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Journal of Bacteriology, May 2003, p . 3147-3154, Vol . 185,
No . 10
Early
Colonization Events in the Mutualistic Association between Steinernema
carpocapsae Nematodes and Xenorhabdus nematophila Bacteria
Eric C . Martens, Kurt Heungens,
and Heidi Goodrich-Blair*
Department of Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706
Received 16 December 2002/ Accepted 4 February 2003
The bacterium Xenorhabdus nematophila is a mutualist of the
entomopathogenic nematode Steinernema carpocapsae . During its
life cycle, the bacterium exists both separately from the nematode
and as an intestinal resident of a nonfeeding nematode form, the
infective juvenile (IJ) . The progression of X . nematophila
from an ex vivo existence to a specific and persistent colonization
of IJs is a model to understand the mechanisms mediating the
initiation and maintenance of benign host-microbe interactions . To
help characterize this process, we constructed an X . nematophila
strain that constitutively expresses green fluorescent protein,
which allowed its presence to be monitored within IJs . Using this
strain, we showed that few bacterial cells initiate colonization of
an individual IJ and that these grow inside the lumen of the IJ
intestine in a reproducible polyphasic pattern during colonization .
In accordance with these two observations, we demonstrated that the
final population of bacteria in a nematode is of predominantly
monoclonal origin, suggesting that only one or two bacterial clones
initiate or persist during colonization of an individual nematode .
These data suggest that X . nematophila initiates IJ
colonization by competing for limited colonization sites or resources
within the nematode intestine . This report represents the first
description of the biological interactions occurring between X .
nematophila and S . carpocapsae during the early stages of
the colonization process, provides insights into the physiology of
X . nematophila in its host niche, and will facilitate
interpretation of future data regarding the molecular events
mediating this process .
The mutualistic, monospecific partnership between the gram-negative
enterobacterium Xenorhabdus nematophila and its entomopathogenic
nematode host, Steinernema carpocapsae, is one of several emerging
models to study benign host-microbe interactions (9,
13, 27) . The natural life cycle
of S . carpocapsae nematodes includes reproductive stages that
occur exclusively within larval-stage insects and that are not
colonized by X . nematophila and also includes a
nonreproductive, nonfeeding, soil-dwelling stage known as the
infective juvenile (IJ), which is colonized, at a discrete intestinal
location termed the vesicle, by a monoculture of X . nematophila
bacteria (9) .
Colonized IJs exist in the soil until they invade a susceptible
insect host, seeking the blood system or hemolymph . Once there, the
IJs release their X . nematophila symbionts by defecation (19,
31; E . C . Martens and H . Goodrich-Blair, unpublished data) . At this
point in their life cycles, bacteria and nematodes exist separately
although in close proximity to one another . The released X .
nematophila bacteria contribute to the killing of the insect host
and grow to high density in the resulting cadaver . These specific
bacteria are essential for nematode growth and development presumably
both by serving as a direct food source and by supplying nutrients
through degradation of the insect carcass (2,
22) .
When nematode numbers become high and nutrients become limiting in
the insect cadaver, S . carpocapsae nematode progeny reassociate
with X . nematophila bacteria and differentiate into the colonized,
nonfeeding IJ form that emerges into the soil to forage for a
new host (23) . IJ formation, and concomitant colonization
with X . nematophila, is a model of the process by which a specific
and intimate association between a microbe and a eukaryotic
host in a benign relationship develops (9, 27) .
A deeper understanding of X . nematophila-nematode interactions
will provide insights into the general mechanisms mediating the
development and maintenance of benign microbe-host interactions and
also allow a comparison of benign interactions with those that are
pathogenic (27) .
We chose to characterize the early stages of nematode colonization
by X . nematophila to better understand the process by which
this mutualistic interaction is initiated and maintained . A
characteristic of the IJ stage of the nematode, which develops within
the spent insect cadaver prior to emergence into the soil, is its
sealed mouth and anus (18) . The IJ therefore does
not ingest resources or excrete intestinal waste during its existence
outside an insect and must be colonized by X . nematophila
prior to development into this stage . Until now, experiments
exploring the initiation of X . nematophila colonization of the
pre-IJ nematode have not been reported . We considered two possible
models to explain how mature IJs (i.e., those that have emerged from
an insect host) obtain a full complement of colonizing bacteria (13,
19) . In the simplest model, we postulated that a
developing IJ ingests a large number of bacteria from its environment
before it ceases feeding and that these bacteria, instead of being
digested, are retained in the intestinal vesicle . A more complex
model supposes that a pre-IJ nematode retains only one or a few
bacteria in a selective manner and, after the IJ ceases ingesting
external bacteria, these few bacteria grow until they reach the full
density found in a mature IJ .
