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Exopolymer Microenvironments of Microbial Flora: Multiple and Interactive Effects on Trophic Relationships
Ist Teil von
Limnology and oceanography, 1993-12, Vol.38 (8), p.1633-1645
Ort / Verlag
Waco, TX: American Society of Limnology and Oceanography
Erscheinungsjahr
1993
Quelle
EZB Electronic Journals Library
Beschreibungen/Notizen
Microbial cells in natural environments are often encased in different types of exopolymer secretions (EPS), ranging from tight capsules surrounding individual cells to the looser slime matrices of biofilms. The different physical and chemical properties of exopolymers could have secondary effects on trophic interactions between microbial cells and consumer animals. Laboratory studies showed that capsule EPS is significantly less digestible to consumers than slime EPS, even when extracted from the same bacterial strain. Bacterial cells with EPS capsules are less efficiently digested than noncapsuled cells, suggesting that capsules protect against digestion. Follow-up experiments determined that polysaccharide-rich fractions of slime EPS are absorbed with very high efficiencies while protein portions, which are more abundant in capsular polymers, are absorbed relatively poorly. Another series of experiments showed that dissolved organic matter (DOM), when adsorbed directly to the mineralogical portions of sediments particles, is available to deposit feeders. However, the further presence of an exopolymer coating on sediments more than doubled the bioavailability of adsorbed DOM to the consumer. Observations using cold-stage scanning electron microscopy indicated that exopolymer microenvironments are a common feature of natural marine sediments. Microbial exopolymers range from easily digestible carbon source to relatively refractory ones that effectively protect some microbial cells from consumer digestion. Exopolymer microenvironments may also make recently adsorbed DOM highly accessible to particle-ingesting animals.