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Monday,
January 28, 2008
Writer: Philip Lee Williams, 706/542-8501, phil@franklin.uga.edu
Contact: Mary Ann Moran, 706/542-6481, mmoran@uga.edu
Discovery of "generalist
bacteria" in coastal waters indicates these
lifeguards of ocean processes and health may be more flexible than
known
before
Athens, Ga. - Marine bacteria come almost a billion to a cup.
Until
recently, however, little has been known about how these minute creatures
live or what they need to flourish.
Now, new research led by a marine
microbial ecologist at the University of
Georgia is showing for the first time that the roles played by bacteria
in
coastal waters aren't nearly as specific as some scientists suspected.
In
fact, these bacteria are generalists in how they get their nourishment
and
may have the option of doing many different things, depending on what
works best at the time.
While the new research confirms predictions
by ecological theorists, it is
among the first clear demonstrations at the experimental level that
coastal ocean bacteria can act as "tidewater utility infielders," changing
their functions depending on local food supply.
"If you asked me earlier how different species of coastal bacteria
use
their available food supplies, I would have said each species is optimized
for very specialized uses," said Mary Ann Moran. "But our new research
says most are carrying out multiple processes when it comes to carbon
cycling."
The research was just published in the journal Nature. Co-authors
on the
paper are postdoctoral associate Xiaozhen Mou, bioinformaticist Shulei
Sun
and professor emeritus Robert Hodson, all of the University of Georgia,
and Robert Edwards of San Diego State University.
Learning just how
everything works together in the oceans has been a
daunting task, but scientists agree that it is crucial. The paper
published in Nature specifically examined the metabolic capabilities
of
bacteria involved in breaking down organic carbon compounds.
Scientists
don't yet understand much about how the various genes in ocean
bacteria are packaged together. But as the ocean changes, they would
like
to model and predict how the processes mediated by the genes could
be
affected.
Only in the past 15 years have scientists been able to begin
identifying
the bacteria in oceans at all. Part of this is simply because ocean
bacteria are notoriously hard to culture in the lab, and many can't
be
cultured yet at all. This makes studying them extremely difficult.
New
methods, however, are making such studies easier. One of them, which
formed the basis for this research, is metagenomics, which bypasses
the
culturing step entirely by directly sequencing the mixture of bacterial
genomes in seawater.
Understanding more about the genomes of bacteria
has allowed researchers
to ask much narrower questions than ever before, and the result has
been a
new ability to understand how marine bacteria live and interact in
the
ocean.
The research in the current study was done in an area off the
coast of
Sapelo Island, Ga., and while the findings about bacterial generalists
may
hold true for similar coastal ecosystems, researchers don't know if
the
same will be true in deep-ocean or other sea environments.
"We can understand a great deal about the health of the oceans by
understanding more about how the bacteria that live in our coastal
waters
function," said Moran.
The idea for bacterial generalists isn't new, but this is the first
experimental evidence for marine coastal bacteria as generalists.
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