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Characterization of Bacterial Magnetotactic Behaviors by Using a Magnetospectrophotometry Assay
Authors:Christopher T Lefèvre  Tao Song  Jean-Paul Yonnet  Long-Fei Wu
Affiliation:Laboratoire de Chimie Bactérienne, UPR9043, Université de la Méditerranée, Institut de Microbiologie de la Méditerranée, CNRS, F-13402 Marseille Cedex 20, France,1. Institute of Electrical Engineering, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100080, People''s Republic of China,2. Laboratoire de Génie Electrique de Grenoble, UMR 5269, Grenoble-INP, F-38402 Saint Martin d''Hères Cedex, France3.
Abstract:Magnetotactic bacteria have the unique capacity of synthesizing intracellular single-domain magnetic particles called magnetosomes. The magnetosomes are usually organized in a chain that allows the bacteria to align and swim along geomagnetic field lines, a behavior called magnetotaxis. Two mechanisms of magnetotaxis have been described. Axial magnetotactic cells swim in both directions along magnetic field lines. In contrast, polar magnetotactic cells swim either parallel to the geomagnetic field lines toward the North Pole (north seeking) or antiparallel toward the South Pole (south seeking). In this study, we used a magnetospectrophotometry (MSP) assay to characterize both the axial magnetotaxis of “Magnetospirillum magneticum” strain AMB-1 and the polar magnetotaxis of magneto-ovoid strain MO-1. Two pairs of Helmholtz coils were mounted onto the cuvette holder of a common laboratory spectrophotometer to generate two mutually perpendicular homogeneous magnetic fields parallel or perpendicular to the light beam. The application of magnetic fields allowed measurements of the change in light scattering resulting from cell alignment in a magnetic field or in absorbance due to bacteria swimming across the light beam. Our results showed that MSP is a powerful tool for the determination of bacterial magnetism and the analysis of alignment and swimming of magnetotactic bacteria in magnetic fields. Moreover, this assay allowed us to characterize south-seeking derivatives and non-magnetosome-bearing strains obtained from north-seeking MO-1 cultures. Our results suggest that oxygen is a determinant factor that controls magnetotactic behavior.Magnetotactic bacteria are morphologically, metabolically, and phylogenetically diverse prokaryotes (1, 11). They synthesize unique intracellular organelles, the magnetosomes, which are single-domain magnetic crystals of the mineral magnetite or greigite enveloped by membranes. Magnetosomes are usually organized in a chain(s) within the cell and cause the cell to align along geomagnetic field lines while it swims. The highest numbers of magnetotactic bacteria are generally found at, or just below, the oxic-anoxic transition zone (OATZ) or redoxocline in aquatic habitats (1). Early studies showed that Northern Hemisphere magnetotactic bacteria swim preferentially northward in parallel with the geomagnetic field lines (north seeking NS]) (2) and that those from the Southern Hemisphere swim preferentially antiparallel to the geomagnetic field lines to the magnetic South Pole (south seeking SS]) (4). The geomagnetic field is inclined downward from horizontal in the Northern Hemisphere and upward in the Southern Hemisphere, with the inclination magnitude increasing from the equator to the poles. Therefore, magnetotaxis might guide cells in each hemisphere downward to less-oxygenated regions of aquatic habitats, where they would presumably stop swimming until conditions change (1). A recent study reported the coexistence of both NS and SS magnetotactic bacteria in the Northern Hemisphere, which conflicts with the prevalent model of the adaptive value of magnetotaxis (14).Under laboratory conditions, magnetotactic bacteria form microaerophilic bands of cells in oxygen-gradient medium. In fact, magnetotaxis and aerotaxis work together in these bacteria, and the behavior observed has been referred to as “magnetoaerotaxis.” Two different magnetoaerotactic mechanisms, termed polar and axial, are found in different bacterial species (6). The magnetotactic bacteria, principally the magnetotactic cocci, that swim persistently in one direction along the magnetic field (NS or SS) are polar magnetoaerotactic. Magnetotactic bacteria, especially the freshwater spirilla, that swim in either direction along the magnetic field lines with frequent, spontaneous reversals of swimming direction without turning around are axial magnetoaerotactic. For polar magnetotactic bacteria, the magnetic field provides an axis and a direction for motility, whereas for axial magnetotactic bacteria, the magnetic field provides only an axis of motility. The two mechanisms can best be seen in flattened capillary tubes containing suspensions of cells in reduced medium in a magnetic field oriented parallel to the capillary. An oxygen gradient forms along the tube, beginning at the ends of the capillary, with one oriented parallel and the other antiparallel to the magnetic field (1). Band formation by axial magnetoaerotactic cells, such as Magnetospirillum magnetotacticum cells, occurs at both ends of the capillary. Rotation of the magnetic field by 180° after the formation of the bands causes the cells in both bands to rotate 180°, but the bands remain intact. In contrast, band formation by polar magnetoaerotactic cells, such as the marine cocci, occurs only at the end of the capillary for which the magnetic field and the oxygen concentration gradient are oriented opposite to each other. Rotation of the magnetic field by 180° after the formation of the band causes the cells in the band to rotate 180° and swim away, resulting in the dispersal of the band (1). In this study, we developed a magnetospectrophotometry (MSP) assay that provides an alternative method for the quantitative and versatile characterization of the two magnetotactic mechanisms. Using this assay, we demonstrated the effect of artificial magnetic fields on the generation of homogeneous NS or SS magnetotactic bacterial populations.
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