1. Competitive Advantages of Caedibacter-Infected Paramecia
- Author
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Petra Albrecht, Lars Czubatinski, Margret Alter, Markus Hübner, Jürgen Kusch, and Silke Nachname
- Subjects
Ciliate ,Paramecium ,Ecology ,Host (biology) ,Intracellular parasite ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Biology ,Amoeba proteus ,biology.organism_classification ,Adaptation, Physiological ,Models, Biological ,Microbiology ,Competition (biology) ,Animals ,Bacteria ,Alphaproteobacteria ,Paramecia ,media_common - Abstract
Summary Intracellular bacteria of the genus Caedibacter limit the reproduction of their host, the freshwater ciliate Paramecium. Reproduction rates of infected strains of paramecia were significantly lower than those of genetically identical strains that had lost their parasites after treatment with an antibiotic. Interference competition occurs when infected paramecia release a toxic form of the parasitic bacterium that kills uninfected paramecia. In mixed cultures of infected and uninfected strains of either P. tetraurelia or of P. novaurelia, the infected strains outcompeted the uninfected strains. Infection of new host paramecia seems to be rare. Infection of new hosts was not observed in either mixtures of infected with uninfected strains, or after incubation of paramecia with isolated parasites. The competitive advantages of the host paramecia, in combination with their vegetative reproduction, makes infection of new hosts by the bacterial parasites unnecessary, and could be responsible for the continued existence of “killer paramecia” in nature. Caedibacter parasites are not a defensive adaptation. Feeding rates and reproduction of the predators Didinium nasutum (Ciliophora) and Amoeba proteus (Amoebozoa, Gymnamoebia) were not influenced by whether or not their paramecia prey were infected. Infection of the predators frequently occurred when they preyed on infected paramecia. Caedibacter-infected predators may influence competition between Paramecium strains by release of toxic parasites into the environment that are harmful to uninfected strains.
- Published
- 2002
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