To test these models, we conducted experiments utilizing an in
vitro culturing technique in which S . carpocapsae nematodes
are grown on a lawn of X . nematophila bacteria (31) .
This technique allows monitoring of nematodes throughout their
reproductive life cycle, and progeny IJs emerging from these lawns
are colonized at levels that are comparable to those of IJs produced
from insect infection (13) . In addition to this
technique, we developed and/or implemented several new tools that
facilitated the examination of early stages in the association
between nematodes and bacteria . We present data that document the
process by which nematodes achieve the fully colonized state,
differentiate between the hypothetical colonization models described
above, and provide insight into mechanisms mediating early
colonization events .
Strains, plasmids, and culture conditions. X . nematophila
strains and plasmids used in this study are listed in Table
1 . Permanent stocks of bacterial strains were maintained
at -80°C in Luria-Bertani (LB) broth (14) supplemented
with 25% glycerol (for Escherichia coli) or 10% dimethyl
sulfoxide (for X . nematophila) . Unless stated otherwise, X .
nematophila and E . coli were grown at 30°C in LB broth or
agar that either had not been exposed to light or to which 0.1%
pyruvate had been added (32) . When appropriate,
media were supplemented with chloramphenicol (10 µg ml-1
for X . nematophila or 30 µg ml-1 for E . coli)
and gentamicin (30 µg ml-1) . Solid, lipid-agar medium for
coculture of S . carpocapsae on lawns of X . nematophila
was prepared as described elsewhere (27) . E .
coli S17-1
pir (25) was used to conjugally transfer
plasmids into X . nematophila strains as previously described (10).
S . carpocapsae (strain All) was propagated by passage through
Galleria mellonella larvae (Vanderhorst Wholesale Inc., St .
Marys, Ohio) and harvested in White traps as previously described (27,
30) . As needed, axenic, J1 stage S . carpocapsae
organisms were isolated by harvesting nematode eggs with bleach
from gravid adult females as previously described (28),
except that the eggs were rinsed with sterile LB broth instead of
water or buffered salts solution .
| TABLE 1 . Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study
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The enhanced isoform of green fluorescent protein (GFP) used in this
work was Super-Glo GFP (Qbiogene, Carlsbad, Calif.) and is hereafter
referred to as GFP . To obtain constitutive expression of the GFP
gene, it was fused to a 126-bp fragment containing the aphA
promoter (PaphA) amplified from E . coli
transposon Tn903 by using pNK2859 (29) as a template
and the primers 5'-GGGGGGAGATCTCGTTGTGTCTCAAAATCTCTG-3' and
5'-GGGTCTAGATGAATATGGCTCATAACACCC-3' . The resulting PaphA
fragment was cut with BglII and XbaI and ligated into
pQBI63 (Qbiogene) cut with BglII and XbaI, resulting in
the plasmid pECM9 . For subsequent transfer of this fusion into X .
nematophila, a BglII-EcoRV PaphA-GFP gene
fragment was subcloned from pECM9 into pKR100B to create the plasmid
pECM2 . Plasmid pKR100B is a suicide vector used for delivering
constructs into X . nematophila and was constructed by cutting
pKR100 (a derivative of pGP704 [pJM703.1] [15],
kindly provided by Karen Visick, Loyola University of Chicago,
Chicago, Ill.) with SalI and XbaI and inserting a
linker comprised of the sequence 5'-GTCGACAGATCTAGA-3', thereby
generating a unique BglII site . To direct the PaphA-GFP
gene fragment to the chromosome of X . nematophila, Sau3AI genomic
fragments (average size, 0.4 to1.6 kb) were ligated into pECM2
cut with BglII . To generate an X . nematophila strain expressing
the GFP gene, this library was electroporated as previously
described (4) into E . coli S17-1
pir and conjugated en masse into X . nematophila ATCC
19061 (25) . Exconjugants were selected on
chloramphenicol . Since pECM2 replicates using the origin oriR6K,
which is not functional in X . nematophila, these exconjugants
must contain integrations, directed by homologous recombination with
the cloned Sau3AI fragments, of pECM2 into the bacterial
chromosome . Four exconjugants were selected based on their high
fluorescence levels detected by flow cytometry (conducted at the
University of Wisconsin—Madison CSC Flow Cytometry Facility) . Of
these, strain HGB340 was the brightest and was used for all
subsequent studies . To determine the location of the plasmid
insertion in strain HGB340, the original library fragment that was
cloned in pECM2 and that directed integration into the X .
nematophila chromosome was isolated and sequenced (24) .
