Spatial and Temporal Variations in Chitinolytic Gene Expression and Bacterial Biomass Production during Chitin Degradation
Open Access
- 1 August 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Applied and Environmental Microbiology
- Vol. 66 (8) , 3574-3585
- https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.66.8.3574-3585.2000
Abstract
Growth of the chitin-degrading marine bacterium S91 on solid surfaces under oligotrophic conditions was accompanied by the displacement of a large fraction of the surface-derived bacterial production into the flowing bulk aqueous phase, irrespective of the value of the surface as a nutrient source. Over a 200-h period of surface colonization, 97 and 75% of the bacterial biomass generated on biodegradable chitin and a nonnutritional silicon surface, respectively, detached to become part of the free-living population in the bulk aqueous phase. Specific surface-associated growth rates that included the cells that subsequently detached from the substrata varied depending on the nutritional value of the substratum and during the period of surface colonization. Specific growth rates of 3.79 and 2.83 day−1were obtained when cells first began to proliferate on a pure chitin film and a silicon surface, respectively. Later, when cell densities on the surface and detached cells as CFU in the bulk aqueous phase achieved a quasi-steady state, specific growth rates decreased to 1.08 and 0.79 day−1on the chitin and silicon surfaces, respectively. Virtually all of the cells that detached from either the chitin or the silicon surfaces and the majority of cells associated with the chitin surface over the 200-h period of surface colonization displayed no detectable expression of the chitin-degrading geneschiAandchiB. Cells displaying high levels ofchiA-chiBexpression were detected only on the chitin surface and then only clustered in discrete areas of the surface. Surface-associated, differential gene expression and displacement of bacterial production from surfaces represent adaptations at the population level that promote efficient utilization of limited resources and dispersal of progeny to maximize access to new sources of energy and maintenance of the population.Keywords
This publication has 82 references indexed in Scilit:
- Multiple genes involved in chitin degradation from the marine bacterium Pseudoalteromonas sp. strain S91Microbiology, 1999
- THINKING ABOUT BACTERIAL POPULATIONS AS MULTICELLULAR ORGANISMSAnnual Review of Microbiology, 1998
- Induction of Gene Expression in Escherichia coli After Pilus-Mediated AdherenceScience, 1996
- Review of Chitin and Chitosan as Fiber and Film FormersJournal of Macromolecular Science, Part C: Polymer Reviews, 1994
- Carbon 13 NMR study of oligo(propylene oxide)sMacromolecular Chemistry and Physics, 1994
- Structure and Function of Chitin-Binding ProteinsAnnual Review of Plant Biology, 1993
- Determination of bacterioplankton biomass, net production and growth efficiency in the Southern OceanMarine Ecology Progress Series, 1991
- Adhesion and growth of bacteria at surfaces in oligotrophic habitatsCanadian Journal of Microbiology, 1988
- Utilization of surface localized substrate by non-adhesive marine bacteriaMicrobial Ecology, 1985
- Influence of Method on the Apparent Size Distribution of Bacterioplankton Cells: Epifluorescence Microscopy Compared to Scanning Electron MicroscopyMarine Ecology Progress Series, 1981