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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 2005, p. 8929-8933, Vol. 71, No. 12
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.12.8929-8933.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Identification of "Candidatus Thioturbo danicus," a Microaerophilic Bacterium That Builds Conspicuous Veils on Sulfidic Sediments
Gerard Muyzer,1*
Esengül Yildirim,1,
Udo van Dongen,1,
Michael Kühl,2 and
Roland Thar2
Department of Biotechnology, Delft University of Technology, NL-2628 BC Delft, The Netherlands,1
University of Copenhagen, Institute of Biology, Marine Biological Laboratory, DK-3000 Helsingør, Denmark2
Received 30 May 2005/
Accepted 14 September 2005

ABSTRACT
Molecular analysis of bacteria enriched under in situ-like conditions
and mechanically isolated by micromanipulation showed that a
hitherto-uncultivated microaerophilic bacterium thriving in
oxygen-sulfide counter-gradients (R. Thar and M. Kühl,
Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 68:6310-6320, 2000) is affiliated
with the

-subdivision of the
Proteobacteria. The affiliation
was confirmed by the use of whole-cell hybridization with newly
designed specific oligonucleotide probes. The bacterium belongs
to a new genus and received the provisional name "
Candidatus Thioturbo danicus."

INTRODUCTION
The oxic-anoxic interface is a highly fluctuating microbial
habitat, and motile microaerophilic bacteria must therefore
be well adapted to such variable conditions in order to remain
active. Motility coupled with chemotaxis is one of the mechanisms
to find the most favorable living conditions. Sulfide-oxidizing
bacteria such as
Beggiatoa and
Thiovulum have a characteristic
morphology, and their activity and behavior in oxygen-sulfide
counter-gradients are well studied (
10,
12,
17,
26). However,
microscopic inspection shows the presence of many other microaerophilic
bacteria at the oxic-anoxic interface (
30). Recently, Thar and
coworkers described a bacterium that was able to form conspicuous
veils in oxygen-sulfide counter-gradients of sulfidic marine
sediments (
27,
29,
30). The colorless gram-negative bacterium
has a vibrioid-shaped cell with bipolar polytrichous flagella.
Free-swimming cells have a unique motility behavior and move
in a boomerang-like track, as they rotate and translate along
their short axis (
27). The bacterium exhibits true chemotaxis
towards oxygen and can employ spatial oxygen sensing in its
motility (
28). When attached to a solid substratum via a mucous
stalk, the bacterium forms a cohesive whitish veil, whereon
attached cells keep rotating as a means to enhance their oxygen
uptake rate (
27). Microsensor measurements of oxygen and sulfide
gradients indicated that the bacterium's physiology is based
on the oxidation of reduced sulfur compounds (
27). Attempts
to isolate this bacterium in pure culture have not been successful,
and hence its phylogenetic affiliation has remained unknown.
Here, we describe a full-cycle rRNA approach (3) to identify this particular bacterium. Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) of PCR-amplified 16S rRNA gene fragments (19) was used to determine the diversity of enrichments. DNA fragments were excised from the gels and sequenced. Subsequently, the sequences were used to determine the phylogenetic affiliation of the bacterium and to design specific oligonucleotide probes. Whole-cell hybridization with fluorescent oligonucleotide probes (3) was used to confirm the identification of the bacterium.

Sampling site and enrichment culture.
Sediment samples were taken from Nivå Bay (Denmark), a
sulfidic habitat which has been studied in great detail for
>35 years (
9). Samples were transported to the laboratory
and placed in an aquarium filled with seawater from the sampling
site. Successful enrichment of the bacteria was based on two
microenvironmental conditions: (i) the oxygen-sulfide interface
should be located above the sediment surface in the diffusive
boundary layer, i.e., the sulfide production in the sediment
must be sufficiently high, and (ii) the overlaying seawater
should be gently flushed with air, causing a slow advective
water movement (ca. 1 cm/s) above the sediment. The setup was
kept at room temperature and exposed to dim daylight. The enrichments
were fuelled with organic material by burying Kleenex tissues
in the sediments, a slow degradable source of organic material
for the sulfate reducers.

