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Temporal variation and lack of host specificity among bacterial endosymbionts of Osedax bone worms (Polychaeta: Siboglinidae). | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Osedax worms have a unique root system to extract nutrients from the bones of sunken animals, relying on bacterial endosymbionts for their nutrition, with a study examining the diversity of these bacteria over three years in Monterey Bay.
  • The researchers identified 32 different endosymbiont ribotypes grouped into two main bacterial ribospecies, noticing significant changes in the populations of both host worms and endosymbionts during the study, influenced by factors like the type of bone substrate.
  • While standard PCR methods effectively identified dominant endosymbionts, they failed to represent mixed infections accurately, suggesting that many Osedax worms host multiple bacterial strains that go undetected

Article Abstract

Background: Osedax worms use a proliferative root system to extract nutrients from the bones of sunken vertebrate carcasses. The roots contain bacterial endosymbionts that contribute to the nutrition of these mouthless and gutless worms. The worms acquire these essential endosymbionts locally from the environment in which their larvae settle. Here we report on the temporal dynamics of endosymbiont diversity hosted by nine Osedax species sampled during a three-year investigation of an experimental whale fall at 1820-m depth in the Monterey Bay, California. The host species were identified by their unique mitochondrial COI haplotypes. The endosymbionts were identified by ribotyping with PCR primers specifically designed to target Oceanospirillales.

Results: Thirty-two endosymbiont ribotypes associated with these worms clustered into two distinct bacterial ribospecies that together comprise a monophyletic group, mostly restricted to deep waters (>1000 m). Statistical analyses confirmed significant changes in the relative abundances of host species and the two dominant endosymbiont ribospecies during the three-year sampling period. Bone type (whale vs. cow) also had a significant effect on host species, but not on the two dominant symbiont ribospecies. No statistically significant association existed between the host species and endosymbiont ribospecies.

Conclusions: Standard PCR and direct sequencing proved to be an efficient method for ribotyping the numerically dominant endosymbiont strains infecting a large sample of host individuals; however, this method did not adequately represent the frequency of mixed infections, which appears to be the rule rather than an exception for Osedax individuals. Through cloning and the use of experimental dilution series, we determined that minority ribotypes constituting less than 30% of a mixture would not likely be detected, leading to underestimates of the frequency of multiple infections in host individuals.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3551747PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-12-189DOI Listing

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