Literature DB >> 22681178

Affiliations between bacteria and marine fish leeches (Piscicolidae), with emphasis on a deep-sea species from Monterey Canyon, CA.

S K Goffredi1, N M Morella, M E Pulcrano.   

Abstract

Leeches within the Piscicolidae are of great numerical and taxonomic importance, yet little is known about bacteria that associate with this diverse group of blood-feeding marine parasites of fish and elasmobranchs. We focused primarily on the bacteria from a deep-sea leech species of unknown identity, collected at ∼ 600 m depth in Monterey Canyon, CA, along with two shallow-living leech genera, Austrobdella and Branchellion, from Los Angeles Harbor, CA. Molecular analysis of all five leech species revealed a dominance of gammaproteobacteria, which were distinct from each other and from previously reported freshwater leech symbionts. Bacteria related to members of the genus Psychromonas (99% similarity in 16S rRNA) were dominant in the deep-sea leech species (80-94% of recovered ribotypes) collected over 19 months from two different locations. Psychromonas was not detected in cocoons or 2-16 week-old juveniles, suggesting that acquisition is via the environment at a later stage. Transmission electron microscopy did, however, reveal abundant bacteria-like cells near areas of thinning of the juvenile epithelial surface, as well as Psychromonas sparsely distributed internally. Electron and fluorescence in situ microscopy of adults also showed Psychromonas-like bacteria concentrated within the crop. Despite the apparent non-transient nature of the association between Psychromonas and the deep-sea leech, their functional role, if any, is not known. The prevalence, however, of an abundant bacterial genus in one piscicolid leech species, as well as the presence of a dominant bacterial species in singular observations of four additional marine species, suggests that members of the Piscicolidae, possibly basal within the class Hirudinea, form specific alliances with microbes.
© 2012 Society for Applied Microbiology and Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22681178     DOI: 10.1111/j.1462-2920.2012.02798.x

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


  4 in total

1.  Genomic versatility and functional variation between two dominant heterotrophic symbionts of deep-sea Osedax worms.

Authors:  Shana K Goffredi; Hana Yi; Qingpeng Zhang; Jane E Klann; Isabelle A Struve; Robert C Vrijenhoek; C Titus Brown
Journal:  ISME J       Date:  2013-11-14       Impact factor: 10.302

2.  A new species of Branchellion Savigny, 1822 (Hirudinida: Piscicolidae), a marine leech parasitic on the giant electric ray Narcine entemedor Jordan & Starks (Batoidea: Narcinidae) off Oaxaca, Mexico.

Authors:  Fernando Ruiz-Escobar; Alejandro Oceguera-Figueroa
Journal:  Syst Parasitol       Date:  2019-07-30       Impact factor: 1.431

3.  Temporal changes in the gut microbiota in farmed Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) outweigh the response to diet supplementation with macroalgae.

Authors:  C Keating; M Bolton-Warberg; J Hinchcliffe; R Davies; S Whelan; A H L Wan; R D Fitzgerald; S J Davies; U Z Ijaz; C J Smith
Journal:  Anim Microbiome       Date:  2021-01-07

4.  Solving a Bloody Mess: B-Vitamin Independent Metabolic Convergence among Gammaproteobacterial Obligate Endosymbionts from Blood-Feeding Arthropods and the Leech Haementeria officinalis.

Authors:  Alejandro Manzano-Marín; Alejandro Oceguera-Figueroa; Amparo Latorre; Luis F Jiménez-García; Andres Moya
Journal:  Genome Biol Evol       Date:  2015-10-09       Impact factor: 3.416

  4 in total

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