Abstract

Populations of genetically identical microorganisms residing in the same environment can display marked variability in their phenotypic traits; this phenomenon is termed phenotypic heterogeneity. The relevance of such heterogeneity in natural habitats is unknown, because phenotypic characterization of a sufficient number of single cells of the same species in complex microbial communities is technically difficult. We report a procedure that allows to measure phenotypic heterogeneity in bacterial populations from natural environments, and use it to analyze N2 and CO2 fixation of single cells of the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium phaeobacteroides from the meromictic lake Lago di Cadagno. We incubated lake water with 15N2 and 13CO2 under in situ conditions with and without NH4+. Subsequently, we used flow cell sorting with auto-fluorescence gating based on a pure culture isolate to concentrate C. phaeobacteroides from its natural abundance of 0.2% to now 26.5% of total bacteria. C. phaeobacteroides cells were identified using catalyzed-reporter deposition fluorescence in situ hybridization (CARD-FISH) targeting the 16S rRNA in the sorted population with a species-specific probe. In a last step, we used nanometer-scale secondary ion mass spectrometry to measure the incorporation 15N and 13C stable isotopes in more than 252 cells. We found that C. phaeobacteroides fixes N2 in the absence of NH4+, but not in the presence of NH4+ as has previously been suggested. N2 and CO2 fixation were heterogeneous among cells and positively correlated indicating that N2 and CO2 fixation activity interact and positively facilitate each other in individual cells. However, because CARD-FISH identification cannot detect genetic variability among cells of the same species, we cannot exclude genetic variability as a source for phenotypic heterogeneity in this natural population. Our study demonstrates the technical feasibility of measuring phenotypic heterogeneity in a rare bacterial species in its natural habitat, thus opening the door to study the occurrence and relevance of phenotypic heterogeneity in nature.

Highlights

  • Research in the recent decade revealed that microbial cells of an isogenic population can show substantial variability in specific phenotypic traits even if they share the same environment (Raj and van Oudenaarden, 2008): this phenomenon is termed phenotypic heterogeneity

  • We studied phenotypic heterogeneity in N2 and CO2 fixation in the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium phaeobacteroides residing in the chemocline of the meromictic lake Lago di Cadagno

  • Flow cell sorting of C. phaeobacteroides from the Lago di Cadagno microbial community enriched this rare species to abundance levels that allowed the quantification of phenotypic heterogeneity with NanoSIMS (Figures 1 and 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Research in the recent decade revealed that microbial cells of an isogenic population can show substantial variability in specific phenotypic traits even if they share the same environment (Raj and van Oudenaarden, 2008): this phenomenon is termed phenotypic heterogeneity. Lago di Cadagno, because an earlier study indicated strong heterogeneity in N2 fixation in this population based on the analysis of a relatively low number of cells with NanoSIMS (Halm et al, 2009).

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