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Many cooks don't spoil the broth: Man­i­fold sym­bionts pre­pare their host for any even­tu­al­ity.

Oct 14, 2019

Deep-sea mussels, which cooperate with symbiotic bacteria for their food, harbor a surprisingly high diversity of these bacterial “cooks”: Up to 16 different bacterial strains live in the mussel's gills, each with its own abilities and strengths. Thanks to this diversity of symbiotic bacterial partners, the mussel is prepared for all eventualities. The mussel bundles up an all-round carefree package, a German-Austrian research team around Rebecca Ansorge and Nicole Dubilier from the Max-Planck-Institute for Marine Microbiology in Bremen and Jillian Petersen from the University of Vienna now reports in Nature Mi­cro­bi­o­logy.

Bathymodiolus-mussels and other inhabitants of hydrothermal vents at the Mid-Atlantic Ridge off the coast of the Azores. (© MARUM – Center for Marine Environmental Sciences, University of Bremen)
Bathymodiolus-mussels and other inhabitants of hydrothermal vents at the Mid-Atlantic Ridge off the coast of the Azores. (© MARUM – Center for Marine Environmental Sciences, University of Bremen)

Hy­dro­thermal vents in the deep sea are fas­cin­at­ing and rich hab­it­ats. Mus­sels, for ex­ample, thrive in this seem­ingly hos­tile en­vir­on­ment, nour­ished by sym­bi­otic bac­teria in­side their gills. These bac­teria, called chemo­syn­thetic sym­bionts, con­vert chem­ic­als from the vents that an­im­als can­not use into tasty food for their mus­sel hosts. The mus­sel bundles up an all-round care­free pack­age, a Ger­man-Aus­trian re­search team around Rebecca Ansorge from the Max-Planck-In­sti­tute for Mar­ine Mi­cro­bi­o­logy in Bre­men now re­ports in Nature Microbiology.

On sev­eral re­search ex­ped­i­tions An­sorge and her col­leagues vis­ited black smokers – tower­ing chim­neys where hot, min­eral-rich wa­ter gushes out of the sea­floor – and col­lec­ted Bathymodiolus mus­sels, a dis­tant re­l­at­ive of the ed­ible blue mus­sel. Back in the Bre­men and Vi­enna labs they ana­lyzed the gen­omes of the bac­teria in­hab­it­ing these mus­sels in great de­tail. So far it was as­sumed that the mus­sel is home to only one or two types of sym­bionts. However, Bathymodiolus is clearly more hos­pit­able. “In fact, we found up to 16 dif­fer­ent bac­terial strains in a single mus­sel,” says An­sorge.

Di­versity mat­ters

The dif­fer­ent bac­terial strains en­sure that the mus­sel is pre­pared for all even­tu­al­it­ies. They ful­fill dif­fer­ent func­tions, help with dif­fer­ent meta­bolic con­ver­sions and have dif­fer­ent abil­it­ies. “Dif­fer­ent sym­bionts can, for ex­ample, use dif­fer­ent sub­stances and en­ergy sources from the sur­round­ing wa­ter to feed the mus­sel,” ex­plains An­sorge. Oth­ers are par­tic­u­larly res­ist­ant to vir­uses or para­sites.

“We think that the great di­versity of its ten­ants makes the mus­sel highly ver­sat­ile,” con­tin­ues Jill­ian Petersen, leader of the Uni­versity of Vi­enna lab in­volved in the study. If its en­vir­on­ment changes – which hap­pens fre­quently in such dy­namic hab­it­ats as hy­dro­thermal vents – the mus­sel can ad­apt quickly. Those bac­terial strains that are par­tic­u­larly well ad­ap­ted to the new con­di­tions can then be­come more nu­mer­ous. Moreover, if the mus­sels want to col­on­ize new hab­it­ats, they are well pre­pared with this mo­saic of sym­bionts. Ob­vi­ously, the many cooks do not spoil the mus­sel's broth, but can ac­tu­ally pre­pare just the right broth for every oc­ca­sion.

Rebecca Ansorge and technician Silke Wetzel collect specimen of Bathymodiolus-mussels that were retrieved from the deep with the submersible MARUM-QUEST. (© Christian Borowski)
Rebecca Ansorge and technician Silke Wetzel collect specimen of Bathymodiolus-mussels that were retrieved from the deep with the submersible MARUM-QUEST. (© Christian Borowski)

“This vari­ety of sym­bionts does not fit with cur­rent evol­u­tion­ary the­or­ies, ac­cord­ing to which or­gan­isms as sim­ilar as these bac­terial sym­bionts can­not co­ex­ist,” ex­plains Nicole Du­bilier, pro­ject leader of the study and dir­ector at the Max Planck In­sti­tute for Mar­ine Mi­cro­bi­o­logy. This is pos­sible due to a spe­cial fea­ture of this sym­bi­osis: The mus­sel does not feed its ten­ants dir­ectly, but in­stead en­sures that they al­ways have ac­cess to their food source at the black smokers. The sym­bionts ob­tain their food from the sur­round­ing wa­ter. “This al­lows the mus­sel to ac­com­mod­ate cooks who may not be work­ing op­tim­ally un­der the cur­rent con­di­tions. You never know when they will be use­ful.”