The cloned fragment (GenBank accession number
AY194223) is 614 bp and shares predicted amino acid sequence
similarity with a putative potassium efflux system from Yersinia
pestis . We have found that HGB340 colonizes S . carpocapsae
similarly to HGB007 (the wild type) under all conditions tested (data
not shown), indicating that integration of pECM20 and constitutive
expression of the GFP gene do not exert an observable effect on
the process of bacterial colonization of nematodes . Additionally, the
E . coli S17-1
pir strain harboring pECM20 has proven suitable for labeling
other X . nematophila strains and mutants with the GFP gene
(data not shown) .
Mini-Tn7 constructs containing the ECFP and DsRed genes (Clontech,
Palo Alto, Calif.) were kind gifts from Lotte Lambertsen (Technical
University of Denmark, Lyngby) . These constructs were conjugated
into HGB007 from E . coli S17-1
pir and delivered to the X . nematophila att Tn7
site (Martens and Goodrich-Blair, unpublished data) by triparental
mating using the helper plasmid pUX-BF13 (5) .
In vitro coculture of nematodes on bacterial lawns. In vitro
coculture of nematodes on bacterial lawns was performed as described
previously (27) in 6-cm-diameter petri plates (Fisher
Scientific, Pittsburgh, Pa.) containing lipid-agar medium, except
that cocultures for preparation of immature IJs were carried
out in 500-cm2 polystyrene plates (Corning, Corning, N.Y.) and
inoculated with IJs instead of axenic J1 nematodes . Approximately
4 x 105 IJs were inoculated
onto each 500-cm2 plate to initiate nematode growth .
Culture progression was monitored by microscopic examination of
nematodes (see below) . Immature IJs typically formed 8 to 9 days
after introduction of the IJ inoculum into cocultures .
SDS isolation of immature S . carpocapsae IJs from mixtures of
developmental stages. Immature IJs were harvested when approximately
50% of the nematodes present in an in vitro coculture were
microscopically observed to be IJs and were selectively isolated from
the heterogeneous populations of other S . carpocapsae stages
by treatment with sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS; Sigma, St . Louis,
Mo.) . IJs are resistant to treatment with 1% SDS, while other stages
are not . This treatment was based on the procedure described by
Cassada and Russell (8) for the specific isolation
of Caenorhabditis elegans dauerlarvae from mixed developmental
stages . Nematodes were harvested by flooding the culture plates with
200
ml of distilled water (dH2O), resuspending the nematodes
and remaining bacterial cells, and centrifuging the suspensions at
1,000 x g . Nematode
suspensions were treated with 1% SDS for 20 min with periodic
agitation and then washed a total of three times with dH2O
(50 ml/wash) . Nematodes were rinsed an additional two times with dH2O
in a filter apparatus equipped with an 11-µm-pore-size nylon membrane
(Fisher Scientific) . Immature IJs recovered in this manner were
stored in dH2O at 25°C during the period of bacterial
outgrowth . Control experiments were conducted to determine if SDS
treatment affects the number of bacteria in IJs . In one of these
experiments, 0.5% bleach was employed to surface sterilize IJs and to
remove other nematode stages from the population (see Results) .
Treatment with bleach achieved the same result that treatment with
SDS did; however, IJ survival was poor after this treatment, so it
was not used for selective isolation of IJs used for prolonged
observation .
Isolation of nematodes from bacteria without SDS. To monitor
outgrowth of HGB340 in immature IJs, nematodes were harvested from
heterogeneous populations without the use of SDS treatment . These
nematodes were washed repeatedly with excess volumes of sterile dH2O
to remove external bacteria and were subsequently stored in dH2O .
Microscopic examination of S . carpocapsae. To observe
S . carpocapsae microscopically, suspensions of nematodes were
applied to the surface of a glass slide on which a 4% agarose pad
containing 10 mM sodium azide (Sigma) had been applied . A coverslip
was applied to the slide before the nematode suspension was allowed
to dry completely, and the slide was observed under a Nikon Eclipse
TE300 inverted microscope at x600
magnification . Fluorescence microscopy of GFP-containing samples was
performed by using fluorescein isothiocyanate, tetramethyl rhodamine
isocyanate, and triple-band DAPI
(4',6'-diamidino-2-phenylindole)-FITC (fluorescein
isothiocyanate)-TRITC (tetramethyl rhodamine isothiocyanate) filter
sets (Chroma, Brattleboro, Vt.; items 31001, 31002, and 8200,
respectively) . GFP-expressing bacteria were differentiated from
nematode intestinal autofluorescence by using filter set 8200 and
appeared green, whereas autofluorescence appears white-yellow . Images
were recorded electronically with a digital camera (Hamamatsu,
Hamamatsu City, Japan; model C4742-95-10NR) and a personal computer
equipped with MetaMorph version 4.5r6 software (Universal Imaging
Corporation, West Chester, Pa.) . Images were prepared for publication
by using Adobe Photoshop version 6.0.1 and Deneba Canvas version 7.0 .
