Literature DB >> 17222128

Key role of selective viral-induced mortality in determining marine bacterial community composition.

T Bouvier1, P A del Giorgio.   

Abstract

Viral infection is thought to play an important role in shaping bacterial community composition and diversity in aquatic ecosystems, but the strength of this interaction and the mechanisms underlying this regulation are still not well understood. The consensus is that viruses may impact the dominant bacterial strains, but there is little information as to how viruses may affect the less abundant taxa, which often comprise the bulk of the total bacterial diversity. The potential effect of viruses on the phylogenetic composition of marine bacterioplankton was assessed by incubating marine bacteria collected along a North Pacific coastal-open ocean transect in seawater that was greatly depleted of ambient viruses. The ambient communities were dominated by typical marine groups, including alphaproteobacteria and the Bacteroidetes. Incubation of these communities in virus-depleted ambient water yielded an unexpected and dramatic increase in the relative abundance of bacterial groups that are generally undetectable in the in situ assemblages, such as betaproteobacteria and Actinobacteria. Our results suggest that host susceptibility is not necessarily only proportional to its density but to other characteristics of the host, that rare marine bacterial groups may be more susceptible to viral-induced mortality, and that these rare groups may actually be the winners of competition for resources. These observations are not inconsistent with the 'phage kills the winner' hypothesis but represent an extreme and yet undocumented case of this paradigm, where the potential winners apparently never actually develop beyond a very low abundance threshold in situ. We further suggest that this mode of regulation may influence not just the distribution of single strains but of entire phylogenetic groups.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17222128     DOI: 10.1111/j.1462-2920.2006.01137.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Microbiol        ISSN: 1462-2912            Impact factor:   5.491


  74 in total

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8.  Top-down controls on bacterial community structure: microbial network analysis of bacteria, T4-like viruses and protists.

Authors:  Cheryl-Emiliane T Chow; Diane Y Kim; Rohan Sachdeva; David A Caron; Jed A Fuhrman
Journal:  ISME J       Date:  2013-11-07       Impact factor: 10.302

9.  Jellyfish blooms result in a major microbial respiratory sink of carbon in marine systems.

Authors:  Robert H Condon; Deborah K Steinberg; Paul A del Giorgio; Thierry C Bouvier; Deborah A Bronk; William M Graham; Hugh W Ducklow
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Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2007-08-31       Impact factor: 4.792

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