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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, May 2007, p. 2939-2946, Vol. 73, No. 9
0099-2240/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.02892-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

,
Linda Tonk,1,
Ingmar Janse,2,
Suzanne Hol,1
Pieter Slot,1
Jef Huisman,1 and
Petra M. Visser1*
Aquatic Microbiology, Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics, University of Amsterdam, Nieuwe Achtergracht 127, 1018 WS Amsterdam, The Netherlands,1 Department of Microbial Wetland Ecology, Centre for Limnology, Netherlands Institute of Ecology, Rijksstraatweg 6, 3631 AC Nieuwersluis, The Netherlands2
Received 14 December 2006/ Accepted 23 February 2007
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Microcystis populations often consist of mixtures of microcystin-producing and non-microcystin-producing strains (10, 23, 48, 52). Interestingly, several studies show that the average microcystin content expressed per cell is typically high at the onset of Microcystis blooms but much lower at the height of these blooms (22, 51, 53). In other words, with increasing Microcystis biomass, the Microcystis cells become, on average, less toxic. Examples from three Microcystis-dominated Dutch lakes are shown in Fig. 1. This striking seasonal variability in microcystin content of Microcystis blooms exceeds the physiological variability in cellular microcystin content reported for isolated Microcystis strains in laboratory experiments (13, 29, 54). Thus, it seems that the changes in microcystin contents during the development of Microcystis blooms are due to a seasonal succession of toxic and nontoxic strains, in which nontoxic strains prevail at the height of the Microcystis bloom. A seasonal succession of toxic and nontoxic Microcystis geno- or chemotypes has indeed been observed in several lakes (11, 53).
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FIG. 1. Seasonal dynamics of cellular microcystin content (closed circles) and cyanobacterial abundance (open triangles) in three eutrophic Dutch lakes: (A) 't Joppe, (B) Sloterplas, and (C) De Gouden Ham. All three lakes were dominated by Microcystis. Microcystin contents are expressed per unit of cyanobacterial abundance. Cyanobacterial abundance is expressed as cyanobacterium-bound chlorophyll, which was determined by flow cytometry with lasers specific for phycocyanin and chlorophyll fluorescence. All data are from the summer season of 1999 and were kindly provided by the Dutch Foundation for Applied Water Research (STOWA).
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Here, we use competition experiments to investigate competition for light between toxic and nontoxic Microcystis strains. The experiments were carried out in laboratory chemostats specifically designed to study competition for light (16, 17, 31, 41). Toxic and nontoxic strains cannot be distinguished by traditional light microscopic techniques. Therefore, we used two alternative approaches to distinguish the different strains in our competition experiments. In one competition experiment, we used observed differences in pigment composition to monitor the competing strains. In the other competition experiments, we applied recently developed molecular tools based on denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) of the PCR-amplified internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of the rRNA operon (20, 21) to monitor competition between the Microcystis strains.
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TABLE 1. Characteristics of the Microcystis strains used in this study
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Experiments.
The Microcystis strains were grown in monoculture experiments and competition experiments. The monoculture experiments were performed for four reasons: (i) to ensure that the strains could all survive in monoculture under the imposed experimental conditions, (ii) to determine the microcystin content of the toxic strains under the imposed experimental conditions, (iii) to assess changes in pigment concentration during the experiments, and (iv) to determine the critical light intensities of the strains. The critical light intensity (I*out) of each strain was measured as the light intensity penetrating through the monoculture once the monoculture had reached a steady state (15, 16, 31). We ran three competition experiments. In competition experiment 1, the toxic strain V163 and nontoxic strain V145 were inoculated at low initial population densities at a cell ratio of 1:1. Likewise, in competition experiment 2, the toxic strain CYA140 and nontoxic strain CYA43 were inoculated at a cell ratio of 1:1. In competition experiment 3, the toxic strain CYA140 and nontoxic strain CYA43 were inoculated at a cell ratio of 9:1 to give the toxic strain an initial advantage.
Sampling.
Cultures were not completely axenic. However, frequent examination by phase-contrast microscopy indicated that heterotrophic bacteria amounted to less than 1% of the total biovolume. Furthermore, we used our DGGE analysis (see below) to check for contamination with other cyanobacterial species: the primers used for PCR and DGGE were cyanobacterium specific, and contamination by other cyanobacteria would have been detected as an additional band in the DGGE profiles. Contamination by other cyanobacteria was not detected.
Samples were taken from day 1 (inoculation) until the cultures had maintained a steady state (constant population density and constant Iout) for at least 1 week. During the entire experimental period, samples were taken once every 4 days from the monocultures and once every 2 days from the competition experiments. Samples were divided into subsamples for analysis of cell counts (Casycounter, type Casy 1 TTC; Schärfe System, Germany), light absorption spectra, DGGE profiles, and intracellular and extracellular microcystin concentrations.