Quantification of colonizing bacteria. Quantification of
X . nematophila CFU per IJ was performed as previously described (13) .
Samples of maturing IJs that had been isolated by use of the SDS
isolation procedure described above were removed at various times
after isolation, surface sterilized, enumerated, and sonicated in a
water bath sonicator (Branson Ultrasonics, Danbury, Conn.) to
liberate bacteria from the intestines of the IJs . Between 9
x 103 and 1.1
x 104 IJs were
sonicated at each time point, and the number of CFU per IJ was
determined by plating dilutions of sonicates on LB agar plus 0.1%
pyruvate . The detection limit of this procedure was
0.003
CFU/IJ, and approximately 60 CFU/IJ were normally detected in IJs
cultivated on wild-type X . nematophila (13) . Because
microscopic examination of nematodes containing HGB340 detected
visible bacteria in the intestinal vesicle exclusively (see below),
we believe that viable counts of CFU per IJ determined through
homogenization and plating reflect bacteria that are liberated from
this location only . Raw data from the curves shown below (see Fig.
3) were analyzed by analysis of variance and a t
test to determine if significant reductions in recoverable CFU per IJ
occurred during the course of growth . To calculate the maximum
doubling time of X . nematophila bacteria in nematodes, a
linear regression analysis was performed with data taken from four
regions of the curves shown below (see Fig . 3) . Regions
containing three or more consecutive points of increasing value
were selected for analysis, and the slopes of best-fit lines were
used directly to determine the doubling time at each point .
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FIG . 3 . X . nematophila growth in isolated immature IJs .
Populations of immature IJs were assayed at 4- or 6-h intervals to
determine the average number of X . nematophila cells associated
with IJs . Two replicates each from two separate experiments (A and B)
are shown . Each point is the average result for three individual assays
± standard error (measured in CFU per IJ) . Lowercase letters a to d
indicate the regions of growth where data were used to determine the
maximum growth rate (see Materials and Methods) . Peaks from both curves
under the region labeled c and d were used.
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Analysis of signature-tagged clones in single nematodes. To
determine which signature-tagged clone(s) was present in individual
nematodes, IJs produced on a mixed lawn of strains STM-1, STM-2, and
STM-3 were surface sterilized and individual IJs were ground in 100
µl of LB broth in a Duall 20 homogenizer (Kimble-Kontes, Vineland,
N.J.) . The entire 100-µl volume of homogenate was plated on LB agar,
and only homogenates from which
88
CFU were recovered were analyzed . Individual X . nematophila
colonies were patched onto LB agar plates overlaid with sterilized
10-cm-diameter Hybond nylon membranes (Amersham-Pharmacia, Piscataway,
N.J.) . Colony blot and hybridization analyses to detect signature-tagged
strains were performed as previously described (12,
13), with the exception that bacterial DNA was
cross-linked to nylon membranes by using a UV cross-linker
(Stratagene, La Jolla, Calif.) .
To observe interactions between X . nematophila and S . carpocapsae
during early stages of the colonization process, we constructed
a derivative of wild-type X . nematophila HGB007 that constitutively
expresses an enhanced isoform of GFP (see Materials and Methods;
Table 1) . This strain, HGB340, is readily detectable
inside mature IJs by epifluorescence microscopy (Fig .
1A) and colonizes IJs to levels similar to those of the parent
(data not shown) .
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FIG . 1 . Bacterial colonization of immature IJs . Vesicles of mature IJs
may contain 40 to >100 X . nematophila cells (A), whereas the
vesicles of immature IJs contain only a few X . nematophila cells
(indicated by enclosure in a dashed white line) (B to D) . In panel B,
six to seven rod-shaped X . nematophila cells cluster in close
proximity to each other in the vesicle . The vesicle shown in panel C
contains slightly more X . nematophila cells, and that in panel D
contains even more than the IJ shown in panel B, but each has noticeably
fewer than the full complement of cells found in a mature IJ (A) .
