| Literature DB >> 33441694 |
Rui-Heng Chang1,2, Li-Ting Yang1,2, Ming Luo3, Yihan Fang1,2, Li-Hua Peng1,2, Yuli Wei1,4, Jiasong Fang1,4, Jin-Long Yang5,6, Xiao Liang7,8.
Abstract
Bacteria from coast seawaters are widely known to induce larval recruitment of many invertebrates. However, whether and how deep-sea bacteria, that play crucial roles in the ecological and biogeochemical cycles, promote larval recruitment remains little known. Here, the interaction between deep-sea bacterial biofilms (BFs) and Mytilus coruscus larvae was tested. All these nine deep-sea bacterial isolates triggered planktonic-sessile transition, and the highest percentage of post-larvae was observed in Virgibacillus sp. 1 BF. Except for Pseudomonas sp. 3, Pseudoalteromonas sp. 32 and Bacillus sp. 13, other BF cell densities were significantly related to their corresponding inductive efficiency. The deep-sea Virgibacillus sp. 1 BF's cue that triggers planktonic-sessile transition was uncovered. Treating Virgibacillus sp. 1 BFs through physic-chemical approaches reduced inducing impact and cell survival. The conditioned water collaborated with formalin-fixed Virgibacillus sp. 1 BF hoisted planktonic-sessile transition efficiency in comparison to each one alone. Thus, two signals derived from deep-sea bacteria trigger planktonic-sessile transition in M. coruscus. This finding firstly demonstrates that deep-sea bacteria has good potential for application in the mussel seed production and provides novel insight to clarify the bacteria-mussel interaction.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33441694 PMCID: PMC7806842 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-79832-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379