Abstract

Environmentally acquired beneficial associations are comprised of a wide variety of symbiotic species that vary both genetically and phenotypically, and therefore have differential colonization abilities, even when symbionts are of the same species. Strain variation is common among conspecific hosts, where subtle differences can lead to competitive exclusion between closely related strains. One example where symbiont specificity is observed is in the sepiolid squid-Vibrio mutualism, where competitive dominance exists among V. fischeri isolates due to subtle genetic differences between strains. Although key symbiotic loci are responsible for the establishment of this association, the genetic mechanisms that dictate strain specificity are not fully understood. We examined several symbiotic loci (lux-bioluminescence, pil = pili, and msh-mannose sensitive hemagglutinin) from mutualistic V. fischeri strains isolated from two geographically distinct squid host species (Euprymna tasmanica-Australia and E. scolopes-Hawaii) to determine whether slight genetic differences regulated host specificity. Through colonization studies performed in naïve squid hatchlings from both hosts, we found that all loci examined are important for specificity and host recognition. Complementation of null mutations in non-native V. fischeri with loci from the native V. fischeri caused a gain in fitness, resulting in competitive dominance in the non-native host. The competitive ability of these symbiotic loci depended upon the locus tested and the specific squid species in which colonization was measured. Our results demonstrate that multiple bacterial genetic elements can determine V. fischeri strain specificity between two closely related squid hosts, indicating how important genetic variation is for regulating conspecific beneficial interactions that are acquired from the environment.

Highlights

  • Transmitted symbioses occur through the acquisition of bacteria from the environment into a naıve, uncolonized juvenile host [1]

  • Animal colonization experiments were performed using host-specific strains and complemented mutants in both squid host species (E. tasmanica or E. scolopes) to determine whether these loci were involved in strain recognition with the purpose of describing how competitive hierarchy is linked to the manipulated symbiotic operons

  • Infection efficiency data is plotted as the log values of the relative competitiveness index (RCIs), calculated by dividing the ratio of mutant to wild-type by the starting ratio [28]

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Summary

Introduction

Transmitted symbioses occur through the acquisition of bacteria from the environment into a naıve, uncolonized juvenile host [1]. Two closely related V. fischeri isolates (ETJB1H from the Australian host Euprymna tasmanica, and ES114 from the Hawaiian host E. scolopes) were examined in order to determine whether differences in symbiotic loci were important for strain specificity and host recognition.

Results
Conclusion
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