Molecular and Ecological Evidence for Species Specificity and Coevolution in a Group of Marine Algal-Bacterial Symbioses
- 1 July 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Applied and Environmental Microbiology
- Vol. 66 (7), 3024-3030
- https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.66.7.3024-3030.2000
Abstract
The phylogenetic relationships of bacterial symbionts from three gall-bearing species in the marine red algal genusPrionitis (Rhodophyta) were inferred from 16S rDNA sequence analysis and compared to host phylogeny also inferred from sequence comparisons (nuclear ribosomal internal-transcribed-spacer region). Gall formation has been described previously on two species ofPrionitis, P. lanceolata (from central California) and P. decipiens (from Peru). This investigation reports gall formation on a third related host,Prionitis filiformis. Phylogenetic analyses based on sequence comparisons place the bacteria as a single lineage within theRoseobacter grouping of the α subclass of the divisionProteobacteria (99.4 to 98.25% sequence identity among phylotypes). Comparison of symbiont and host molecular phylogenies confirms the presence of three gall-bearing algal lineages and is consistent with the hypothesis that these red seaweeds and their bacterial symbionts are coevolving. The species specificity of these associations was investigated in nature by whole-cell hybridization of gall bacteria and in the laboratory by using cross-inoculation trials. Whole-cell in situ hybridization confirmed that a single bacterial symbiont phylotype is present in galls on each host. In laboratory trials, bacterial symbionts were incapable of inducing galls on alternate hosts (including two non-gall-bearing species). Symbiont-host specificity in Prionitis gall formation indicates an effective ecological separation between these closely related symbiont phylotypes and provides an example of a biological context in which to consider the organismic significance of 16S rDNA sequence variation.Keywords
This publication has 58 references indexed in Scilit:
- GC‐SIM‐MS DETECTION AND QUANTIFICATION OF FREE INDOLE‐3‐ACETIC ACID IN BACTERIAL GALLS ON THE MARINE ALGA PRIONITIS LANCEOLATA (RHODOPHYTA)Journal of Phycology, 1999
- Bacterial Symbionts Colonize the Accessory Nidamental Gland of the Squid Loligo opalescens via Horizontal TransmissionThe Biological Bulletin, 1998
- BACTERIA THAT INDUCE MORPHOGENESIS IN ULVA PERTUSA (CHLOROPHYTA) GROWN UNDER AXENIC CONDITIONS1Journal of Phycology, 1996
- MOLECULAR IDENTIFICATION OF A BACTERIUM ASSOCIATED WITH GALL FORMATION IN THE MARINE RED ALGA PRIONITIS LANCEOLATA1Journal of Phycology, 1996
- Roseobacter algicola sp. nov., a New Marine Bacterium Isolated from the Phycosphere of the Toxin-Producing Dinoflagellate Prorocentrum limaInternational Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology, 1995
- MOLECULAR DELINEATION OF SPECIES AND SPECIES RELATIONSHIPS IN THE RED ALGAL AGAROPHYTES GRACILARIOPSIS AND GRACILARIA (GRACILARIALES)1Journal of Phycology, 1994
- DNA ANALYSIS OF EUKARYOTIC ALGAL SPECIES1Journal of Phycology, 1991
- BACTERIA INDUCED POLYMORPHISM IN AN AXENIC LABORATORY STRAIN OF ULVA LACTUCA (CHLOROPHYCEAE)1Journal of Phycology, 1980
- Growth regulating effects of phenylacetic acid and p-hydroxyphenylacetic acid on Fucus spiralis L. (Phaeophyceae, Fucales) in axenic culturePhycologia, 1977
- Light and electron microscopic observations on red algal gallsProtoplasma, 1974