1. Ammonium and attachment of Rhodopirellula baltica.
- Author
-
Frank, Carsten, Langhammer, Philipp, Fuchs, Bernhard, and Harder, Jens
- Subjects
- *
MICROBIOLOGY , *MARINE phytoplankton , *CHEMOSTAT , *AMMONIUM , *BIOFILMS , *NITROGEN , *FLOW cytometry - Abstract
dimorphic life cycle has been described for the planctomycete Rhodopirellula baltica SH1, with juvenile motile, free-swimming cells and adult sessile, attached-living cells. However, attachment as a response to environmental factors was not investigated. We studied the response of R. baltica to nitrogen limitation. In batch cultures, ammonium limitation coincided with a dominance of free-swimming cells and a low number of aggregates. Flow cytometry revealed a quantitative shift with increasing ammonium availability, from single cells towards attached cells in large aggregates. During growth of R. baltica on glucose and ammonium in chemostats, an ammonium addition caused a macroscopic change of the growth behaviour, from homogeneous growth in the liquid phase to a biofilm on the borosilicate glass wall of the chemostat vessel. Thus, an ammonium limitation-a carbon to nitrogen supply ratio of 30:1-sustained free-living growth without aggregate formation. A sudden increase in ammonium supply induced sessile growth of R. baltica. These observations reveal a response of Rhodopirellula baltica cells to ammonium: they abandon the free-swimming life, attach to particles and form biofilms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF