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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, April 2001, p. 1710-1717, Vol. 67, No. 4
Marine Biotechnology Institute, Shimizu
Laboratories, Shimizu City, Shizuoka 424-0037, Japan
Received 16 October 2000/Accepted 22 January 2001
More than 60% of species examined from a total of 421 strains of
heterotrophic marine bacteria which were isolated from marine sponges
and seawater were observed to have no detectable siderophore production
even when Fe(III) was present in the culture medium at a concentration
of 1.0 pM. The growth of one such non-siderophore-producing strain,
alpha proteobacterium V0210, was stimulated under iron-limited conditions with the addition of an isolated exogenous siderophore, N,N'-bis
(2,3-dihydroxybenzoyl)-O-serylserine from a
Vibrio sp. Growth was also stimulated by the addition of
three exogenous siderophore extracts from siderophore-producing
bacteria. Radioisotope studies using 59Fe showed that the
iron uptake ability of V0210 increased only with the addition of
exogenous siderophores. Biosynthesis of a hydroxamate siderophore by
V0210 was shown by paper electrophoresis and chemical assays for the
detection of hydroxamates and catechols. An 85-kDa iron-regulated outer
membrane protein was induced only under iron-limited conditions in the
presence of exogenous siderophores. This is the first report of
bacterial iron uptake through an induced siderophore in response to
exogenous siderophores. Our results suggest that siderophores are
necessary signaling compounds for growth and for iron uptake by some
non-siderophore-producing marine bacteria under iron-limited conditions.
0099-2240/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.67.4.1710-1717.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Effect of Exogenous Siderophores on Iron Uptake
Activity of Marine Bacteria under Iron-Limited Conditions
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Shimizu
Laboratories, Marine Biotechnology Institute, 1900 Sodeshi-cho, Shimizu
City, Shizuoka 424-0037, Japan. Phone: 81-543-66-9215. Fax:
81-543-66-9256. E-mail: lguan{at}shimizu.mbio.co.jp.
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