Investigating the chemical preferences of marine microbes in situ at organismal scales

Bennett Lambert1,2, Jean-Baptiste Raina3, Justin Seymour3, Christian Rinke4, Gene W. Tyson4, Philip Hugenholtz4 and Roman Stocker2,5, (1)Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Cambridge; Woods Hole, MA, United States, (2)ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland, (3)University of Technology Sydney, Sydney, Australia, (4)University of Queensland, St Lucia, Australia, (5)Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, United States
Abstract:
The chemical preferences of marine microbes underpin many fundamental microbial functions, from the quest for nutrients to the attraction of pathogens to hosts. Our understanding of these processes is currently based solely on experiments with laboratory isolates, due to the difficulty of assaying chemical preferences in situ. The ISCA (In Situ Chemotaxis Assay) is a custom-built chip designed to assess the ability of marine microbes to respond to chemical cues in their natural environment. It consists of 25 wells, each connected to the outside seawater by one inlet port. Upon deployment, each well produces a controlled microplume of a desired chemical, to which microbes can respond by swimming into the well. Flow-cytometric, molecular analysis, and high-speed video microscopy allow determination of the number and identity of the responding microbes, providing unique links between microbial identity and chemical preferences. Here we present highly resolved spatiotemporal accumulation profiles with a model bacterium and chemoattractants as well as initial data from field deployments. These initial results indicate that the ISCA will be a valuable new tool for understanding microbial interactions in the natural environment.