Synergistic interactions in the microbial world

被引:214
作者
Schink, B [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Konstanz, Fachbereich Biol, D-78457 Constance, Germany
来源
ANTONIE VAN LEEUWENHOEK INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GENERAL AND MOLECULAR MICROBIOLOGY | 2002年 / 81卷 / 1-4期
关键词
D O I
10.1023/A:1020579004534
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
After several decades of microbiological research has focused on pure cultures, synergistic effects between different types of microorganisms find increasing interest. Interspecies interactions between prokaryotic cells have been studied into depth mainly with respect to syntrophic cooperations involved in methanogenic degradation of electron-rich substrates such as fatty acids, alcohols, and aromatics. Partners involved in these processes have to run their metabolism at minimal energy increments, with only fractions of an ATP unit synthesized per substrate molecule metabolized, and their cooperation is intensified by close proximity of the partner cells. New examples of such syntrophic activities are anaerobic methane oxidation by presumably methanogenic and sulfate-reducing prokaryotes, and microbially mediated pyrite formation. Syntrophic relationships have also been discovered to be involved in the anaerobic metabolization of amino acids and sugars where energetical restrictions do not necessarily force the partner organisms into strict interdependencies. The most highly developed cooperative systems among prokaryotic cells appear to be the structurally organized phototrophic consortia of the Chlorochromatium and Pelochromatium type in which phototrophic and chemotrophic bacteria not only exchange metabolites but also interact at the level of growth coordination and tactic behaviour.
引用
收藏
页码:257 / 261
页数:5
相关论文
共 30 条
[1]  
Benz M, 1998, APPL ENVIRON MICROB, V64, P4507
[2]   GROWTH YIELDS OF GREEN SULFUR BACTERIA IN MIXED CULTURES WITH SULFUR AND SULFATE REDUCING BACTERIA [J].
BIEBL, H ;
PFENNIG, N .
ARCHIVES OF MICROBIOLOGY, 1978, 117 (01) :9-16
[3]   A marine microbial consortium apparently mediating anaerobic oxidation of methane [J].
Boetius, A ;
Ravenschlag, K ;
Schubert, CJ ;
Rickert, D ;
Widdel, F ;
Gieseke, A ;
Amann, R ;
Jorgensen, BB ;
Witte, U ;
Pfannkuche, O .
NATURE, 2000, 407 (6804) :623-626
[4]   MICROBIAL METHANE PRODUCTION - THEORETICAL ASPECTS [J].
BRYANT, MP .
JOURNAL OF ANIMAL SCIENCE, 1979, 48 (01) :193-201
[5]  
Cord-Ruwisch R, 1998, APPL ENVIRON MICROB, V64, P2232
[6]   OXIDATION OF GLYCEROL, LACTATE, AND PROPIONATE BY PROPIONIBACTERIUM-FREUDENREICHII IN A POISED-POTENTIAL AMPEROMETRIC CULTURE SYSTEM [J].
EMDE, R ;
SCHINK, B .
ARCHIVES OF MICROBIOLOGY, 1990, 153 (05) :506-512
[7]   Phylogenetic affiliation of the bacteria that constitute phototrophic consortia [J].
Fröstl, JM ;
Overmann, J .
ARCHIVES OF MICROBIOLOGY, 2000, 174 (1-2) :50-58
[8]   Physiology and tactic response of the phototrophic consortium "Chlorochromatium aggregatum" [J].
Fröstl, JM ;
Overmann, J .
ARCHIVES OF MICROBIOLOGY, 1998, 169 (02) :129-135
[9]   Physiology, phylogenetic relationships, and ecology of filamentous sulfate-reducing bacteria (genus Desulfonema) [J].
Fukui, M ;
Teske, A ;
Assmus, B ;
Muyzer, G ;
Widdel, F .
ARCHIVES OF MICROBIOLOGY, 1999, 172 (04) :193-203
[10]   Thermacetogenium phaeum gen. nov., sp nov., a strictly anaerobic, thermophilic, syntrophic acetate-oxidizing bacterium [J].
Hattori, S ;
Kamagata, Y ;
Hanada, S ;
Shoun, H .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SYSTEMATIC AND EVOLUTIONARY MICROBIOLOGY, 2000, 50 :1601-1609