Lecture 10: Microbial Interactions Flashcards
What is ectosymbiosis/endosymbiosis? Give examples.
- Microorganisms living on the outside (ecto) and the inside (endo) of another organism
- Ex. Thiotrix species: sulfur-usuing bacterium; attached to surface of mayfly larva (which contains a parasitic bacterium)
What are the 2 types of intrapopulation interactions?
- Positive: growth rate increases
- Cooperation: low to moderate cell densities - Negative: growth rate decreases
- Competition: high cell densities
Define bacterial cooperation (synthrophy).
Larger numbers of bacteria can encourage growth and survival
Give an example of cooperation.
Desulfovibrio and Chromatium
- Organic matter and sulfate needed by Desulfovibrio are produced by the Chromatium
- Chromatium goes through photosynthesis and oxidizes sulfide to sulfate
What do cell exudates release?
- Nutrients/carbon
- Exoenzymes
- Other macromolecules
How do bacteria modify their environment?
- Cell exudates
- Modify physico-chemical environment
- Metabolic redox, pH changes
- Solubilize minerals/nutrients in soil/rock
- EPS production
Dictyostelium
Myxobacteria (“social bacteria”)
What is commensalism?
One species benefits, one is neither harmed nor helped (unidirectional)
- Symbiont can survive without host
- Ex. Nitrosomonas oxidizes ammonium to nitrite, Nitrobacter oxidizes nitrite to nitrate
What is mutualism?
Both organisms benefit
- Obligatory relationship (+/+)
- Ex. Lichens
What are negative interactions?
- Compeition: resource limitation
- Amensalism: production of inhibitory compounds
- Parasitism: one species benefits while the other is harmed
Compare and contrast parasitism vs. predation. Use examples.
Not always a clear difference when it comes to microbes
- Parasitism: bacteria living in algae or protozoa
- Predation: protozoa engulfing bacteria
What is facilitiation?
+/+ or 0/+
- One species has positive interaction on another species without direct and intimate contact
- May or may not benefit the individual
- NOT mutualism or commensalism because they are not closely associated with each other