GFP-labeled X . nematophila cells were distinguished from nematode
intestinal autofluorescence by virtue of bacterial cell shape and
differential spectral emission under appropriate fluorescence filters
(see Materials and Methods) . In all images, nematodes are oriented with
heads off the left side of the panel . Magnification,
x600 . Bar, 10 µm.
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Premigratory IJs are colonized by few bacteria. S .
carpocapsae nematodes were cultured on lawns of HGB340, and the
resulting IJ progeny were microscopically examined for the presence
of bacteria in the vesicle . Two types of IJs were examined: those
that had migrated away from the lawn on which they were cultured
(mature IJs) and those that had recently formed on the lawn but had
not yet migrated (immature IJs) . The latter were isolated from the
mixed population based on the exclusive resistance of IJs to 1% SDS
(see Materials and Methods) (8) . Both types of IJs
were observed by using epifluorescence microscopy to detect GFP (Fig.
1) . As expected, mature IJs had brightly
fluorescent vesicles with numerous individual bacterial cells
distinguishable, which is indicative of complete colonization (Fig.
1A) . In mature IJs, HGB340 bacteria were observed to be
present in the anterior region of the intestine only and not in
the posterior intestine, the pharynx, or on the surface of the
nematode (data not shown) . In contrast to these mature IJs, immature
IJs were usually colonized by only a few bacteria ("oligocolonization")
(Fig . 1B to D) . To address the possibility that SDS
treatment directly affects levels of bacteria inside IJs, a
heterogeneous mixture of S . carpocapsae developmental stages
cultivated on lawns of HGB340 was microscopically examined without
prior exposure to SDS (see below) . Oligocolonization was also
observed in immature IJs in this population . Nematode samples
containing immature IJs were also surface sterilized with bleach (see
Materials and Methods), and the number of CFU per IJ was enumerated
before SDS treatment . Counts of CFU per IJ both before and after SDS
treatment for identical batches of nematodes were found to be
the same (data not shown) .
Bacterial growth occurs in the vesicle of maturing IJs. The
observation that immature IJs contain few bacteria, even though their
mouths and anuses are already sealed, indicates that the fully
colonized vesicle typical of a mature IJ results from bacterial
growth within the intestinal vesicle . To monitor this process, a
population of nematodes was cultivated on HGB340 until immature IJs
began to form and were removed from exogenous X . nematophila
by rinsing with large volumes of distilled water (see Materials and
Methods) . These nematodes were intermittently observed by
fluorescence microscopy for 138 h after isolation . Individual IJs in
this nematode population were distinguished by IJ-specific
morphological features (20) and scored according
to the number of green fluorescent bacteria that each appeared to
contain (Fig . 2) . IJs were scored as belonging to one of
three groups: (i) those containing no observable fluorescent
bacteria, (ii) those in which the vesicle was oligocolonized (Fig.
1B and C), and (iii) those with full or nearly full vesicles
(approximately one-third or more fully colonized) (Fig . 1A) .
The percentages of both oligocolonized IJs and those with no
observable bacteria decreased over time, while the number of near
fully or fully colonized IJs increased over time . At each observation
time, the average number of CFU per IJ was quantified (see Materials
and Methods) and found to increase over time, which correlated with
the increase in the number of IJs with brightly fluorescing vesicles .
Furthermore, oligocolonized IJs are not observed in populations of
mature IJs (i.e., >150 h postisolation), suggesting that the trend
toward increased colonization is not reversible (data not shown) .
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FIG . 2 . Microscopic analysis of colonization density of GFP-labeled
X . nematophila in nematode IJs . Nematodes were cultivated on lawns
of HGB340, and immature IJs were isolated by repeated rinsing with
sterile dH2O (see Materials and Methods) . At various times
after isolation (indicated below each set of bars), nematodes were
observed by fluorescence microscopy and rated as belonging to one of
three classes: not visibly colonized (open bars), oligocolonized
(hatched bars), or fully colonized (filled bars) . Between 170 and 303
IJs were observed for each time point, and at each time point a sample
of IJs was used to quantify the average CFU per IJ (values shown below
graph).
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To examine the growth characteristics of X . nematophila in IJs
in more detail, we quantified the number of CFU per IJ over time in
three separate populations of immature IJs derived from wild-type
(nonfluorescent) X . nematophila lawns and isolated by SDS
treatment . After isolation, samples were taken from the immature IJ
populations at 4- or 6-h intervals over approximately a 150-h period
and the average number of CFU per IJ was quantified (Fig.