Microcystin analysis.
For intracellular microcystin analysis, 10 ml of culture suspension was filtered in triplicate using GF/C filters (pore size,
1.2 µm; 25-mm diameter; Whatman, Maidstone, United Kingdom). The filters were lyophilized, and subsequently 1.5 ml of 75% (vol/vol) aqueous methanol was added for extraction of microcystins according to Fastner et al. (9), with an extra step for grinding the filters in a Mini Beadbeater (Biospec products, Bartlesville, OK) with 0.5-mm silica beads (45). Dried extracts were stored at 20°C and dissolved in 50% MeOH for analysis of microcystin content using high-performance liquid chromatography with photodiode array detection (KONTRON Instruments, Watford, United Kingdom). Extracts were separated on a LiChrospher 100 RP-18 (5 µm) LichorChart 250-4 cartridge system (Merck, Darmstadt, Germany), using a gradient of 30 to 70% (vol/vol) aqueous acetonitrile (with 0.05% [vol/vol] trifluoroacetic acid) at a flow rate of 1 ml min1. Microcystins were identified using their typical UV spectra (24). Total microcystin concentrations were quantified as the sum of all microcystin peaks using a microcystin LR gravimetrical standard provided by the Laboratory of Microbiology of the University of Dundee.
Extracellular microcystins were obtained from the 10 ml of filtered culture suspension mentioned above. The filtrate was lyophilized and subsequently resuspended in 150 µl Milli-Q water. Prior to analysis the samples were vortexed, boiled in a water bath for 1 h (27), and centrifuged for 3 min at 18,300 x g. Extracellular microcystin concentrations were below the detection limit of the high-performance liquid chromatograph (2.5 ng microcystin). Therefore, they were determined using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was performed according to the protocol of the microcystin plate kit (EnviroLogix, Inc.; catalog no. EP 022).
Light absorbance spectra.
Because strain V145 has a higher content of the pigment phycocyanin than strain V163, we could deduce the population dynamics of the two strains in competition experiment 1 from the relative concentration of phycocyanin. For this purpose, 2 ml of culture suspension was pressurized at 10 x 105 Pa to collapse the gas vesicles of the cells. Next, the culture suspension was transferred to a quartz cuvette (10-mm width) and its light absorbance spectrum was scanned from 350 to 700 nm with a bandwidth of 0.4 nm using an Aminco DW-2000 double-beam spectrophotometer. Mineral medium without Microcystis was used for baseline measurements. After baseline correction, the relative concentration of phycocyanin in the culture was estimated by expressing light absorption by phycocyanin (at 627 nm) as a percentage of the light absorption by the first chlorophyll peak (at 438 nm).
DGGE profiling.
Strain CYA140 and strain CYA43 have a very similar pigment composition. Previous work, however, has shown that different Microcystis strains can be differentiated at high resolution using DGGE analysis of the ITS region (20, 21). Therefore, we prepared a range of different mixtures of the two strains, to assess whether the relative abundances of the two strains could be quantified using the relative band intensities of strain-specific bands in DGGE profiles. Since this worked out very well, we decided to monitor the population dynamics of Microcystis strains CYA140 and CYA43 in competition experiments 2 and 3 using their relative band intensities in DGGE profiles of the samples. After sampling, 2 ml of the culture suspension was transferred to Eppendorf tubes and put under pressure (10 x 105 Pa) to collapse the gas vesicles of the cells. Subsequently, the Eppendorf tubes were centrifuged at 18,300 x g and the supernatants were removed. The Eppendorf tubes were stored at 20°C until further processing. We used a xanthogenate-based protocol for DNA isolation (43). We applied DGGE analysis to sections of the ITS between the 16S and 23S rRNA genes. The PCR amplification protocol and the ITSa primer set used for the ITS region were based on Janse et al. (20). PCR products were separated on a 1.5-mm-thick, vertical DGGE gel containing 8% (wt/vol) polyacrylamide (37.5:1 acrylamide/bisacrylamide ratio) and a linear gradient of the denaturants urea and formamide. After staining of the gel in water containing 0.5 µg ml1 ethidium bromide, an image of the gel was recorded with a charge-coupled device camera system (Imago; B&L Systems, The Netherlands). DGGE gel pictures were analyzed using the Phoretics-1D package (Nonlinear Dynamics, United Kingdom). Lanes were created manually with a fixed width. Subsequent lanes represented subsequent sampling days. Peaks smaller than 1% of the maximum peak were discarded. Relative densities of Microcystis bands were calculated by dividing the peak intensity of the band concerned by the sum of the peak intensities from all Microcystis bands in that lane. Here, peak intensity is defined as the sum of all pixel values within the band boundaries. The DGGE profiles were run in duplicate to check the consistency of the results.
