The impact of primary colonizers on the community composition of river biofilm

PLoS One. 2023 Nov 13;18(11):e0288040. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0288040. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

As a strategy for minimizing microbial infections in fish hatcheries, we have investigated how putatively probiotic bacterial populations influence biofilm formation. All surfaces that are exposed to the aquatic milieu develop a microbial community through the selective assembly of microbial populations into a surface-adhering biofilm. In the investigations reported herein, we describe laboratory experiments designed to determine how initial colonization of a surface by nonpathogenic isolates from sturgeon eggs influence the subsequent assembly of populations from a pelagic river community, into the existing biofilm. All eight of the tested strains altered the assembly of river biofilm in a strain-specific manner. Previously formed isolate biofilm was challenged with natural river populations and after 24 hours, two strains and two-isolate combinations proved highly resistant to invasion, comprising at least 80% of the biofilm community, four isolates were intermediate in resistance, accounting for at least 45% of the biofilm community and two isolates were reduced to 4% of the biofilm community. Founding biofilms of Serratia sp, and combinations of Brevundimonas sp.-Hydrogenophaga sp. and Brevundimonas sp.-Acidovorax sp. specifically blocked populations of Aeromonas and Flavobacterium, potential fish pathogens, from colonizing the biofilm. In addition, all isolate biofilms were effective at blocking invading populations of Arcobacter. Several strains, notably Deinococcus sp., recruited specific low-abundance river populations into the top 25 most abundant populations within biofilm. The experiments suggest that relatively simple measures can be used to control the assembly of biofilm on the eggs surface and perhaps offer protection from pathogens. In addition, the methodology provides a relatively rapid way to detect potentially strong ecological interactions between bacterial populations in the formation of biofilms.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Bacteria, Aerobic
  • Biofilms*
  • Fishes / microbiology
  • Flavobacterium
  • Rivers*

Grants and funding

Funding sources included the Michigan Department of Natural Resources State Wildlife Grants Program T-10-T-5 Study 237026 to KS (https://www.michigan.gov/dnr/buy-and-apply/grants/aq-wl/wildlife-hab), Center for Water Sciences Water Cube initiative at MSU to TLM & KS (https://water.msu.edu/watercube/), and the Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics at MSU (TLM). In addition, we thank the Department of Microbiology and the College of Natural Science for partial funding including a Thesis Completion grant (RA). The funders had no role in study design. data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.