3) . The data indicate that the bacterial population within
IJs fluctuates, with an overall trend toward increasing bacterial
density . Several of the decreases in detectable CFU per IJ were
determined to be statistically significant relative to previous peaks
in CFU per IJ . Four regions of individual growth curves were chosen
to determine the maximum growth rate of X . nematophila in the
intestinal vesicle . The doubling time was determined to be 10 ± 0.5 h
(average ± standard error) per doubling .
X . nematophila populations in individual IJs are often clonal.
The results presented thus far are consistent with the hypothesis
that limited colonization sites are available for X . nematophila
within the forming IJ and that competition for these sites may
occur . To address this possibility, we assessed the number of X .
nematophila clones that were present inside individual IJs by
using two approaches (Fig . 4 and 5) . First,
we cultivated IJs on a lawn containing a mixture of three strains
that each contain a uniquely tagged mini-Tn5 insertion
(strains STM-1, -2, and -3) . These strains were generated in a
previously published signature-tagged mutagenesis study conducted by
our lab and were selected because they do not have a competitive
colonization defect (13) . These three strains can
be distinguished by hybridization to a unique probe (A, B, or C,
respectively) . Four individual IJs derived from the mixed bacterial
lawn were homogenized, and the homogenates were plated to recover
liberated X . nematophila bacteria . Individual bacterial
colonies isolated from each nematode were grown on nylon membranes,
and colony blot analyses were separately performed with probes A, B,
and C (Fig . 4) . Of the four nematodes, three
yielded bacteria that hybridized to one of the three probes . The
fourth nematode had been colonized by a mixture of bacteria that
hybridized to two probes . In the case of this nematode, 49% (43 of
88) of the clones were detected by probe B, whereas the remaining 51%
(45 of 88) were detected by probe C .
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FIG . 4 . Competition of signature-tagged X . nematophila strains
for nematode colonization . X . nematophila bacteria recovered from
individual IJs (numbered 1 to 4) were probed to determine if they
hybridized to probe A, B, or C . All 88 colonies recovered from IJ 1
hybridized to probe C . All 88 colonies recovered from IJs 2 and 3
hybridized to probe A . For IJ 4, 49% (43 of 88) of the clones hybridized
to probe B, whereas the remaining 51% (45 of 88) hybridized to probe C.
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FIG . 5 . Competition of HGB566 and HGB567 for nematode colonization . IJs
raised on a lawn inoculated with equal amounts of HGB566 and HGB567 were
analyzed to determine whether they contained only strain HGB567 (A),
only strain HGB566 (B), or a mixture of both fluorescent strains (C) .
The frequency of each colonization type is indicated in the lower right
corner of each panel . A total of 481 IJs were examined . The reason for
the disproportionately high percentage of nematodes colonized by
ECFP-expressing bacteria only may be due to the unequal competition of
these strains for growth and survival during the
10-day
coculture period . This inequality in strain representation further
exemplifies the tendency toward monoclonal colonization because the
17.8% of nematodes that contained only DsRed-expressing bacteria would
have been fully colonized by those bacteria despite the fact that they
were a minority population.
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We wished to directly observe the apparent monoclonal and biclonal
colonization phenomenon suggested by the experiment described above
in a larger sample size . To do this, we constructed two X .
nematophila strains, HGB566 and HGB567, that are differentially
detectable in vivo because they constitutively express the genes for
enhanced cyan fluorescent protein (ECFP) and a red fluorescent
protein (DsRed) . IJs were cultured on a mixed lawn that was initially
established by mixing equal amounts of HGB566 and HGB567 . Resultant
IJs were analyzed by epifluorescence microscopy to determine if they
contained only ECFP- or DsRed-labeled bacteria or a mixture of both .
We found that of 481 IJs examined, 88.5% contained only one type of
labeled bacteria (70.7% with ECFP, 17.8% with DsRed) (Fig.
5A and B), whereas the remaining 11.5% of the
nematodes contained a mixture of both ECFP- and DsRed-labeled
bacteria (Fig . 5C) . In nematodes that contained a mixture of
both ECFP- and DsRed-labeled bacteria, bacterial growth occurred
in distinct sectors (e.g., Fig . 5C), suggesting that
bacterial movement may be physically restricted during growth in the
nematode intestine . The percentage of IJs containing both DsRed- and
ECFP-labeled bacteria (11.5%) can be used to estimate the actual
percentage of biclonal colonization . Because equivalent percentages
of IJs should be biclonally colonized by two ECFP-labeled strains
alone or by two DsRed-labeled strains alone, we estimated the
percentage of biclonal colonization for this experiment to be
approximately 35% (3 x 11.5%) . This estimate
agrees with the percentage of biclonal colonization from the previous
experiment, which was 25% (one in four IJs) .