From Lucky Strike to Lil­li­put

Lucky Strike, Lil­li­put, Clue­less, Se­menov, Wide­awake – these are the names of the hy­dro­thermal fields where An­sorge and her col­leagues have so far found the hos­pit­able deep-sea mus­sels. These fields are dis­trib­uted along the en­tire Mid-At­lantic Ridge, from the Azores to far into the South At­lantic, sev­eral thou­sand meters un­der the sur­face of the ocean. At every loc­a­tion the re­search­ers found the same pat­tern of un­ex­pec­tedly high sym­biont di­versity, with minor dif­fer­ences in their abil­it­ies, which may be tuned to the local con­di­tions.

“Next, we want to in­vest­ig­ate whether this di­versity also ex­ists in other deep-sea sym­bi­oses, for ex­ample in sponges or clams,” says An­sorge. “We also want to ex­am­ine if our ob­ser­va­tions are typ­ical for sym­bi­oses or if they also oc­cur in closely re­lated free-liv­ing bac­teria, which are very com­mon in the oceans.” The re­search­ers are ex­pect­ing to find that their res­ults are no ex­cep­tion, and that such a large vari­ety of bac­terial sym­bionts is com­mon in other com­par­able sys­tems. This would mean that we need to re­vise our cur­rent evol­u­tion­ary the­or­ies about sym­bi­otic re­la­tion­ships.

Ori­ginal pub­lic­a­tion:

Re­becca An­sorge, Stefano Ro­mano, Lizbeth Sayavedra, Miguel Ángel González Por­ras, Anne Kup­czok, Halina E. Te­get­meyer, Nicole Du­bilier, Jill­ian Petersen: Func­tional di­versity en­ables mul­tiple sym­biont strains to co­ex­ist in deep-sea mus­sels. Nature Mi­cro­bi­o­logy.

DOI: 10.1038/s41564-019-0572-9

 

Behind the paper: Same same but different

Participating institutions:

  • Max Planck In­sti­tute for Mar­ine Mi­cro­bi­o­logy, Bre­men, Ger­many

  • Centre for Mi­cro­bi­o­logy and En­vir­on­mental Sys­tems Sci­ence, Uni­versity of Vi­enna, Aus­tria

  • Chris­tian-Al­brechts-Uni­versity Kiel, Ger­many

  • MARUM, Cen­ter for Mar­ine En­vir­on­mental Sci­ences, Uni­versity of Bre­men, Ger­many 


  • Cen­ter for Bi­o­tech­no­logy, Biele­feld Uni­versity, Biele­feld, Ger­many 

From onboard the ship, the scientists and ROV-pilots can operate and follow ROV MARUM-QUEST during its dive to the hydrothermal vents. (© Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology / P. Wendlinger)
From onboard the ship, the scientists and ROV-pilots can operate and follow ROV MARUM-QUEST during its dive to the hydrothermal vents. (© Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology / P. Wendlinger)

Be­hind the pa­per

Read Rebecca Ansorges "Behind the paper":

Same same but different - Remarkable diversity behind identical 16S rRNA gene sequences

Co-ex­ist­ing strains of in­tra­cel­lu­lar sym­bionts dif­fer ex­tens­ively in their gene con­tent. Can this be an ad­vant­age for their host?

Please dir­ect your quer­ies to:

Director

Department of Symbiosis

Prof. Dr. Nicole Dubilier

MPI for Marine Microbiology
Celsiusstr. 1
D-28359 Bremen
Germany

Room: 

3241

Phone: 

+49 421 2028-9320

Prof. Dr. Nicole Dubilier

Head of Press & Communications

Dr. Fanni Aspetsberger

MPI for Marine Microbiology
Celsiusstr. 1
D-28359 Bremen
Germany

Room: 

1345

Phone: 

+49 421 2028-9470

Dr. Fanni Aspetsberger

Ass. Prof. Dr. Jillian Petersen

Uni­versity of Vi­enna

Phone: +43 1 4277 91206

Email: petersen@mi­cro­bial-eco­logy.net

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