Changes in bacterial and eukaryotic community structure after mass lysis of filamentous cyanobacteria associated with viruses
Publication date
1999
Authors
Hannen, E.J. van
Zwart, G.
Agterveld, M.P. van
Gons, H.J.
Ebert, J.
Laanbroek, H.J.
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Article
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Abstract
During an experiment in two laboratory-scale enclosures filled with lake water (130 liters each) we noticed
the almost-complete lysis of the cyanobacterial population. Based on electron microscopic observations of viral
particles inside cyanobacterial filaments and counts of virus-like particles, we concluded that a viral lysis of the
filamentous cyanobacteria had taken place. Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) of 16S ribosomal
DNA fragments qualitatively monitored the removal of the cyanobacterial species from the community and the
appearance of newly emerging bacterial species. The majority of these bacteria were related to the Cytophagales
and actinomycetes, bacterial divisions known to contain species capable of degrading complex organic molecules.
A few days after the cyanobacteria started to lyse, a rotifer species became dominant in the DGGE profile
of the eukaryotic community. Since rotifers play an important role in the carbon transfer between the microbial
loop and higher trophic levels, these observations confirm the role of viruses in channeling carbon through
food webs. Multidimensional scaling analysis of the DGGE profiles showed large changes in the structures of
both the bacterial and eukaryotic communities at the time of lysis. These changes were remarkably similar in
the two enclosures, indicating that such community structure changes are not random but occur according to
a fixed pattern. Our findings strongly support the idea that viruses can structure microbial communities.