Previous work from many laboratories has established that the IJ
stage of Steinernematid nematodes is specifically colonized by
a single species of Xenorhabdus bacteria (2, 11; C . E . Cowles
and H . Goodrich-Blair, unpublished data) and that this colonization
is limited to the intestinal vesicle (6, 21,
22) . However, until the present study was done, an
examination of early events in the colonization process had not been
reported . Our results have allowed us to differentiate between the
two hypothetical colonization models that we have proposed and to
demonstrate the existence of two previously undescribed early stages
in the association between S . carpocapsae and X .
nematophila . The first is a competitive initiation event that
typically results in colonization by a monoclonal or oligoclonal
population of X . nematophila . This stage was demonstrated by
two experiments in which differentially labeled wild-type strains
were competing for colonization (Fig . 4) . The
observation that X . nematophila populations are frequently of
oligoclonal origin corresponds with the direct observation that early
in the colonization process very few GFP-labeled bacteria can be seen
occupying the vesicle (Fig . 1) and supports the
hypothesis that a small number of X . nematophila bacteria
initiate vesicle colonization and subsequently grow inside the host .
The second early colonization stage we have identified in this work
is an outgrowth phase during which bacteria reproduce inside the
intestine of an IJ and ultimately achieve their maximum population
density . Evidence for this stage includes the fact that immature IJs
derived from lawns of fluorescent X . nematophila bacteria
contain noticeably fewer fluorescent bacteria (Fig . 1B
to D) than those IJs that have been allowed to mature (Fig.
1A) . The second line of evidence for an outgrowth
stage comes from the fact that a pure population of nonfeeding IJs
exhibits a quantitative increase in the average number of CFU per IJ
over time (Fig . 2 and 3) and that this
increase in bacterial number can be microscopically localized
to the intestinal vesicle (Fig . 2) . Since the only source of
bacteria within the IJ population is that within the intestinal
vesicle, this increase in bacterial cell counts over time must result
from outgrowth of the initial colonizing bacteria within the vesicle .
A reproducible feature of the in vivo growth patterns observed for
X . nematophila is repeated waves of population rise and decline .
This observation demonstrates the dynamic nature of the X .
nematophila population within the nonfeeding IJ and suggests that
the nematode may be controlling the bacterial population in some way
(see below) .
The clarification of the processes through which uncolonized
nematodes become persistently colonized by X . nematophila will
provide a useful foundation for proposing and testing hypotheses
regarding the molecular mechanisms that mediate bacterium-nematode
interactions . For example, the colonization competition assays (Fig.
4 and 5) and the ability to label X .
nematophila mutant strains with autofluorescent proteins
described in this report can help reveal the precise stage(s) of
colonization that is blocked in recently described colonization
mutants (13, 27) . Furthermore,
our work provides insights into the early events in the development
of the colonized IJ stage that will be useful in the mass production
and field application of nematodes for biological control .
A highly efficient colonization initiation event results in
oligocolonized vesicles. In a remarkably efficient process, few
initiating X . nematophila bacteria per S . carpocapsae
IJ results in greater than 90% of a given population of IJs (isolated
from either insects or in vitro) being colonized (3, 27; Martens and
Goodrich-Blair, unpublished data) . This finding elicits the following
questions: how is colonization initiation limited to a few bacteria
and what mechanisms account for its efficiency? One possibility is
that there is a specific, physical contact between the bacteria and
the nematode, such as a receptor-adhesin-mediated interaction, that
is anatomically restricted to the region at which initiation takes
place . If an essential physical interaction between the bacteria and
the nematode exists, then we predict that colonization could be
inhibited by the presence of competing bacteria that are capable
of binding the initiation region and perhaps also by the presence
of small molecules, pure protein, or antibodies that interfere
with the initial interaction .
A second possible explanation for the predominantly clonal nature
of bacterial populations in IJs is that multiple cells initiate
colonization but that, most frequently, either one cell outcompetes
the others in establishing a fully colonized vesicle or the
phenomenon of repetitive rounds of population rise and decline
observed during X . nematophila in vivo growth (Fig . 3)
eventually eliminates all but a few clonal bacterial lineages . Future
experiments that monitor the percentage of polyclonal bacterial
populations (Fig . 5C) in nematodes over time will
determine whether this percentage changes and should differentiate
between these possibilities and the model suggesting that few cells
actually initiate nematode colonization .
Initiating bacterial colonizers grow to full density within the IJ.
Once nematode colonization has been initiated, X . nematophila
cells reproduce in the intestinal vesicle until a maximum bacterial
cell density is achieved (Fig . 2 and 3) .