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FIG. 2. Time course of cell number (open triangles) and Iout (closed circles) in monoculture experiments with (A) the nontoxic strain V145 and (B) the toxic strain CYA140. A steady state was reached in about 20 to 30 days.
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FIG. 3. Light absorption spectra, normalized on the first chlorophyll peak at 438 nm, of the monoculture experiments of (A) toxic strain V163 and (B) nontoxic strain V145 and of the competition experiment between these two strains on (C) day 4 and (D) day 39. (E) Changes in the relative absorption at 627 nm, the characteristic wavelength for phycocyanin, show the displacement of the toxic strain V163 by the nontoxic strain V145 during the competition experiment (solid squares connected by solid line). Changes in the relative absorption at 627 nm during the monoculture experiments of strain V145 (solid triangles connected by a dashed-and-dotted line) and strain V163 (circles connected by dashed line) are also indicated.
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(iii) Microcystin concentration and Microcystis biomass.
The increasing dominance of the nontoxic strain V145 was confirmed by changes in microcystin concentration. While the total Microcystis population increased more than fourfold, the total microcystin concentration in the competition experiment decreased to nearly zero in 10 days (Fig. 4).
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FIG. 4. Time course of the total microcystin concentration (solid diamonds) and cell number (open triangles) in competition experiment 1 between the nontoxic strain V145 and the toxic strain V163. Data represent the mean of three replicate measurements.
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FIG. 5. DGGE gels loaded with PCR products after amplification with ITSa primers of the rRNA ITS region for different mixtures of strain CYA43 and strain CYA140. (A) DGGE gel of strains CYA43 and CYA140 mixed in the following ratios (from left to right): 99:1, 5.67:1, 2.45:1, 1.33:1, 0.89:1, 0.59:1, 0.32:1, 0.14:1, and 0.01:1. (B) DGGE gel of competition experiment 2, in which the toxic strain CYA140 is gradually displaced by the nontoxic strain CYA43.
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FIG. 6. Time courses of competition between the toxic strain CYA140 (open circles) and the nontoxic strain CYA43 (solid circles), deduced from the relative band intensities on the DGGE gels. (A) At the start of competition experiment 2, the competing strains CYA43 and CYA140 were inoculated in a 1:1 ratio. (B) At the start of competition experiment 3, the competing strains CYA43 and CYA140 were inoculated in a 1:9 ratio to give the toxic strain CYA140 an initial advantage. (C) Time course of the total microcystin concentration (solid diamonds) and total cell density (open triangles) in the latter competition experiment shown in panel B. Data for total microcystin concentration and total cell density represent the mean of three replicate measurements. Data for the relative band intensities of the two strains are based on duplicate DGGE profiles.
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Competition for light.
Earlier laboratory studies revealed subtle differences in the light-dependent growth responses of various Microcystis strains (2, 13). Nevertheless, our results show that these subtle differences among Microcystis strains are sufficient to cause competitive replacement (Fig. 3 and 6). Competition theory predicts that, in well-mixed waters, the phytoplankton species with the lowest critical light intensity will be the best competitor for light (15, 50). This prediction is confirmed by a series of competition experiments (16, 26, 31). In our study, the critical light intensity of toxic strain V163 was higher than the critical light intensity of nontoxic strain V145. As predicted by the theory, the toxic strain V163 was indeed competitively displaced by the nontoxic strain V145 (Fig. 3). Competitive displacement took less than 2 weeks. The critical light intensities of strains CYA140 and CYA43 were very similar. Therefore, competition theory predicts that these two strains should be more or less equal competitors for light. However, the nontoxic strain CYA43 became dominant in the competition experiments. Even in competition experiment 3, where toxic strain CYA140 was given a strong initial advantage, the nontoxic strain CYA43 became dominant in the end. Competitive displacement of CYA140 by CYA43 took much longer, however, than competitive displacement of V163 by V145 (compare the time scales of Fig. 3 and Fig. 6), which is consistent with the prediction that the difference in competitive abilities between CYA140 and CYA43 must have been small.
Our competition experiments suggest that nontoxic strains are better competitors for light than toxic strains. In each of the competition experiments, toxic strains were competitively excluded by nontoxic strains. One might expect a tradeoff between the costs and benefits of toxin production (33). Strains that invest their resources in microcystin production and the microcystin synthetase complex may have fewer resources available to invest in other cellular functions. Although the physiological costs of microcystin production have not yet been fully elucidated, this might indeed imply that toxic strains are usually poorer competitors than nontoxic strains. However, the numbers of toxic and nontoxic Microcystis strains that we investigated are relatively small, and we explored only one set of environmental conditions. Further research with more strains competing under a wide range of different environmental conditions will be needed to shed more light on the generality of this finding.
