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Microbial Ecology | Spotlight

An Amoebal Grazer of Cyanobacteria Requires Cobalamin Produced by Heterotrophic Bacteria

Amy T. Ma, Joris Beld, Bianca Brahamsha
Harold L. Drake, Editor
Amy T. Ma
aDepartment of Microbiology and Immunology, Drexel University College of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
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Joris Beld
aDepartment of Microbiology and Immunology, Drexel University College of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
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Bianca Brahamsha
bMarine Biology Research Division, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California, USA
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Harold L. Drake
University of Bayreuth
Roles: Editor
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DOI: 10.1128/AEM.00035-17
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ABSTRACT

Amoebae are unicellular eukaryotes that consume microbial prey through phagocytosis, playing a role in shaping microbial food webs. Many amoebal species can be cultivated axenically in rich media or monoxenically with a single bacterial prey species. Here, we characterize heterolobosean amoeba LPG3, a recent natural isolate, which is unable to grow on unicellular cyanobacteria, its primary food source, in the absence of a heterotrophic bacterium, a Pseudomonas species coisolate. To investigate the molecular basis of this requirement for heterotrophic bacteria, we performed a screen using the defined nonredundant transposon library of Vibrio cholerae, which implicated genes in corrinoid uptake and biosynthesis. Furthermore, cobalamin synthase deletion mutations in V. cholerae and the Pseudomonas species coisolate do not support the growth of amoeba LPG3 on cyanobacteria. While cyanobacteria are robust producers of a corrinoid variant called pseudocobalamin, this variant does not support the growth of amoeba LPG3. Instead, we show that it requires cobalamin that is produced by the Pseudomonas species coisolate. The diversity of eukaryotes utilizing corrinoids is poorly understood, and this amoebal corrinoid auxotroph serves as a model for examining predator-prey interactions and micronutrient transfer in bacterivores underpinning microbial food webs.

IMPORTANCE Cyanobacteria are important primary producers in aquatic environments, where they are grazed upon by a variety of phagotrophic protists and, hence, have an impact on nutrient flux at the base of microbial food webs. Here, we characterize amoebal isolate LPG3, which consumes cyanobacteria as its primary food source but also requires heterotrophic bacteria as a source of corrinoid vitamins. Amoeba LPG3 specifically requires the corrinoid variant produced by heterotrophic bacteria and cannot grow on cyanobacteria alone, as they produce a different corrinoid variant. This same corrinoid specificity is also exhibited by other eukaryotes, including humans and algae. This amoebal model system allows us to dissect predator-prey interactions to uncover factors that may shape microbial food webs while also providing insight into corrinoid specificity in eukaryotes.

FOOTNOTES

    • Received 9 January 2017.
    • Accepted 3 March 2017.
    • Accepted manuscript posted online 10 March 2017.
  • Supplemental material for this article may be found at https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.00035-17 .

  • Copyright © 2017 American Society for Microbiology.

All Rights Reserved .

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An Amoebal Grazer of Cyanobacteria Requires Cobalamin Produced by Heterotrophic Bacteria
Amy T. Ma, Joris Beld, Bianca Brahamsha
Applied and Environmental Microbiology May 2017, 83 (10) e00035-17; DOI: 10.1128/AEM.00035-17

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An Amoebal Grazer of Cyanobacteria Requires Cobalamin Produced by Heterotrophic Bacteria
Amy T. Ma, Joris Beld, Bianca Brahamsha
Applied and Environmental Microbiology May 2017, 83 (10) e00035-17; DOI: 10.1128/AEM.00035-17
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KEYWORDS

amoeba
cyanobacteria
food chain
Pseudomonas
Vitamin B 12
amoeba
corrinoids
microbial interactions
vitamin B12

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