Phillip.light organ
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Transcript Phillip.light organ
Phillip Plourde
Symbiosis
The formation of an often long-term
association or alliance between two or more
individual organisms
Symbiont Transmission
Classified as either Vertical or Horizontal
Vertical Transmission – The microbial partner
is passed directly from the parent to the
offspring via the egg.
Example – Coral and Zooxanthella
Symbiont Transmission
Horizontal Transmission – each new generation
of the host acquires the Symbiont directly from
the surrounding environment.
Example – Mammalian intestinal epithelial and
Bacteria
Study Organism
Hawaiian bobtail squid
Euprymna scolopes
Symbiont – Vibrio fischeri
bacteria
Vibro Symbiosis
The squid establishes a very tight horizontally
transmitted symbiotic relationship with the
bioluminescent bacteria
Extreme specificity between host and symbiont
Light produced by the bacterial facilitates counter
illumination
This illumination helps the host avoid predators
during their nocturnal activities.
Predator Avoidance
Mechanism
At night
Symbiotic bacteria are housed in
a “light organ” deep within the
organism
Host emits luminescence from
its ventral surface
Emitted light mimics downwelling
moon and star light thereby
obscuring its silhouette
Similar purpose as dual dorsal
ventral coloration of many animal
in nature. ie sharks, birds etc.
Colonization of Host
Problems:
The symbiont is relatively rare in sea water (<0.1% of the
bacterioplankton population)
How do you bring the two together?
How do you make sure only the intended microbe enters the
host when there is such a plethora of potential invaders in
the environment?
Host and bacteria must solve these problems if they are to
be successful
Transmission
At dawn colonized squid expel about 95% of V. fischeri prior
to burrowing into the sand
Behaviour serves as a means of local enhancement, seeding
the environment with more symbionts
Enhancement helps juveniles during colonization which
begins immediately after hatching
Mechanisms of Transmission
1.
Water brought into mantel cavity and
drawn across the light organ.
Light organ
Bacteria must enter the
pores to access the crypts
where permanent
colonization can occur
Pores about 15µm across
Mechanisms of Transmission
Water being drawn across the light
organ alone is not enough.
Interesting fact:
1µl / ventilation
2 ventilations / second
500 bacteria / ml sea water
Works out to < 1 bacteria / ventilation
Not Very good odds
Mechanisms of Transmission
Facilitated active capture
2.
Host has evolved structures that assist in bringing V. fischeri
into the light organ.
• Structure
located
on inside of
mantel cavity
• Ciliated
epithelia bring
materials into the
vicinity of the
pores
Mechanisms of Transmission
3. Enriching symbiont via Mucosal aggregation
Before bacteria enters the pore leading to the light organ it must first
become the dominant microbe
Cilia cells secrete a mucus in which the symbionts gather
By some as yet unknown mechanism the mucus composition helps to filter
out microbes other then the desired V. fischeri
Possibly due to chemotaxis towards N-acetylneuraminic acid, a component
of squid mucus
At this stage V. fischeri becomes the dominant microbe in the mucus
Mechanisms of Transmission
After some time clusters migrate into the ducts and
eventually into the deep crypts within the light organ
V. fischeri must overcome a number of difficult obstacles
while migrating into the light organ including:
High concentrations of nitric oxide synthase
Presence of halide peroxidase – hypohalous acid
Dense cilia that beat in an outward direction
All probably important in keeping out harmful microbes
and help to control the symbionts
Mechanisms of Transmission
At each important step the luminescent
bacteria have been concentrated and finally
undergone winnowing resulting in selection
for the specific symbiont
Mechanisms of Transmission
The whole process of
colonization is very time
sensitive, requiring
certain things to happen
within a constricted time
frame
Light Organ Development
Once V. fischeri colonize the light organ
they initiate some reversible and
permanent changes in the host
morphology!
Light Organ Development
Changes include:
Initiation of bioluminescence
Swelling of light organ cells
Constriction of the ducts
(reversible)
Cessation of mucus shedding
(reversible)
Loss of surface epithelium
(permanent)
Likely that these changes would
help to limit other microbes from
infecting the host
Symbiont Adaptations
Number of mutants have been identified that lack
the ability to colonize the squid
These shed some light on the important features
of the bacteria
Motility – mutants that lack motility can not fight
the microcurrents created by cilia at the pores and
as such can not colonize the host
See that V. fischeri has evolved to be highly
motile
Symbiont Adaptations
Oxidative stress defences – mutants
that have defective putative aerobic and
anaerobic NO-inactivating genes can
not deal with the various oxidative
stresses imposed by the host
See that V. fischeri has evolved enzymatic
mechanism to deal with the oxidative stress
Light Production
If bacteria colonize the squid that are
unable to produce light they are
eliminated and out competed by wild
type bacteria
Likely due to monitoring of the luciferase
metabolic pathway by the host
Conclusions
Colonization occurs in a series of stages
Each step confers greater specificity
between the host and the symbiont
V. fischeri is not a passive player in
successful establishment of symbiosis
References
Nyholm, S., McFall-Ngai, M. 2004. The Winnowing: Establishing The SquidVibrio Symbiosis, Nature Reviews Microbiology. 2.
Questions?
Questions?