Allelopathic interactions?
Several studies have suggested that microcystins and other toxic peptides produced by cyanobacteria may have allelopathic effects on other phytoplankton and plants (32, 35-38; however, see reference 25). In particular, microcystins can function as inhibitors of photosynthetic activity (14, 39, 42). Mathematical theory predicts that, at least in well-mixed chemostats, the winner of allelopathic interactions between toxin-producing and toxin-sensitive strains will depend on the initial abundances of these strains (4, 8, 19). That is, allelopathic interactions will be effective only if toxin-producing strains are sufficiently abundant and produce enough toxin to suppress toxin-sensitive strains. Our experiments were run with very high cell densities (up to 25 million cells ml1) typical of dense cyanobacterial blooms. Moreover, in one of our competition experiments, the toxic strain was given a much higher initial abundance than the nontoxic strain. Yet, in the end, in all competition experiments the nontoxic strain became dominant. Furthermore, the outcome of the competition experiment with strains V145 and V163 followed the prediction on the basis of their growth in monocultures: i.e., the strain with the lowest critical light intensity, V145, won the competition. Any effect of microcystins or other allelopathic substances would have counteracted this result. Hence, our findings do not support the suggestion that microcystins play an ecologically important role as allelopathic compounds in Microcystis population dynamics.
One explanation for the absence of allelopathic effects might be that the non-microcystin-producing strains used in our study were resistant to microcystins. An alternative explanation might be that the extracellular microcystin concentrations in our experiments never exceeded 20 µg liter1, which is only 5% of the cell-bound microcystin in the experiments. Despite high Microcystis densities, the extracellular microcystin concentrations in our experiments may still have been too low to have a significant negative effect on the growth of non-microcystin-producing Microcystis strains. Similarly, Babica et al. (1) recently concluded that ecologically relevant microcystin concentrations, as commonly found in Microcystis blooms, are generally too low to have allelopathic effects on other photoautotrophic organisms.
Seasonal dynamics of toxic and nontoxic strains.
Controlled laboratory experiments provide very simple environments in comparison to the full complexity of real aquatic ecosystems. For instance, in our laboratory experiments we found competitive exclusion, resulting in the dominance of a single strain. Under field conditions, however, coexistence of several Microcystis genotypes is often found (23, 30, 34, 55). It might be that ecologically relevant aspects not investigated in our experiments, like zooplankton grazing or nutrient limitation, promote the coexistence of multiple strains in natural waters. Furthermore, differences in pigment composition may enable strains containing phycoerythrin, like strain V163, to use another part of the light spectrum, which may prolong their coexistence with strains containing phycocyanin (41).
Yet, despite the simplified environments in laboratory experiments, there are striking similarities between the population dynamics in our competition experiments and the seasonal dynamics of toxic and nontoxic Microcystis strains in natural waters. In eutrophic lakes, the increase in total Microcystis biomass during the growing season is often accompanied by a decrease of the average microcystin concentration per cell (Fig. 1) (see also references 22 and 51). We hypothesize that this seasonal pattern reflects a competitive replacement from toxic to nontoxic Microcystis strains within Microcystis blooms. The population dynamics in our competition experiments indicate that the strain composition within Microcystis populations determines the overall microcystin concentration. Moreover, the toxic strains were weaker competitors for light than the nontoxic strains, resulting in gradually declining microcystin concentrations during the competition experiments (Fig. 4 and 6). Hence, our laboratory experiments demonstrate that, in principle, competition for light can drive a seasonal succession from toxic to nontoxic strains in dense Microcystis blooms.
The research of W.E.A.K. and I.J. was funded by the Technology Foundation (STW; project ACH 4874). L.T., S.H., J.H., and P.M.V. were supported by the Earth and Life Sciences Foundation (ALW), which is subsidized by The Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO). L.T. and P.M.V. were additionally supported by a European Union grant within the program PEPCY.
Published ahead of print on 2 March 2007. ![]()
W.E.A.K. and L.T. contributed equally to this work. ![]()
Present address: DHV Consultancy, P.O. Box 1132, 3800 BC Amersfoort, The Netherlands. ![]()
Present address: National Institute for Public Health and the Environment, P.O. Box 1, 3720 BA Bilthoven, The Netherlands. ![]()
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álek. 2006. Exploring the natural role of microcystins: a review of effects on photoautotrophic organisms. J. Phycol. 42:9-20.[CrossRef]
ejnohová, D. Némethová, H. von Döhren, J. Jarkosk
, and B. Mar
álek. 2007. Seasonal shifts in chemotype composition of Microcystis sp. communities in the pelagial and the sediment of a shallow reservoir. Limnol. Oceanogr. 52:609-619.This article has been cited by other articles:
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