硫氧化共生体在琉璃苣宿主的消化道中定植

Cristina M Alcaraz, Joana Séneca, Martin Kunert, Christopher Pree, Marta Sudo, Jillian M Petersen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

与许多海洋无脊椎动物一样,海绿蛤与位于被称为细菌细胞的特化鳃细胞中的有益硫氧化细菌有着密切的关系。以前的研究大多集中于这些(和其他)共生双壳类动物鳃中的共生菌,通常假设共生菌只在鳃中持续定殖,至少在成体阶段是这样。我们使用 16S rRNA 基因测序和数字聚合酶链式反应,并使用共生体特异性引物对琉璃蛤(Loripes orbiculatus)的足、甲壳、内脏和鳃上的 soxB 基因进行检测。我们还使用共生体特异性探针进行荧光原位杂交,在整个全生物体水平上研究共生体的分布。尽管对这些共生体进行了 40 年的研究,我们还是在包括消化道在内的多个器官中发现了以前未知的共生体细胞群。与研究较多的鳃一样,消化道中的共生体也可能位于宿主细胞内。在没有硫化氢为共生体新陈代谢提供动力的情况下,为期 14 个月的饥饿实验导致鳃中的共生体数量比内脏中的数量减少得更多,这就提出了一种可能性,即消化道中的共生体是持久性的,与鳃中的共生体相比,消化道中的共生体可能具有不同的生理机能,在共生关系中扮演不同的角色。我们的研究结果突显了海洋丝蛤与其共生体之间意想不到的复杂关系,并对化合共生体仅限于这些宿主的鳃的观点提出了挑战。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Sulfur-oxidizing symbionts colonize the digestive tract of their Lucinid hosts
Like many marine invertebrates, marine lucinid clams have an intimate relationship with beneficial sulfur-oxidizing bacteria located within specialized gill cells known as bacteriocytes. Most previous research has focused on the symbionts in the gills of these (and other) symbiotic bivalves, often assuming that the symbionts only persistently colonize the gills, at least in the adult stage. We used 16S rRNA gene sequencing and digital polymerase chain reaction with symbiont-specific primers targeting the soxB gene on the foot, mantle, visceral mass, and gills of the lucinid clam Loripes orbiculatus. We also used fluorescence in situ hybridization with symbiont-specific probes to examine symbiont distribution at the level of the whole holobiont. Despite 40 years of research on these symbioses, we detected previously unknown populations of symbiont cells in several organs, including the digestive tract. As in the well-studied gills, symbionts in the digestive tract may be housed within host cells. A 14-month starvation experiment without hydrogen sulfide to power symbiont metabolism caused a larger reduction in symbiont numbers in the gills compared to the visceral mass, raising the possibility that symbionts in the digestive tract are persistent and may have a distinct physiology and role in the symbiosis compared with the gill symbionts. Our results highlight the unexpectedly complex relationships between marine lucinid clams and their symbionts and challenge the view that chemosynthetic symbionts are restricted to the gills of these hosts.
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