Abstract

The importance of defensive symbioses, whereby microbes protect hosts through the production of specific compounds, is becoming increasingly evident. Although defining the partners in these associations has become easier, assigning function to these relationships often presents a significant challenge. Here, we describe a functional role for a bacterial consortium in a female reproductive organ in the Hawaiian bobtail squid, Euprymna scolopes Bacteria from the accessory nidamental gland (ANG) are deposited into the egg jelly coat (JC), where they are hypothesized to play a defensive role during embryogenesis. Eggs treated with an antibiotic cocktail developed a microbial biomass primarily composed of the pathogenic fungus Fusarium keratoplasticum that infiltrated the JC, resulting in severely reduced hatch rates. Experimental manipulation of the eggs demonstrated that the JC was protective against this fungal fouling. A large proportion of the bacterial strains isolated from the ANG or JC inhibited F. keratoplasticum in culture (87.5%), while a similar proportion of extracts from these strains also exhibited antifungal activity against F. keratoplasticum and/or the human-pathogenic yeast Candida albicans (72.7%). Mass spectral network analyses of active extracts from bacterial isolates and egg clutches revealed compounds that may be involved in preventing microbial overgrowth. Several secondary metabolites were identified from ANG/JC bacteria and egg clutches, including the known antimicrobial lincomycin as well as a suite of glycerophosphocholines and mycinamicin-like compounds. These results shed light on a widely distributed but poorly understood symbiosis in cephalopods and offer a new source for exploring bacterial secondary metabolites with antimicrobial activity.IMPORTANCE Organisms must have strategies to ensure successful reproduction. Some animals that deposit eggs protect their embryos from fouling/disease with the help of microorganisms. Although beneficial bacteria are hypothesized to contribute to egg defense in some organisms, the mechanisms of this protection remain largely unknown, with the exception of a few recently described systems. Using both experimental and analytical approaches, we demonstrate that symbiotic bacteria associated with a cephalopod reproductive gland and eggs inhibit fungi. Chemical analyses suggest that these bacteria produce antimicrobial compounds that may prevent overgrowth from fungi and other microorganisms. Given the distribution of these symbiotic glands among many cephalopods, similar defensive relationships may be more common in aquatic environments than previously realized. Such defensive symbioses may also be a rich source for the discovery of new antimicrobial compounds.

Highlights

  • The importance of defensive symbioses, whereby microbes protect hosts through the production of specific compounds, is becoming increasingly evident

  • Lagriamide, was isolated from over 28,000 beetle eggs, likely produced by an uncultured symbiont, Burkholderia gladioli [35]. These examples demonstrate that diverse aquatic and terrestrial invertebrates utilize symbiotic bacteria to ward off fungal infections, and our work provides additional evidence to support the ideas of a similar functional role of accessory nidamental gland (ANG) and jelly coat (JC) bacteria in E. scolopes

  • Our research experimentally links a defensive function to the ANG/JC symbiotic bacterial community in the protection of squid eggs in the model cephalopod E. scolopes

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Summary

Introduction

The importance of defensive symbioses, whereby microbes protect hosts through the production of specific compounds, is becoming increasingly evident. Beneficial bacteria are hypothesized to contribute to egg defense in some organisms, the mechanisms of this protection remain largely unknown, with the exception of a few recently described systems Using both experimental and analytical approaches, we demonstrate that symbiotic bacteria associated with a cephalopod reproductive gland and eggs inhibit fungi. Defensive symbioses are found in a number of host-microbe associations, wherein secondary metabolites derived from beneficial symbionts are often used to inhibit other microorganisms or to protect the host from predation [1,2,3,4,5,6] This phenomenon has been well studied in insect associations, for example, in a number of beetle species, termites, fungus-farming ants, and in the protection of beewolf larvae [6, 7]. While the antibacterial activity of a few specific ANG/JC bacterial isolates and the whole ANG has been described previously [22, 23], the function of this association remains uncharacterized

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