Volumen 38- Número 2: 57-67 | 2003
Article

pdficon-rbmo PDF

Bloom inside the bloom: intracellular bacteria multiplication within toxic dinoflagellates

José L. Córdova*, Claudia Escudero & Juana Bustamante

Fundación Ciencia para la Vida and the Millennium Institute for Fundamental and Applied Biology, Av. Marathón 1943, Ñuñoa, Santiago, Chile

*Esta dirección de correo electrónico está siendo protegida contra los robots de spam. Necesita tener JavaScript habilitado para poder verlo.

This study has shown that Alexandrium catenella and Protoceratium reticulatum are infected with different species of bacteria. Using 5-cyano-2,3-di-4-tolyltetrazolium chloride (CTC), a substrate that becomes fluorescent after being reduced by electrons produced during bacterial respiration and combined with confocal microscopy analysis, live intracellular bacteria were observed. It was possible to determine that these dinoflagellates had a heavier bacterial load when the culture was in stationary phase as compared to the log phase. We have termed this observation “bloom inside the bloom”. Whether the high number of intracellular bacteria observed is a result of intracellular bacteria multiplication or re-infection from broken cells with heavy bacterial infection is unknown. Additionally, the bacteria isolates from each dinoflagellate are capable to reinfect both dinoflagellates regardless of their origin. Furthermore, when sodium nitrate and sodium phosphate are supplemented into the culture medium the bacterial multiplication pattern in both dinoflagellates is modified. Finally, based on this study, we propose the hypothesis that the interaction between intracellular bacteria and dinoflagellate is bimodal: at the beginning of the growth curve is mutualistic and at later stages, bacteria become parasitic, killing the host cell. This hypothesis could explain the suddenly disappearance of blooms in nature, without excluding other factors.

Key words: Interaction dinoflagellate-bacteria, intracellular bacteria multiplication, bacterial infection, Alexandrium catenella, Protoceratium reticulatum

pdficon-rbmo PDF

 

1Laboratorio de Zooplancton, Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología,Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. A. P. 70-305, 04510 México, D. F. México