Virus and siderophore-mediated transfer of available Fe between heterotrophic bacteria: Characterization using an Fe-specific bioreporter

32Citations
Citations of this article
66Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Although marine chemists can accurately quantify both the concentration of dissolved iron (Fe) and the high-affinity organic ligands which complex Fe in surface waters, tools to characterize the relative bioavailability of such organically bound Fe complexes remain unavailable. In this study, we compared the bioavailability of Fe released from the lysis of the heterotrophic bacterium Vibrio natriegens PWH3a to that of Fe complexed to synthetic chelators (EDTA) and siderophores (including the trihydroxamate desferrioxamine B [DFB] and 2 catecholates isolated from Fe-limited heterotrophic bacterial cultures) using a heterotrophic bioluminescent reporter of Fe availability (Pseudomonas putida FeLux). Using the bioluminescent response of P. putida FeLux, we were able to rank the Fe sources tested here in a decreasing order of bioavailability: lysates > Fe-homologous catecholate (from a P. putida FeLux culture) ∼ Fe-exogenous catecholate (from V. natriegens culture) > inorganic Fe (FeCl3, 15 nM) ∼ Fe(III)′ from EDTA-buffered treatment (pFe 18.12) > Fe:DFB, where pFe is -log [Fe3+]. Combined with estimates of Fe assimilation of 55Fe-labeled lysates, our data further demonstrate that organic Fe complexes released during virus-mediated cell lysis are ca. 1000 times more bioavailable and efficiently assimilated by bacterial cells than Fe(III)′. Our results validate the utilization of P. putida FeLux as a bioreporter of Fe-bioavailability and also support the assumption that virus activity plays a crucial role in the regeneration of biologically available Fe complexes in surface seawater. © Inter-Research 2005.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Mioni, C. E., Poorvin, L., & Wilhelm, S. W. (2005). Virus and siderophore-mediated transfer of available Fe between heterotrophic bacteria: Characterization using an Fe-specific bioreporter. Aquatic Microbial Ecology, 41(3), 233–245. https://doi.org/10.3354/ame041233

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free