Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
J. Bacteriol., 02 1995, 1053-1058, Vol 177, No. 4
KJ Boettcher and EG Ruby
Vibrio fischeri is the specific light organ symbiont of the sepiolid squid
species Euprymna scolopes and Euprymna morsei. Both species of squid are
luminescent by virtue of their bacterial symbionts, but the natural
symbionts of E. scolopes do not produce visible luminescence in laboratory
culture. The primary cause of this depressed luminescence by E. scolopes
symbionts in culture was found to be the production of relatively low
levels of V. fischeri autoinducer, a positive transcriptional coregulator
of the lux regulon, identified as N-(3- oxohexanoyl) homoserine lactone.
Concentrations of autoinducer activity produced by these symbionts in
culture were quantified and found to be at least 10-fold lower than those
produced by E. morsei isolates (which are visibly luminous outside the
association) and perhaps 10,000-fold lower than those of the brightest V.
fischeri strains. Despite the differences in their symbiont strains, the
intact light organs of the two species of squid contained comparable
amounts of extractable autoinducer activity (between 100 and 200 pg per
adult animal). The chromatographic behavior of this autoinducer activity on
reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography was consistent with
its presumptive identification as V. fischeri autoinducer. Within the 5-
microliter volume of the epithelial core of the light organ in which the
symbiotic V. fischeri strains are housed, these amounts would result in an
effective autoinducer concentration of at least 100 nM.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED
AT 250 WORDS)
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Detection and quantification of Vibrio fischeri autoinducer from symbiotic squid light organs
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Southern California, Los Angeles 90089-0371.
This article has been cited by other articles:
| Appl. Environ. Microbiol. | Infect. Immun. | Eukaryot. Cell |
|---|---|---|
| Mol. Cell. Biol. | J. Virol. | Microbiol. Mol. Biol. Rev. |
| ALL ASM JOURNALS |