111)
had no inhibitory effect on
V. cholerae particle colonization
(Fig.
3A).
The colonization experiment was repeated with agarose particles
embedded with freeze-thaw-lysed cells of the dinoflagellate
Lingulodinium polyedrum, and patterns of colonization similar
to those in the previous experiment were observed (Fig.
3B),
although absolute growth rates were lower.

DISCUSSION
Vibrio cholerae is among the most studied marine heterotrophic
bacteria. Factors such as temperature and salinity that regulate
its distribution and abundance have been elucidated at the meso-scale
and ocean basin levels (
6,
7,
30). At smaller scales, its attachment
to pelagic particles is well documented. To successfully colonize
organic matter in the marine environment,
V. cholerae must compete
against the other 10 to 1,000 million phylogenetically diverse
bacteria that reside within a cubic centimeter of a particle.
Our findings here show that interspecies antagonistic interactions
involving allelochemicals can influence particle colonization
by
V. cholerae and that these interactions can be temperature
sensitive.
Previous studies of antagonistic interactions between marine bacteria have focused on isolates from pelagic particles, including marine snow (13, 14, 26, 27). Organic particles are sites of intense microbial activity (1, 32, 35, 37), and bacterial abundance increases with proximity to nutrient-rich particles, reaching concentrations up to three orders of magnitude greater than those in ambient waters (5). It is hypothesized that bacteria use chemically mediated defenses to compete for space and nutrients in these microenvironments (26). Long and colleagues found that an antibiotic molecule produced by a marine particle-associated Alteromonas sp. could influence bacterial community structure, which in turn could alter the remineralization of the organic matter on the particle (27). Grossart and colleagues have further suggested that interspecies antagonistic interactions are a microscale factor that can influence particle colonization rates (13).
This study found that a range of phylogenetically diverse bacteria have the potential to interfere with V. cholerae growth on surfaces. There was little difference is the level of inhibition observed between clinical and environmental strains of V. cholerae. While the model SWAT3 isolate is capable of producing the highly inhibitory compound andrimid, the mechanism of V. cholerae inhibition by the other isolates in this study has not yet been elucidated. Andrimid has been previously reported to be produced by several different Gammaproteobacteria (11, 28, 29, 36). Oclarit and colleagues isolated a Vibrio sp. from a marine sponge that produced andrimid in laboratory culture (29). Extracts directly from the sponge indicated that andrimid was also produced in situ. Recently, it was shown that andrimid at the nanomolar level inhibits the acetyl coenzyme A carboxylase of gram-negative bacteria than at 20°C (12).
The Vibrio cholerae strains in this study were sensitive to far fewer antagonistic interactions at 30°C. The relationship between antagonism and temperature is particularly intriguing in view of the increased occurrence of cholera outbreaks during El Niño-Southern Oscillation events (31, 38). It has been proposed that climate changes are expanding the range of pathogenic organisms both spatially and temporally (16). In the case of cholera, climate-related factors such as sea surface temperature, salinity, and sea surface height have been correlated to outbreaks (6, 21, 30, 31). These factors can influence interspecific interactions between bacteria at the microscale, including the production of and/or resistance to antibiotics.
In conclusion, our results suggest that marine bacterium-bacterium antagonism is a contributing factor in regulating the proliferation of V. cholerae on particles. Importantly, autochthonous bacteria appear to become less inhibitory against V. cholerae at elevated temperatures. Hence, as sea surface temperatures increase due to changes in global climate, reduced competitiveness from other autochthonous microbes may contribute to increasing abundance and geographic spread of this and other pathogens.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by grants from NIH NIAID (AI46600-01
to D.H.B and F.A.), NSF/CREICO (OCE132677 to F.A.), NSF (MCB
0453877 to R.A.L.), and Texas A&M University (VPR 32293-18797
to R.A.L). NSF grant MCB 04538743 and NIH grant P20 RR016457
from the BRIN Program of the National Center for Research Resources
supported the contributions of D.C.R. and J.L. to this project.
We thank Marcial Leonardo Lizarraga-Partida and John J. Mekalanosfor use of their Vibrio cholerae strains.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Present address: Department of Oceanography, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-3146. Phone: (979) 845-5105. Fax: (979) 845-6331. E-mail:
rlong{at}ocean.tamu.edu.


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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 2005, p. 8531-8536, Vol. 71, No. 12
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.12.8531-8536.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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