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Metabolically active bacteria in Lake Kinneret

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Title Metabolically active bacteria in Lake Kinneret
Names Berman, T. (creator)
Kaplan, B. (creator)
Chava, S. (creator)
Viner, Y. (creator)
Sherr, Barry F. (creator)
Sherr, Evelyn (creator)
Date Issued 2001-02-28 (iso8601)
Abstract Three staining methods were used to identify metabolically active bacteria in Lake Kinneret,
northern Israel: CTC, DAPI staining followed by a propanol wash, and the Molecular Probes
Live/Dead stain. Positive results from these methods purport to show, respectively, actively respiring
bacteria (CTC+), cells with intact nucleoids (NuCC), and cells with intact membranes (MEM+). Concomitantly,
bacterial metabolic activity was measured as electron transport system (ETS) flux, O₂
uptake, activities of peptidase, β-glucosidase and lipase, and rate of leucine incorporation in monthly
samples taken for 2.5 yr at a pelagic lake station. Laboratory experiments followed changes during 22
or 40 h in the percentages of ‘active’ bacteria in GF/C-filtered lake water with or without substrate
enrichment or antibiotic inhibitors of cell division, or with bacterivorous protists. In lake samples,
each of the staining methods detected different aspects of cellular state or metabolic activity but all 3
indicated low percentages of ‘active’ bacteria relative to total bacterial abundance. CTC+ ranged
from 1.0 to 27.3% (average 5.1%), NuCC from 1.4 to 42.9% (average 8.3%) and MEM+ from 1.0 to
29.9% (average 8.8%), with no clear seasonal or spatial patterns. No significant correlations were
found between the proportions of ‘active’ bacteria in lake water as determined by these methods,
although such correlations were observed in the laboratory experiments. Significant correlations
were obtained between ETS and O₂ uptake, peptidase and β-glucosidase, and between leucine
incorporation and peptidase. ETS was significantly correlated with CTC+ and NuCC cell abundance,
but not with total bacteria (DAPI counts). In contrast, peptidase activity correlated with total bacterial
counts. Results of time course experiments indicated that some bacteria which initially appear to
be inactive can become active when stimulated by substrate addition, even though cell division is
inhibited. Grazing by protists increased the percentage of active bacteria, at least during the active
predator-prey phase. Our data support the hypothesis that in natural waters usually only a small fraction
(probably <20%) of the entire bacterial assemblage is strongly active metabolically at any given
time. This proportion may increase dramatically with localized substrate inputs. The concept of bacterial
assemblages, heterogeneous not only in terms of phylotype, but also in terms of levels of metabolic
activity will need to be considered in future aquatic ecosystem models.
Genre Article
Topic Metabolically active bacteria
Identifier Berman, T., Kaplan, B., Chava, S., Viner, Y., Sherr, B. F., & Sherr, E. B. (2001). Metabolically active bacteria in Lake Kinneret. Aquatic Microbial Ecology, 23, 213-224.

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