Micromanipulation of bacteria.
About 1 mm
2 of the veils was extracted with a Pasteur pipette
and transferred into flat glass capillaries (8 by 0.8 by 40
mm inner dimension; VitroCom Inc., Mountain Lakes, N.J.) mounted
on a research microscope. Within 20 to 40 min, the inner region
of the flat capillaries became anoxic due to the O
2-respiring
bacteria. Around this region, the bacteria of interest aggregated
chemotactically in a circular band at the oxic-anoxic interface.
A microcapillary (inner tip diameter ca. 10 µm) was introduced
into the flat capillaries with help of a manual micromanipulator
(Unisense, Denmark). The microcapillary was connected to a manual
microinjector (CellTram oil; Eppendorf, Germany). The position
of the microcapillary could be followed with the microscope.
Thus, clusters of the bacteria of interest were extracted with
the microcapillary and transferred into Eppendorf tubes for
further processing.

DNA extraction.
Genomic DNA was extracted from the sediment samples and enrichments
using the Ultra Clean soil DNA isolation kit (MoBIO Laboratories)
according to the manufacturer's protocol. The quality of the
extracted DNA was analyzed by agarose electrophoresis.

PCR amplification of 16S rRNA gene fragments.
Primer pair GM3 and GM4 were used to amplify the nearly complete
16S rRNA gene (
18). Subsequently, this PCR product was used
as a template in a second PCR to create DNA fragments that could
be analyzed by DGGE (
23). The primers used in this study are
described in Table
1. The PCR products were first inspected
on 2% (wt/vol) agarose gels before they were analyzed by DGGE.

DGGE of PCR products.
DGGE was performed as described by Schäfer and Muyzer (
23).
Individual bands were excised, reamplified, and run again on
a denaturing gradient gel to verify their purity. PCR products
for sequencing were purified using the QIAquick PCR purification
kit (QIAGEN, Germany). DNA sequencing was carried out by a commercial
company (BaseClear, Leiden, The Netherlands).

Phylogenetic analysis.
The sequences were first compared to sequences stored in
GenBank using the BLAST algorithm (
1;
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST).
Subsequently, the sequences were imported into the ARB software
program (
14;
http://www.arb-home.de), aligned, and added
to a phylogenetic tree using the QUICK_ADD_TO_EXISTING_TREE
tool. The alignment was further corrected by eye, and a tree
was calculated using the neighbor-joining algorithm with Felsenstein
correction. Bootstrap values were determined with the software
program PAUP (
25).

Probe design and whole-cell hybridization.
Specific oligonucleotide probes were designed using the DESIGN_PROBES
function in the ARB software program (
14). The in silico specificity
of the probes was checked using the MATCH_PROBES function in
ARB (
14) and the PROBE_MATCH function of the Ribosomal Database
Project II (
6;
http://rdp.cme.msu.edu).
Whole-cell hybridization was performed as described by Pernthaler et al. (21). The specificity of the designed probes was tested by using increasing formamide concentrations in the hybridization buffer. A concentration of 40% (vol/vol) was chosen whereby we found an intense signal with the bacterium of interest but no signal with the other bacteria in the sample. Ten microliters of hybridization buffer including fluorescently labeled oligonucleotide probes (0.5 pmol for Cy3/Cy5 and 0.83 pmol for fluorescein-labeled probes) was added to the cells and incubated for 2 h at 46°C. After washing for 20 min at 48°C, the specimens were dried by compressed air and embedded in Vectashield H-1000 mounting medium for fluorescence (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA). Slides were observed with a Zeiss Axioplan 2 imaging epifluorescence microscope. Images were taken with a Leica D350F black and white charge-coupled device camera and acquired with Leica FW4000 software.

Enrichment and isolation by micromanipulation.
Whitish translucent veils appeared within 1 to 3 days on the
sediment surface of the enrichment cultures (
27,
29). Microscopic
inspection ensured that the veils were formed and mainly
consisted of "
Candidatus Thioturbo danicus." The vibrioid cells
showed typical dimensions of 2 by 6 µm and could be unequivocally
identified by their morphology and unique motility behavior
(
27,
28). These cells together with other microaerophilic bacteria
were extracted by micromanipulation for the subsequent phylogenetic
analysis.

PCR-DGGE analysis.
Because of the low number (between 100 and 1,000) of cells isolated
by micromanipulation, and hence the low amount of extracted
DNA, we used a nested PCR approach (
8). First, the nearly complete
16S rRNA gene was amplified using primers GM3F and GM4R. Subsequently,
this PCR product was used as a template in a second PCR using
primers 341F-GC and 907RM, which generated products suitable
for DGGE analysis. DGGE of the PCR products obtained with primers
341F-GC and 907RM showed different patterns with a separated
band (results not shown). Sequencing of DGGE-separated gene
fragments resulted in sequences with lengths between 488 and
540 nucleotides. Subsequently, these sequences were used to
infer the phylogenetic affiliation of the community members.

