Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Applied and Environmental Microbiology, May 2008, p. 2915-2920, Vol. 74, No. 9
0099-2240/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.02139-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
,
Center of Marine Biotechnology, University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute, 701 E. Pratt St., Baltimore, Maryland 21202,1 Center of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology, University of Maryland Institute of Advanced Computer Studies, University of Maryland College Park, College Park, Maryland 20742,2 National Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology, 113 Phahonyothin Rd., Klong 1, Klong Luang, Pathumthani 12120, Thailand,3 Department of Bacteriology, National Institute of Infectious Diseases, Toyama 1-23-1, Shinjuku ku, Tokyo 162-8640, Japan4
Received 18 September 2007/ Accepted 22 February 2008
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
A set of 221 V. cholerae strains examined in the present study were isolated from the upper Chesapeake Bay from 1998 to 2000 and collected in a census-style survey carried out in our laboratory (10). In brief, V. cholerae was isolated at five shore sampling stations (sites from North to South: F, Susquehanna river flat; B, Baltimore Inner Harbor; K, Kent Island; S, estuarine shore on the Rhode River subestuary; and H, Horn Point) biweekly during the summer and monthly in other seasons of the year. Using membrane filters and nylon nets, suspended particulates in the surface water (0- to 1-m depth) were collected and split into three size fractions: >0.2 µm, 20 to 64 µm, and >64 µm. Each of the particulate samples was used as an inoculum in enrichment cultures from which V. cholerae colonies were isolated.
The Sakazaki O serotype (13) of each isolate was determined by using a pool of 210 standard polyclonal antibodies, together with other characteristics listed in Fig. 1. Isolates were also tested for presence or absence of toxin genes and outer membrane protein genes by using a dot blot hybridization method (see Table S1 in the supplemental material for further information). Alleles of genes in each of the isolates were determined by assigning isolates to an allele class according to hybridization signal intensity. The classes were determined by coding the signal intensity semiquantitatively on a scale of 0 to 4, in steps as follows: 0 to 25%, 25 to 50%, 50 to 75%, and 75 to 100% signal intensity compared to the positive control. The results of phenotypic and genotypic tests were coded as binary or five-state characters, e.g., absence (e.g.,
hlyA) and four allele classes (e.g., hlyA+, hlyA2+, hlyA3+, or hlyA4+). Isolates sharing an identical set of characters were concluded to belong to the same operational taxonomic units (OTUs) and were treated as identical clones.
![]() View larger version (24K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 1. Hierarchal clusters of OTUs based on complete linkage analysis of characteristics (left) and maximum-likelihood tree of 16S rRNA sequences (right) of randomly selected strains. The OTU label is presented as follows: arbitrary identification no.-genotypic traits-phenotypic traits-O serogroup. The genotypic traits include transmembrane regulatory gene (toxR), hemolysin subunit A (hlyA), heat-stable enterotoxin gene (stn), and two outer membrane protein genes (ompU and ompW), and the phenotypic traits include growth in nutrient broth containing 6% NaCl (NaCl6); acid production from mannose (Mns) and mannitol (Mnt); production of enzymes, including ornithine decarboxylase (Orn), lysine decarboxylase (Lys), amylase (Amy), lipase (Lp), and chitinase (Ch); response to the methyl red test (MR); Voges-Proskauer tests (VP); response to 50 U of polymyxin B (PB); and growth at 42°C (G42oC). Symbols: , three identical sequences; , five divergent sequences. Scale bars: left bar, number of differences; right bar, substitutions per base pair. The abbreviations defined here are used in Fig. 2.
|
The distance between OTU pairs was calculated as the number of different phenotypic characteristics, or gene loci, and hierarchal cluster analysis was performed by using the complete linkage method (Fig. 1). The higher-order branches were fixed predominantly with specific allele classes of genotypic traits, e.g., toxR, ompU, and ompW. Other genotypic traits, namely, stn and hlyA, and phenotypic traits, including serotype, were variable in the lower-order clusters. Polymorphism of the 16S rRNA genes (Fig. 1), only a few bases when determined from the evenly scattered selection of seven strain sequences (18), showed congruence with phenotypic divergence and was compatible with the criterion for a microdiversity cluster (i.e., >99% similarity in any pair of sequences).
