The Effect of Cyanobacterial Water Bloom Formation Upon Conjugational Gene Transfer Between Associated Heterotrophic Bacteria

Author(s):  
N. Cook
2012 ◽  
Vol 518-523 ◽  
pp. 2780-2784
Author(s):  
Li Na Tang ◽  
Xiao Yi Wang ◽  
Zai Wen Liu ◽  
Ji Ping Xu ◽  
Ling Bin Wang

Based on deep search on the mechanism about evolution of water bloom, Petri net is utilized to construct the simulation model for evolutionary process of water bloom`s pattern. The formation of water bloom is considered in the key factors and different stage. Through test and simulation, the results verify that the petri net model can be realized, which describe the evolutionary process of water bloom`s pattern, so provides another effective approach about the evolution of water bloom.


2012 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 396-399 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaoyi Wang ◽  
Shuoqi Dong ◽  
Zaiwen Liu ◽  
Jiping Xu ◽  
Xiaoping Zhao

2018 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
pp. 89-110 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frédérique Le Roux ◽  
Melanie Blokesch

Vibrio is a genus of ubiquitous heterotrophic bacteria found in aquatic environments. Although they are a small percentage of the bacteria in these environments, vibrios can predominate during blooms. Vibrios also play important roles in the degradation of polymeric substances, such as chitin, and in other biogeochemical processes. Vibrios can be found as free-living bacteria, attached to particles, or associated with other organisms in a mutualistic, commensal, or pathogenic relationship. This review focuses on vibrio ecology and genome plasticity, which confers an ability to adapt to new niches and is driven, at least in part, by horizontal gene transfer (HGT). The extent of HGT and its role in pathogen emergence are discussed based on genomic studies of environmental and pathogenic vibrios, mobile genetically encoded virulence factors, and mechanistic studies on the different modes of HGT.


mBio ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Huansheng Cao ◽  
Yohei Shimura ◽  
Morgan M. Steffen ◽  
Zhou Yang ◽  
Jingrang Lu ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Water bloom development due to eutrophication constitutes a case of niche specialization among planktonic cyanobacteria, but the genomic repertoire allowing bloom formation in only some species has not been fully characterized. We posited that the habitat relevance of a trait begets its underlying genomic complexity, so that traits within the repertoire would be differentially more complex in species successfully thriving in that habitat than in close species that cannot. To test this for the case of bloom-forming cyanobacteria, we curated 17 potentially relevant query metabolic pathways and five core pathways selected according to existing ecophysiological literature. The available 113 genomes were split into those of blooming (45) or nonblooming (68) strains, and an index of genomic complexity for each strain’s version of each pathway was derived. We show that strain versions of all query pathways were significantly more complex in bloomers, with complexity in fact correlating positively with strain blooming incidence in 14 of those pathways. Five core pathways, relevant everywhere, showed no differential complexity or correlations. Gas vesicle, toxin and fatty acid synthesis, amino acid uptake, and C, N, and S acquisition systems were most strikingly relevant in the blooming repertoire. Further, we validated our findings using metagenomic gene expression analyses of blooming and nonblooming cyanobacteria in natural settings, where pathways in the repertoire were differentially overexpressed according to their relative complexity in bloomers, but not in nonbloomers. We expect that this approach may find applications to other habitats and organismal groups. IMPORTANCE We pragmatically delineate the trait repertoire that enables organismal niche specialization. We based our approach on the tenet, derived from evolutionary and complex-system considerations, that genomic units that can significantly contribute to fitness in a certain habitat will be comparatively more complex in organisms specialized to that habitat than their genomic homologs found in organisms from other habitats. We tested this in cyanobacteria forming harmful water blooms, for which decades-long efforts in ecological physiology and genomics exist. Our results essentially confirm that genomics and ecology can be linked through comparative complexity analyses, providing a tool that should be of general applicability for any group of organisms and any habitat, and enabling the posing of grounded hypotheses regarding the ecogenomic basis for diversification.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Olga M. Pérez-Carrascal ◽  
Nicolas Tromas ◽  
Yves Terrat ◽  
Elisa Moreno ◽  
Alessandra Giani ◽  
...  

AbstractCyanobacteria from the genus Microcystis can form large mucilaginous colonies with attached heterotrophic bacteria – their microbiome. However, the nature of the relationship between Microcystis and its microbiome remains unclear. Is it a long-term, evolutionarily stable association? Which partners benefit? Here we report the genomic diversity of 109 individual Microcystis colonies – including cyanobacteria and associated bacterial genomes – isolated in situ and without culture from Lake Champlain, Canada and Pampulha Reservoir, Brazil. We found 14 distinct Microcystis genotypes from Canada, of which only two have been previously reported, and four genotypes specific to Brazil. Microcystis genetic diversity was much greater between than within colonies, consistent with colony growth by clonal expansion rather than aggregation of Microcystis cells. We also identified 72 bacterial species in the microbiome. Each Microcystis genotype had a distinct microbiome composition, and more closely-related genotypes had more similar microbiomes. This pattern of phylosymbiosis could be explained by co-phylogeny in two out of the nine most prevalent associated bacterial genera, Roseomonas and Rhodobacter, suggesting long-term evolutionary associations. Roseomonas and Rhodobacter genomes encode functions which could complement the metabolic repertoire of Microcystis, such as cobalamin and carotenoid biosynthesis, and nitrogen fixation. In contrast, other colony-associated bacteria showed weaker signals of co-phylogeny, but stronger evidence of horizontal gene transfer with Microcystis. These observations suggest that acquired genes are more likely to be retained in both partners (Microcystis and members of its microbiome) when they are loosely associated, whereas one gene copy is sufficient when the association is physically tight and evolutionarily long-lasting.


2001 ◽  
Vol 120 (5) ◽  
pp. A356-A357
Author(s):  
M FURUKAWA ◽  
Y MAGAMI ◽  
D NAKAYAMA ◽  
F MORIYASU ◽  
J PARK ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 177 (4S) ◽  
pp. 617-618
Author(s):  
Hiraki Kubota ◽  
Kevin Coward ◽  
Olivia Hibbitt ◽  
Nilendran Prathalingam ◽  
William Holt ◽  
...  

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