| Literature DB >> 26441867 |
Bopaiah A Biddanda1, Adam C McMillan1, Stephen A Long1, Michael J Snider1, Anthony D Weinke1.
Abstract
We studied the motility of filamentous mat-forming cyanobacteria consisting primarily of Oscillatoria-like cells growing under low-light, low-oxygen, and high-sulfur conditions in Lake Huron's submerged sinkholes using in situ observations, in vitro measurements and time-lapse microscopy. Gliding movement of the cyanobacterial trichomes (100-10,000 μm long filaments, composed of cells ∼10 μm wide and ∼3 μm tall) revealed individual as well as group-coordinated motility. When placed in a petri dish and dispersed in ground water from the sinkhole, filaments re-aggregated into defined colonies within minutes, then dispersed again. Speed of individual filaments increased with temperature from ∼50 μm min(-1) or ∼15 body lengths min(-1) at 10°C to ∼215 μm min(-1) or ∼70 body lengths min(-1) at 35°C - rates that are rapid relative to non-flagellated/ciliated microbes. Filaments exhibited precise and coordinated positive phototaxis toward pinpoints of light and congregated under the light of foil cutouts. Such light-responsive clusters showed an increase in photosynthetic yield - suggesting phototactic motility aids in light acquisition as well as photosynthesis. Once light source was removed, filaments slowly spread out evenly and re-aggregated, demonstrating coordinated movement through inter-filament communication regardless of light. Pebbles and pieces of broken shells placed upon intact mat were quickly covered by vertically motile filaments within hours and became fully buried in the anoxic sediments over 3-4 diurnal cycles - likely facilitating the preservation of falling debris. Coordinated horizontal and vertical filament motility optimize mat cohesion and dynamics, photosynthetic efficiency and sedimentary carbon burial in modern-day sinkhole habitats that resemble the shallow seas in Earth's early history. Analogous cyanobacterial motility may have played a key role in the oxygenation of the planet by optimizing photosynthesis while favoring carbon burial.Entities:
Keywords: aggregation; carbon burial; cyanobacterial motility; dispersion; microbial mat; photosynthetic efficiency; phototaxis; submerged sinkhole
Year: 2015 PMID: 26441867 PMCID: PMC4561352 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2015.00930
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Compilation of permalink You-Tube clips showing short time-lapse photography sequences of several Oscillatoria filament and mat motility events.
| Description of motility event | Time-lapse video Youtube Permalink |
|---|---|
| (A) Filaments showing positive phototaxis towards a pin point of light. | |
| (B) Filaments showing positive phototaxis towards a beam of light. | |
| (C) Time-lapse movement of filaments over a 1mm graph paper background. | |
| (D) Filaments showing movement across a boundary zone. | |
| (E) Gradual filament movements covering and burying a tiny pebble. | |
| (F) Rapid vertical and horizontal motility covering up a large pebble. |
Comparison of linear distance traveled per unit time (speed) and number of body lengths traveled per unit time (relative speed) for various prokaryotic microbial species and select eukaryotes.
| Organism | Absolute speed | Relative speed | Reference∗ |
|---|---|---|---|
| (Genus/common name) | (μm min-1) | (Body Lengths min-1) | |
| 6 | 3 | ||
| 10 | 5 | ||
| 50 | 16 | Present Study | |
| 120 | – | ||
| 900 | 450 | ||
| 1200 | – | ||
| 3000 | – | ||
| 4500 | 2250 | ||
| 9600 | 4800 | ||
| Copepod | 6.0 × 105 | 600 | |
| Human (Swimming) | 1.0 × 108 | 50 | |
| Human (Sprinting) | 5.5 × 108 | 360 | |
| Cheetah | 1.5 × 109 | 750 |