The composition of the V. cholerae population (Fig. S1 in the supplemental material) and its characteristics varied by geographic location and time of sampling (Fig. 2). To determine how much variation in the clonal diversity of V. cholerae populations can be attributed to differences in geographic location and time of sampling, redundancy analysis (RDA) (11) or canonical correspondence analysis (CCA) (15), implemented in CANOCO for Windows version 4.5 (16), was performed on either the incidence of OTUs or the prevalence of characteristics, the latter being defined as the ratio of the number of OTUs with the given characteristic to the number of OTUs in the V. cholerae population isolated from a specific enrichment flask. The difference in sampling station and sampling date was used as the factor in the two-way factorial analysis of variance (ANOVA), considering each set of three enrichment flasks as replicates for a given sample, since the effect of the difference in inocula was determined to be insignificant (see Table S2 in the supplemental material). Since decomposition of the total temporal variance by different scales of time can account for the temporal dimension in the succession of V. cholerae populations, a nested ANOVA design was used for further variance decomposition analyses (Table 1). Among the time scales, season (3-month periods) was the significant factor in the variation in prevalence of a characteristic (16% of the total variance), whereas only variation by month was significant for the occurrence of an OTU (17% of the total variance). This result strongly indicated that turnover in a component of the population was significant at monthly intervals, whereas turnover in a characteristic was slower, i.e., at 3-month intervals. In other words, the succession of bacterial taxa showing microdiversity occurred monthly, while a proportion of the characteristics, e.g., "core" characteristics, are commonly carried by the population for an entire season.
![]() View larger version (22K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 2. Prevalence of V. cholerae characteristics, shown as star charts. Inset (spines radiating from a common origin): the solid line spine represents scale bars for 100% prevalence of a characteristic. The angle of a star chart apex represents the characteristic indicated by the accompanying label; labels give abbreviations for phenotypic and genotypic characteristics used in Fig. 1 or O-serogroup names. For the star charts, the origin indicates the site and time of sampling; the apex indicates the prevalence of a characteristic, ranging from zero to 100%; the thin, solid lines show the lines connecting apexes (prevalence values) for selected phenotypic characteristics (NaCl6, Mns, Mnt, Orn, Lys, MR, VP, Amy, Lp, Ch, PB, and G42oC [see the legend to Fig. 1 for definitions], counterclockwise starting from the apex with the zero tangent); the thin, gray lines show the lines connecting apexes for genotypic characteristics (toxR+, toxR3+, toxR4+, hlyA3+, hlyA4+, ompU2+, ompU3+, ompU4+, ompW2+, ompW3+, ompW4+, stn, and stn4+ in counterclockwise order); the thick, solid lines show the lines connecting apexes for O serogroups (O2-O200 and "OUT", i.e., untypeable O serogroups). On the horizontal axis, tick marks indicate the 15th day of the given month.
|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Decomposition of variance of trait prevalence and OTU incidence by site and hierarchy of time scalesa
|
![]() View larger version (15K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 3. Distribution of prevalence of selected bacterial traits compared to pH, salinity (middle and bottom rows), and prevalence of zooplankton groups (top row). Labels: r, Pearson correlation coefficient; *, significance (P) of r determined from randomization test of <0.05. The randomization test used the permutation method of toroidal shift, keeping the temporal order of sampling and treating site as permutation block. **, significance of r is <0.01.
|
In the present study, we examined diversity in a population of V. cholerae, with a focus on phenotype and genotype, namely, genes coding for extracellular products involved in interactions with the external physicochemical environment. A significant correspondence was found between phenotypic, genotypic, and serological traits of V. cholerae and its environment. Variation in bacterial population structure, namely, seasonal succession or spatial differentiation associated with given bacterial populations, demonstrates a spatiotemporal correspondence with environmental conditions. In the case of the zooplankton community, correspondence occurred at a taxon scale, at which the microdiverse population structure of V. cholerae is generated by selective pressure arising from its habitat.
The 16S rRNA sequences determined in the present study were deposited in GenBank under accession no. EF684899 to EF684905.
Published ahead of print on 29 February 2008. ![]()
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://aem.asm.org/. ![]()
|
|
|---|
, J., and P.
milauer. 2003. Multivariate analysis of ecological data using CANOCO. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
milauer. 2002. CANOCO reference manual and CanoDraw for Windows user's guide: software for canonical community ordination (version 4.5). Microcomputer Power, Ithaca, NY.This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»