Biofilms are a common mode of life for bacteria in many aquatic
ecosystems. One of several suggested reasons for this is the protection that
they have been found to offer organisms against predation. A major source of
mortality for both planktonic and biofilm bacteria is predation by phagotrophic
protists, which rapidly locate and graze aggregations of these organisms
causing graze-resistant strains to evolve. In biofilms however these resistant
strains do not seem to appear, suggesting chemical defence may play an
important role against predation at high cell density. High planktonic
populations have been previously found to rely more heavily on cell morphology and
escape rather than chemical methods. This study compared the presence of
chemical defences in marine biofilms vs plankton populations and found that
chemical defences were far more prevalent in biofilm communities. The authors
then went on to investigate the nature of one such chemical defence, which is effective
against protozoan predators. The potential advantages for bacteria growing as
biofilms were tested by contrasting the occurrence of chemical defence in
biofilm and plankton populations.
Bacterial communities from the marine macroalga Ulva australis were used in this
investigation due to their associations with both planktonic and biofilm
habitats. They were isolated for 24 hours before planktonic bacteria were separated
their biofilm counterparts. Niche separation necessitated the use of two different
protozoan grazing species, as there is not a single species capable of
utilizing both biofilm and planktonic bacteria. C.roenbergensis was used in the planktonic communities, while R. nasuta was added to the biofilm
bacteria. A significant reduction in planktonic cell numbers was recorded in isolates
where predatory protazoa (C. roenbergenis)
were present, which contrasted with the findings from biofilm isolates showing high
levels of resistance to R. nasuta.
The findings from this investigation provide further
evidence for previous research that suggests biofilms provide a refuge from
protozoan grazing. Previous work by the authors of this paper proposed that
biofilm structure may play a part in the prevention of predation by protozoa. These
ideas have been expanded upon here with the suggestion that chemical defence may
also play a significant role. Analysis showed that the chemical violacein was
released by the bacteria within the biofilm in much higher quantities than in
the planktonic communities. Further tests showed that this chemical was toxic
to the grazing protozoa, providing further evidence for the idea of chemical
defence within marine biofilms. As a note of interest, violacein has been
proposed as a possible anti-cancer treatment as it could induce apoptosis in mammalian
cell lines.
A review of Matz C., Webb J.S., Schupp P.J., Phang S.Y., Penesyan A., Egan S., Steinberg P. and Kjelleberg S. (2008) Marine Biofilm Bacteria Evade Eukaryotic Predation by Targeted Chemical Defence, Plos, 7, e2744.
A review of Matz C., Webb J.S., Schupp P.J., Phang S.Y., Penesyan A., Egan S., Steinberg P. and Kjelleberg S. (2008) Marine Biofilm Bacteria Evade Eukaryotic Predation by Targeted Chemical Defence, Plos, 7, e2744.
1 comment:
It is interesting that the bacteria within the biofilm are capable of producing higher levels of the toxin in comparison to the planktonic. Do they mention a possible explanation for this?
I assume this is related to the electrostatic charge of the biofilm attracting greater levels of nutrients to the bacterial communities in the biofilm. The higher nutrient levels would mean that they have surplus energy to use on the defence chemicals. Also the increased communication potential of a biofilm through quorum sensing could give the communities the advantage of working as a group against these phagotrophic protists.
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