Phylogenetic analysis.
The bacteria found in our enrichments were affiliated with different
groups within the
Proteobacteria and the
Bacteroidetes (Fig.
1). Five sequences, i.e., DGGE-Niva-FB3, DGGE-Niva-FB8, DGGE-Niva-DK6,
DGGE-Niva-DK7, and DGGE-Niva-DK8, fell within the

-subdivision
of the
Proteobacteria. The sequences DGGE-Niva-FB3 and DGGE-Niva-FB8
formed a coherent group affiliated with
Roseobacter sp. strain
NAC1-2,
Roseovarius tolerans, and
Sulfitobacter mediterraneus.
Sequence DGGE-Niva-DK8 was closely related to a bacterium that
could degrade humic substances, while sequence DGGE-Niva-DK7
was only loosely related to this cluster. The sequence of DGGE-Niva-DK6
was distantly related to
Holospora elegans.
Three sequences (i.e., DGGE-Niva-FB5, DGGE-Niva-FB10, and DGGE-Niva-FB19)
were affiliated with the

-subdivision of the
Proteobacteria.
Sequence DGGE-Niva-FB5 clustered together with the cluster consisting
of
Alteromonas macleodii and
Shewanella oneidensis. DGGE-Niva-FB10
was related to a
Terredinibacter species, and sequence DGGE-Niva-FB19
was affiliated with
Oceanospirillum beijerinckii (
22).
Five sequences (i.e., DGGE-Niva-FB6_2, DGGE-Niva-FB15, DGGE-Niva-FB12, DGGE-Niva-FB14, and DGGE-Niva-DK4) were grouped within the
-subdivision of the Proteobacteria. Sequence DGGE-Niva-FB15 grouped together with Thiovulum sp., which was also observed microscopically in the veils (30). Sequences DGGE-Niva-FB12 and DGGE-Niva-FB14 formed a tight cluster, affiliated with members of the genus Arcobacter, most closely related to the
-proteobacterium 1021. Sequences DGGE-Niva-FB6_2 and DGGE-Niva-DK4 formed a tight cluster (bootstrap value of 100%) in between the genera Arcobacter, Campylobacter, and Sulfurospirillum.
Three sequences (i.e., DGGE-Niva-FB20, DGGE-Niva-DK1, and DGGE-Niva-DK2) were affiliated with the Bacteroidetes. Sequence DGGE-Niva-FB20 was most closely related to Flavobacterium johnsoniae. Sequence DGGE-Niva-DK1 grouped tightly with Microscilla aggregans, and sequence DGGE-Niva-DK2 grouped loosely with Saprospira grandis.
The bacteria in our enrichments represented typical members of microbial communities of coastal sediments.
- and
-Proteobacteria are frequently detected both by molecular (e.g., reference 11) as well as by cultivation approaches (e.g., reference 5). Also, bacteria affiliated with the
-Proteobacteria, such as Thiomicrospira denitrificans (18, 31) and "Candidatus Arcobacter sulfidicus" (32), have been isolated from these habitats. Members of the Bacteroidetes that are able to degrade polymers and other macromolecules are commonly found in marine sediments (13).

Probe design and whole-cell hybridization.
We first used published probes specific for the

-
Proteobacteria (
15,
20), the

-
Proteobacteria (
15), the
Bacteroidetes (
16),
and for the genus
Arcobacter (
24). None of these probes, however,
gave a positive hybridization signal with the bacterium of interest.
Because no probe has been described for the

-
Proteobacteria in general, we designed two probes (i.e., FB648 and FB741) for
the sequences DGGE-Niva-DK4 and DGGE-Niva-FB6 that formed a
small, but coherent group within the