Based on this finding, we can conclude that the vesicular environment
is conducive to bacterial growth and that the bacteria have access to
a nutrient source, possibly from the nematode . X . nematophila
may have evolved mechanisms to scavenge nutrients from the nematode,
as do pathogens from their hosts . Alternatively, the nematode
might actively provide nutrients to the growing X . nematophila
monoculture . In light of the possibility of either passive or active
transfer of nutrients from the nematode to the bacteria, it is
interesting that axenic S . carpocapsae IJs survive longer at
ambient temperatures than colonized IJs do (17) . This
suggests that maintenance of bacterial symbionts is an energy drain
for the nematode and is consistent with the idea that the nematode
provides food for its bacterial symbionts .
It is notable that when multiple clones of X . nematophila colonize
an individual IJ, these bacteria grow in distinct sectors (Fig .
5C) . The reason for this spatial limitation is unknown, but
it implies that the vesicular environment may contain a matrix
in which bacteria grow and which limits bacterial movement . This idea
is in agreement with the findings of Bird and Akhurst (6),
who observed that in electron micrographs, Xenorhabdus spp .
appear to be embedded in an amorphous matrix inside the intestinal
vesicle .
In the present experiments, X . nematophila reproduced in the
intestinal vesicle with an overall trend toward a maximum capacity
of approximately 45 to 70 CFU/IJ (Fig . 3) . However, over
the
150
h of the experiment, the detectable population size repeatedly
increased and decreased, and during a discrete rise in population,
X . nematophila numbers could be observed to double within as
few as 10 h . Although this doubling time is lengthy compared to the
1-h doubling time of X . nematophila cells grown in LB broth at
30°C (Martens and Goodrich-Blair, unpublished data), it should be
noted that immature IJ populations exhibit some amount of asynchrony
regarding the state of bacterial populations within individuals (for
an example, see Fig . 2) . Therefore calculated rates
of population growth based on growth dynamics of an entire population
may underestimate the actual rate of growth of X . nematophila
in the intestinal vesicles of individuals .
X . nematophila population declines may indicate a selective
pressure imposed by the nematode to limit the size of its symbiont
colony (e.g., through the production of antimicrobial compounds or
vesicular structural rearrangements) . Such a mechanism occurs in the
symbiosis between the Hawaiian bobtail squid and its bacterial
symbiont, Vibrio fischeri, in which the squid daily purges its
light organ of 90% of bacteria and the remaining 10% of the bacterial
population then grows to repopulate this niche (26) .
We are currently investigating the mechanism(s) by which S .
carpocapsae may periodically restrict growth or eliminate
viability of X . nematophila in the intestinal vesicle .
The observation that overall X . nematophila population size
does not surpass a maximal level within the vesicle is important from
the perspective of benign host-microbe interactions because it
implies that the nematode efficiently limits the growth potential of
X . nematophila inside its intestine . Bacteria such as Salmonella
enterica, Enterococcus faecalis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa,
Streptococcus pneumoniae, Staphylococcus aureus, and
Burkholderia pseudomallei can be lethal intestinal pathogens of
nematodes such as C . elegans (1) .
Furthermore, several examples exist in which ordinarily benign
bacteria or fungi gain the ability to overcome host defenses and
exhibit pathogenic qualities as they exploit new niches in the host (7,
16) . Unchecked growth of X . nematophila within
the intestine of S . carpocapsae could lead to pathogenesis and
death of the IJ, but the complete absence of X . nematophila
from the vesicle would block the reproductive fitness of an IJ .
Thus, S . carpocapsae nematodes must have evolved exquisitely
balanced mechanisms to promote X . nematophila colonization while
concomitantly limiting it to a specific area, allowing these
two organisms to coevolve as mutualists rather than as host and
pathogen . By using the details of colonization initiation revealed by
this study, our future goal is to understand the mechanisms that
underlie the balanced X . nematophila-S . carpocapsae
association . Such work will likely reveal general mechanisms by which
hosts attempt to limit growth of microbial flora as well as how
bacteria circumvent such attempts .
We thank Murray Clayton for assistance in statistical analysis and
members of the H.G.-B . laboratory, as well as Steven Finkel, Katrina
Forest, and Jon Woods, for comments on the manuscript .
This work was supported by NIH grant GM59776 and USDA/CRES grant
CRHF-0-6055, both awarded to H.G.-B .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin—Madison, Madison, WI 53706 . Phone: (608)
265-4537 . Fax: (608) 262-9865 . E-mail:
hgblair@bact.wisc.edu .
Present address: DGB-CLO, B-9820 Merelbeke, Belgium .
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