[Study of ectoparasitism of ultramicrobacteria of the genus Kaistia, strains NF1 and NF3 by electron and fluorescence microscopy]

Mikrobiologiia. 2008 Jan-Feb;77(1):55-62.
[Article in Russian]

Abstract

Transmission electron and fluorescence microscopy was used to study the character of the interaction of free-living ultramicrobacterial (UMB) strains NF1 and NF3, affiliated with the genus Kaistia, and seven species of gram-positive and gram-negative heterotrophic bacteria. Strains NF1 and NF3 were found to exhibit parasitic activity against gram-positive Bacillus subtilis and gram-negative Acidovorax delafildii. UMB cells are tightly attached to the envelopes of the victim cells and induce their lysis, thus demonstrating the features of typical ectoparasitism. The selectivity of parasitism of the studied UMB to the victim bacteria has been shown: only two soil microorganisms of the seven test objects, B. subtilis ATCC 6633 and an aerobic gram-negative bacterium A. delafildii 39, were found to be sensitive to UMB attack. Other bacteria (Micrococcus luteus VKM Ac-2230, Staphylococcus aureus 209-P, Pseudomonas putida BS394, Escherichia coli C 600, and Pantoea agglomerans ATCC 27155) were not attacked by UMB. It was established for the first time that free-living UMB may be facultative parasites not only of phototrophic bacteria, as we have previously demonstrated, but of heterotrophic bacteria as well. The UMB under study seem to play an important role in the regulation of the quantity of microorganisms and in the functioning of microbial communities in some natural ecotopes.

Publication types

  • English Abstract
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Alphaproteobacteria / physiology*
  • Alphaproteobacteria / ultrastructure
  • Bacillus subtilis / physiology
  • Bacillus subtilis / ultrastructure
  • Bacteriolysis
  • Comamonadaceae / physiology
  • Comamonadaceae / ultrastructure
  • Microscopy, Electron
  • Microscopy, Fluorescence
  • Soil Microbiology*