-subdivision of the
Proteobacteria (Fig.
1). A third probe was designed for DGGE-Niva-DK4 only.
No specific probe could be designed for DGGE-Niva-FB6_2.
Comparative sequence analysis using the PROBES_MATCHfunction in ARB and the MATCH_PROBES function in RDP showed that the probes had at least two mismatches with all other 16S rRNA gene sequences. Subsequently, these probes were tested with the bacterial samples that were extracted by the micromanipulation procedure. Positive hybridization results were obtained with probe FB648 (Fig. 2B) and FB741 (results not shown). No signal was found with probe FB842, which is specific for the sequence DGGE-Niva-DK4 only. This indicates that the bacterium of interest is represented by sequence DGGE-Niva-FB6_2 and that sequence DGGE-Niva-DK4 probably belongs to a close relative, although we cannot exclude the possibility that the absence of hybridization reaction with probe FB842 is due to the inaccessibility of the target rRNA (4). In addition, the mixture of cells was hybridized with probes specific for members of the genus Arcobacter (i.e., probes ARC94 and ARC1430). Both probes hybridized with small vibrioid-shaped cells (Fig. 2B), indicating the presence of cells affiliated with the genus Arcobacter, which may be those represented by the sequences DGGE-Niva-FB12 and DGGE-Niva-FB14 (Fig. 1). Unfortunately, the target site of these probes cannot be checked on the sequences, because they fall outside the amplified fragment. The combined hybridization with the EUB338mix probe (2, 7), specific for all Bacteria (Fig. 2B), showed the presence of a third, spirillum-like bacterium for which the identity is unknown.
The rRNA approach showed that the uncultivated sulfur-oxidizing
bacterium is a member of a new genus within the

-subdivision
of the
Proteobacteria, for which we propose the provisional
name "
Candidatus Thioturbo danicus," the "Danishsulfur whirl."
Now that FISH probes are available for this bacterium, its distribution
and ecological significance can be studied. In addition, we
will continue our quest for the identification of other motile
bacteria that live at the oxic-anoxic interface of sulfidic
marine sediments. Our study illustrates how enrichment in gradient
cultures, which can be described, e.g., by microsensor measurements
(
27), can be combined with cell micromanipulation and subsequent
molecular analysis in order to identify the phylogeny of yet-uncultivated
bacteria, which can then be quantified by fluorescence in situ
hybridization analysis with probes designed on basis of the
molecular data. This seems a promising approach for future studies
of environmentally relevant microorganisms from natural habitats
without the need of previous cultivation.

Description of "Candidatus Thioturbo danicus."
"Thioturbo danicus" (Thi.o.tur'bo. Gr. N.
thion sulfur, L. masc.
n.
turbo thing that spins, whirl, N.L. masc. n.
Thioturbo, the
sulfur whirl. Da'ni.cus. M.L. masc. adj.
danicus, Danish). Cells
are vibrioid-shaped with a length between 4 and 10 µm
and a diameter between 1.3 and 2.5 µm. They contain several
spherical inclusions of poly-ß-hydroxybutyric acid.
The bacterium is microaerophilic and its physiology is presumably
based on the oxidation of reduced sulfur compounds. The cells
have bipolar polytrichous flagella and exhibit a unique boomerang-like
swimming pattern, rotating and translating along their short
axis, with a motility speed of ca. 75 µm s
1. They
aggregate chemotactically in oxygen-sulfide counter-gradients
at a preferred oxygen concentration of ca. 2 µM, where
they can attach with a mucous stalk to solid substrata, forming
a cohesive whitish veil at the oxic-anoxic interface. Attached
cells can increase their oxygen uptake rate by their joint flagellar
action, causing advective water transport towards the veil.
The stalk length can be dynamically adapted in response to changing
oxygen conditions. The species was enriched from an organic-rich,
sulfidic marine sediment in Nivå Bay, Denmark. The bacterium
is a member of a new genus within the

-subdivision of the
Proteobacteria.
The accession number of the partial 16S rRNA gene sequence is
DQ068291.

Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
All sequences determined in this study were deposited in GenBank
under accession numbers
DQ068276 to
DQ068291.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We acknowledge the kind advice of Hans Trüper in identifying
the name "
Thioturbo danicus." We thank Dimitri Sorokin for helpful
discussions.
This study was funded by the Danish Natural Science Research Council (R.T. and M.K.).

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Biotechnology, Delft University of Technology, Julianalaan 67, NL-2628 BC Delft, The Netherlands. Phone: 31-15-2781193. Fax: 31-15-2782355. E-mail:
g.muyzer{at}tnw.tudelft.nl.

U.V.D. and E.Y. contributed equally to this work. 

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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 2005, p. 8929-8933, Vol. 71, No. 12
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.12.8929-8933.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.