4.5 Article

Top-down effects of a lytic bacteriophage and protozoa on bacteria in aqueous and biofilm phases

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 4, Issue 23, Pages 4444-4453

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.1302

Keywords

Acanthamoeba castellanii; aquatic bacteria; defense evolution; lytic bacteriophage; microcosm; Semad11; Serratia marcescens Db11; Tetrahymena thermophila; top-down regulation

Funding

  1. Academy of Finland [1130724, 1255572]
  2. Centre of Excellence in Biological Interactions [252411]
  3. Finnish Cultural Foundation
  4. Biological Interactions Graduate School (BIOINT)
  5. Ellen and Artturi Nyyssonen Foundation

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Lytic bacteriophages and protozoan predators are the major causes of bacterial mortality in natural microbial communities, which also makes them potential candidates for biological control of bacterial pathogens. However, little is known about the relative impact of bacteriophages and protozoa on the dynamics of bacterial biomass in aqueous and biofilm phases. Here, we studied the temporal and spatial dynamics of bacterial biomass in a microcosm experiment where opportunistic pathogenic bacteria Serratia marcescens was exposed to particle-feeding ciliates, surface-feeding amoebas, and lytic bacteriophages for 8weeks, ca. 1300 generations. We found that ciliates were the most efficient enemy type in reducing bacterial biomass in the open water, but least efficient in reducing the biofilm biomass. Biofilm was rather resistant against bacterivores, but amoebae had a significant long-term negative effect on bacterial biomass both in the open-water phase and biofilm. Bacteriophages had only a minor long-term effect on bacterial biomass in open-water and biofilm phases. However, separate short-term experiments with the ancestral bacteriophages and bacteria revealed that bacteriophages crash the bacterial biomass dramatically in the open-water phase within the first 24h. Thereafter, the bacteria evolve phage-resistance that largely prevents top-down effects. The combination of all three enemy types was most effective in reducing biofilm biomass, whereas in the open-water phase the ciliates dominated the trophic effects. Our results highlight the importance of enemy feeding mode on determining the spatial distribution and abundance of bacterial biomass. Moreover, the enemy type can be crucially important predictor of whether the rapid defense evolution can significantly affect top-down regulation of bacteria.

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