Coating matters in the invisible sea: Biofilms, marine snow and bioengineering
September 9, 2004 | 12:00am
A walk over slippery intertidal rocks can always remind us of the real existence of biofilms, integral parts of Natures "bioengineering" capacity that account for the self-purification of coastal marine waters. The abundance of biofilms in marine environments also complicates monitoring of environmental health. Anyone who tries to detect certain microbes in the sea must be aware that microbial biofilms serve as protected refuge and survival sites in microbial life cycles. Analyses of water samples would even become useless, if the target organisms to be monitored reside in biofilms at interfaces and suspended materials.
A few years ago, it was discovered that certain seaweeds produce chemical compounds of the furanone family. As signal analogues these molecules block the signal compounds required in gene expression to initiate the bacterial colonization of surfaces. This signaling system is based on measuring critical cell densities. This finding aroused interest not only among applied, but also academic researchers: "Cell to cell communication" in microbial biofilms via chemical signals has stirred speculations about the scope of "supraorganismic" capacities among the smallest forms of life with the by far longest history of evolution. On the applied side, a non-antibiotic compound that merely prevents microbial cells from colonizing surfaces, might be turned into an environment-friendly weapon against biofouling in marine environments.
"Hot spots" of microbial growth and activity in the sea are associated with metabolism (as well as decay) of marine animals and plants. The specific role of most microbial biofilms in the life of higher organisms remains yet to be investigated. A few conspicuous cases of symbiosis highlight the role of rather specific biofilms: For example, the "light organs" of squids are run by symbiotic light-emitting bacteria.
The capacity to decompose chitin, the polysaccharide construction element of crab and copepod shells, is common among bacterial colonizers of these animals. While healthy chitin-armored animals are hardly affected, stressed and weakened specimen may invite chitin-degrading colonizers to intrude through lesions in their outer "skin." At this point the primarily harmless colonizer has turned into an opportunist pathogen. Extraordinary stress in intensive shrimp mariculture can render cultivated shrimps vulnerable to attacks by such opportunistic pathogens. Probably all pathogenic bacteria of shellfish and fish are opportunistic scavengers and surface colonizers.
In principle, however, bacterial lawns covering marine animals need not pose a particular health risk for their host. On the contrary, several detritus-feeding animals inhabiting marine sediments seem to depend on their "bacterial gardens" as a source of protein-rich diet. Other sea floor dwellers owe their survival in toxic hydrogen sulfide-rich sediments to "fur coats" composed of a sulfide-oxidizing bacterium.
Thus, aquatic ecosystems and especially the "invisible sea" rely on microbial biofilms. These are instrumental for sustaining indispensable ecosystem functions, such as organic matter recycling and detoxification. Some of these natural designs have already been copied and exploited for man-made technologies, like in biological waste water treatment. On the other hand, numerous man-made constructs suffer from economically undesirable, material-deteriorating effects of biofilms. Support and development of biotechnologically desirable biofilms is counterbalanced by prevention of undesirable biofilm formation on man-made constructs, including those in medicine. Therefore, microbial biofilms constitute a unique case in which support of research can be expected from two opposing ends: From the conservationists and copiers of Natures design to preventionist protectors of man-made constructions. While "biofilm" has become a popular buzz word in todays world of microbiology, it is already an "old acquaintance" for marine scientists. Nevertheless, to those concerned about environmental health and marine resources management, microbial strategies of biofilm formation will continue to teach a lesson.
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