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Collective magnetotaxis of microbial holobionts is optimized by the three-dimensional organization and magnetic properties of ectosymbionts

  • Daniel M. Chevrier*
  • , Amélie Juhin
  • , Nicolas Menguy
  • , Romain Bolzoni
  • , Paul E.D. Soto-Rodriguez
  • , Mila Kojadinovic-Sirinelli
  • , Greig A. Paterson
  • , Rachid Belkhou
  • , Wyn Williams
  • , Fériel Skouri-Panet
  • , Artemis Kosta
  • , Hugo Le Guenno
  • , Eva Pereiro
  • , Damien Faivre
  • , Karim Benzerara
  • , Caroline L. Monteil
  • , Christopher T. Lefevre*
  • *Šī darba korespondējošais autors
  • Aix-Marseille Université
  • Sorbonne Université
  • University of Liverpool
  • L'Orme des Merisiers
  • University of Edinburgh
  • Institut de Microbiologie de la Méditerranée
  • ALBA Synchrotron Light Source

Zinātniskās darbības rezultāts: Devums žurnālamZinātniskais raksts (žurnālā)koleģiāli recenzēts

13 Atsauces (Scopus)

Kopsavilkums

Over the last few decades, symbiosis and the concept of holobiont—a host entity with a population of symbionts—have gained a central role in our understanding of life functioning and diversification. Regardless of the type of partner interactions, understanding how the biophysical properties of each individual symbiont and their assembly may generate collective behaviors at the holobiont scale remains a fundamental challenge. This is particularly intriguing in the case of the newly discovered magnetotactic holobionts (MHB) whose motility relies on a collective magnetotaxis (i.e., a magnetic field-assisted motility guided by a chemoaerotaxis system). This complex behavior raises many questions regarding how magnetic properties of symbionts determine holobiont magnetism and motility. Here, a suite of light-, electron- and X-ray-based microscopy techniques [including X-ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD)] reveals that symbionts optimize the motility, the ultrastructure, and the magnetic properties of MHBs from the microscale to the nanoscale. In the case of these magnetic symbionts, the magnetic moment transferred to the host cell is in excess (102 to 103 times stronger than free-living magnetotactic bacteria), well above the threshold for the host cell to gain a magnetotactic advantage. The surface organization of symbionts is explicitly presented herein, depicting bacterial membrane structures that ensure longitudinal alignment of cells. Magnetic dipole and nanocrystalline orientations of magnetosomes were also shown to be consistently oriented in the longitudinal direction, maximizing the magnetic moment of each symbiont. With an excessive magnetic moment given to the host cell, the benefit provided by magnetosome biomineralization beyond magnetotaxis can be questioned.

OriģinālvalodaAngļu
Raksta numurse2216975120
ŽurnālsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Sējums120
Izdevuma numurs10
DOIs
Publikācijas statussPublicēts - 7 marts 2023
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