Today.Az » Weird / Interesting » Ancient symbiosis between animals and bacteria discovered
29 June 2011 [17:00] - Today.Az
Marine shallow water sandy bottoms on the surface appear desert-like and empty, but in the interstitial space between the sand grains a diverse fauna flourishes. In addition to bacteria and protozoa numerous animal phyla have been found here, some only here. One of the strangest members of this interstitial fauna is Paracatenula, a several millimeters long, mouth and gut-less flatworm, which is found from tropical oceans to the Mediterranean. These worms are the focus of a research project led by Jörg Ott at the Department of Marine Biology of the University of Vienna with funding from the Austrian Science Foundation (FWF).
The surprising results of this research have now been published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
In the early 1970s, at the time of the discovery of Paracatenula,
it was already a mystery how the worms acquire their food without a
mouth and gut. The solution to this question came unexpectedly: At deep
ocean hot vents, giant mouth-less tubeworms were found. These -- like Paracatenula
-- live in symbiosis with intracellular bacteria that oxidize reduced
sulfur compounds. The energy obtained in this chemical process is used
by the symbionts to fix inorganic carbon into biomass -- just like
plants do using sunlight. Due to the high productivity of the symbionts,
their hosts can derive all their nutrition from them.
Many animals of different phyla from several habitats have been found
to live in such a symbiotic association. Compared to the great
diversity of these hosts, the diversity of the microbial symbionts was
strictly limited to members of only two classes, the Gamma and Epsilon
Proteobacteria.
Paracatenula has Alpha-Proteobacterial "Riegeria" symbionts
One of the biggest surprises in the current study was that the symbionts of Paracatenula
are indeed sulfur-oxidizing bacteria, but they are
Alpha-Proteobacteria. Several other important intracellular symbionts
come from this class, most notably the mitochondria, which are the
crucial power plants in the cells of all higher organisms.
The
nitrogen-fixing root nodule bacteria of leguminous plants, as well as
dangerous pathogens such as the causative agent of epidemic typhus, also
belong to this class. In recent years several studies have presented
evidence that the mechanisms in symbiotic and pathogenic relationships
are similar or even identical. Future projects with Paracatenula
and its symbionts called "Riegeria" could give fundamental insights
into the mechanisms that have allowed Alpha-Poteobacteria several times
to establish an intracellular lifestyle independently.
Another captivating detail of the Paracatenula Riegeria
symbiosis is that the symbionts that live in specialized cells called
Bacteriocytes account for up to 50 percent of the total tissue. That is
significantly more than in all other known symbioses between animals and
bacteria.
The Paracatenula-Riegeria symbiosis is 500 million years old
Based on genetic sequences of the symbionts the scientists have
roughly extrapolated the age of the symbiosis -- the estimated age of
500 million years makes this symbiosis the oldest known animal bacteria
association.
Comparing the phylogenies of hosts and symbionts, another subtle but
non trivial detail was uncovered -- the worms have been passing on their
symbionts to their offspring in every generation, without any symbiont
switches for the last 500 million years. How this secured symbiont
transmission is accomplished is the focus of the current studies in Jörg
Ott's lab.
/Science Daily/
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