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Published May 2009 | Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Widespread occurrence of an intranuclear bacterial parasite in vent and seep bathymodiolin mussels

Abstract

Many parasitic bacteria live in the cytoplasm of multicellular animals, but only a few are known to regularly invade their nuclei. In this study, we describe the novel bacterial parasite "Candidatus Endonucleobacter bathymodioli" that invades the nuclei of deep-sea bathymodiolin mussels from hydrothermal vents and cold seeps. Bathymodiolin mussels are well known for their symbiotic associations with sulfur- and methane-oxidizing bacteria. In contrast, the parasitic bacteria of vent and seep animals have received little attention despite their potential importance for deep-sea ecosystems. We first discovered the intranuclear parasite "Ca. E. bathymodioli" in Bathymodiolus puteoserpentis from the Logatchev hydrothermal vent field on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Using primers and probes specific to "Ca. E. bathymodioli" we found this intranuclear parasite in at least six other bathymodiolin species from vents and seeps around the world. Fluorescence in situ hybridization and transmission electron microscopy analyses of the developmental cycle of "Ca. E. bathymodioli" showed that the infection of a nucleus begins with a single rod-shaped bacterium which grows to an unseptated filament of up to 20 μm length and then divides repeatedly until the nucleus is filled with up to 80 000 bacteria. The greatly swollen nucleus destroys its host cell and the bacteria are released after the nuclear membrane bursts. Intriguingly, the only nuclei that were never infected by "Ca. E. bathymodioli" were those of the gill bacteriocytes. These cells contain the symbiotic sulfur- and methane-oxidizing bacteria, suggesting that the mussel symbionts can protect their host nuclei against the parasite. Phylogenetic analyses showed that the "Ca. E. bathymodioli" belongs to a monophyletic clade of Gammaproteobacteria associated with marine metazoans as diverse as sponges, corals, bivalves, gastropods, echinoderms, ascidians and fish. We hypothesize that many of the sequences from this clade originated from intranuclear bacteria, and that these are widespread in marine invertebrates.

Additional Information

Journal compilation © 2009 Society for Applied Microbiology and Blackwell Publishing Ltd. Received 29 July, 2008; accepted 11 November, 2008. We are grateful to the chief scientists and the captains and crews of the involved research vessels (Table 1) as well as the chief engineers and crews of the ROV's Quest 4000 and Victor 6000 and the manned submersible Alvin for providing excellent support to obtain deep-sea hydrothermal vent and cold seep samples. We appreciate our laboratory assistants Silke Wetzel and Sabine Gaude and their indispensable skills. We are grateful to Victoria Orphan for letting us use her DeltaVision RT Restoration Microscopy System along with the SoftWorx deconvolution and image analysis software as well as the Imaris image analysis software package. The author (F.U.Z.) is particularly thankful to Victoria Orphan for hosting him in her lab at the California Institute of Technology during parts of this study. We thank Shana Goffredi and three anonymous reviewers for helpful comments and suggestions for the improvement of this manuscript. This work was supported by grants from the Priority Program 1144 of the German Science Foundation (DFG). This is publication number 24 of the Priority Program 1144 'From Mantle to Ocean: Energy-, Material- and Life cycles at Spreading Axes' of the DFG.

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Supplemental Material - Zielinski2009p2419Environ_Microbiol_supp1.pdf

Supplemental Material - Zielinski2009p2419Environ_Microbiol_supp2.mpg

Supplemental Material - Zielinski2009p2419Environ_Microbiol_supp3.mpg

Supplemental Material - Zielinski2009p2419Environ_Microbiol_supp4.mpg

Supplemental Material - Zielinski2009p2419Environ_Microbiol_supp5.mpg

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