37 research outputs found

    Induction of Larval Metamorphosis of the Coral Acropora millepora by Tetrabromopyrrole Isolated from a Pseudoalteromonas Bacterium

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    The induction of larval attachment and metamorphosis of benthic marine invertebrates is widely considered to rely on habitat specific cues. While microbial biofilms on marine hard substrates have received considerable attention as specific signals for a wide and phylogenetically diverse array of marine invertebrates, the presumed chemical settlement signals produced by the bacteria have to date not been characterized. Here we isolated and fully characterized the first chemical signal from bacteria that induced larval metamorphosis of acroporid coral larvae (Acropora millepora). The metamorphic cue was identified as tetrabromopyrrole (TBP) in four bacterial Pseudoalteromonas strains among a culture library of 225 isolates obtained from the crustose coralline algae Neogoniolithon fosliei and Hydrolithon onkodes. Coral planulae transformed into fully developed polyps within 6 h, but only a small proportion of these polyps attached to the substratum. The biofilm cell density of the four bacterial strains had no influence on the ratio of attached vs. non-attached polyps. Larval bioassays with ethanolic extracts of the bacterial isolates, as well as synthetic TBP resulted in consistent responses of coral planulae to various doses of TBP. The lowest bacterial density of one of the Pseudoalteromonas strains which induced metamorphosis was 7,000 cells mmβˆ’2 in laboratory assays, which is on the order of 0.1 –1% of the total numbers of bacteria typically found on such surfaces. These results, in which an actual cue from bacteria has been characterized for the first time, contribute significantly towards understanding the complex process of acroporid coral larval settlement mediated through epibiotic microbial biofilms on crustose coralline algae

    A Glycoprotein in Shells of Conspecifics Induces Larval Settlement of the Pacific Oyster Crassostrea gigas

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    Settlement of larvae of Crassostrea gigas on shell chips (SC) prepared from shells of 11 different species of mollusks was investigated. Furthermore, the settlement inducing compound in the shell of C. gigas was extracted and subjected to various treatments to characterize the chemical cue. C. gigas larvae settled on SC of all species tested except on Patinopecten yessoensis and Atrina pinnata. In SC of species that induced C. gigas larvae to settle, settlement was proportionate to the amount of SC supplied to the larvae. When compared to C. gigas SC, all species except Crassostrea nippona showed lower settlement inducing activities, suggesting that the cue may be more abundant or in a more available form to the larvae in shells of conspecific and C. nippona than in other species. The settlement inducing activity of C. gigas SC remained intact after antibiotic treatment. Extraction of C. gigas SC with diethyl ether (Et2O-ex), ethanol (EtOH-ex), and water (Aq-ex) did not induce larval settlement of C. gigas larvae. However, extraction of C. gigas SC with 2N of hydrochloric acid (HCl-ex) induced larval settlement that was at the same level as the SC. The settlement inducing compound in the HCl-ex was stable at 100Β°C but was destroyed or degraded after pepsin, trypsin, PNGase F and trifluoromethanesulfonic acid treatments. This chemical cue eluted between the molecular mass range of 45 and 150 kDa after gel filtration and revealed a major band at 55 kDa on the SDS-PAGE gel after staining with Stains-all. Thus, a 55 kDa glycoprotein component in the organic matrix of C. gigas shells is hypothesized to be the chemical basis of larval settlement on conspecifics

    Chemical Mediation of Ternary Interactions Between Marine Holobionts and Their Environment as Exemplified by the Red Alga Delisea pulchra

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    The need for animals and plants to control microbial colonization is important in the marine environment with its high densities of microscopic propagules and seawater that provides an ideal medium for their dispersal. In contrast to the traditional emphasis on antagonistic interactions of marine organisms with microbes, emerging studies lend support to the notion that health and performance of many marine organisms are functionally regulated and assisted by associated microbes, an ecological concept defined as a holobiont. While antimicrobial activities of marine secondary metabolites have been studied in great depth ex-situ, we are beginning to understand how some of these compounds function in an ecological context to maintain the performance of marine holobionts. The present article reviews two decades of our research on the red seaweed Delisea pulchra by addressing: the defense chemistry of this seaweed; chemically-mediated interactions between the seaweed and its natural enemies; and the negative influence of elevated seawater temperature on these interactions. Our understanding of these defense compounds and the functional roles they play for D. pulchra extends from molecular interactions with bacterial cell signaling molecules, to ecosystem-scale consequences of chemically-controlled disease and herbivory. Delisea pulchra produces halogenated furanones that antagonize the same receptor as acylated homoserine lactones (AHL)-a group of widespread intercellular communication signals among bacteria. Halogenated furanones compete with and inhibit bacterial cell-to-cell communication, and thus interfere with important bacterial communication-regulated processes, such as biofilm formation. In a predictable pattern that occurs at the ecological level of entire populations, environmental stress interferes with the production of halogenated furanones, causing downstream processes that ultimately result in disease of the algal holobiont. Β© 2012 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC

    S.: Similarity searches in heterogeneous feature spaces

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    Abstract: Correlating event streams or development paths of observed behavior that involves disparate types of data is a common problem in many applications including biomedical and clinical diagnosis systems. We present a new formulation of the following dual problem: (a) given multiple event streams for which we have prior knowledge, specify a feature space with heterogeneous dissimilarity measures, and (b) find similar time series given these (expert) user-specified heterogeneities, both within the same feature and as combinations across multiple features. By allowing domain experts to describe their feature spaces (quantized representation of observations such as the size of an object, its primary axis, its shape, etc.) more accurately in this fashion, query matches are better suited to the domain experts ’ needs. The presented work augments the existing research of finding local similarity areas and overall patterns in time series data. Key-Words: database queries, dissimilarity measures, prior knowledge

    A spatio-temporal multi-modal data management and analysis environment: A case study in MS lesions

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    We describe the development of a system that automates data collection, metadata extraction and analysis of spatio-temporal multi-modal data, combining data management and data analysis to provide an efficient resource for clinicians. Though the system is extensible to many applications, the current focus is on managing Multiple Sclerosis (MS) lesion data, which are disparate streams of image, numeric, and text data. In order to discover patterns of MS pathology and plan early and effective treatment, multispectral magnetic resonance (MR) image streams collected over time need to be correlated efficiently with each other and with patient performance and clinical data streams. 1

    Corals like it waxed: paraffin-based antifouling technology enhances coral spat survival.

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    The early post-settlement stage is the most sensitive during the life history of reef building corals. However, few studies have examined the factors that influence coral mortality during this period. Here, the impact of fouling on the survival of newly settled coral spat of Acropora millepora was investigated by manipulating the extent of fouling cover on settlement tiles using non-toxic, wax antifouling coatings. Survival of spat on coated tiles was double that on control tiles. Moreover, there was a significant negative correlation between percentage cover of fouling and spat survival across all tiles types, suggesting that fouling in direct proximity to settled corals has detrimental effects on early post-settlement survival. While previous studies have shown that increased fouling negatively affects coral larval settlement and health of juvenile and adult corals, to the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to show a direct relationship between fouling and early post-settlement survival for a broadcast spawning scleractinian coral. The negative effects of fouling on this sensitive life history stage may become more pronounced in the future as coastal eutrophication increases. Our results further suggest that targeted seeding of coral spat on artificial surfaces in combination with fouling control could prove useful to improve the efficiency of sexual reproduction-based coral propagation for reef rehabilitation

    Tracking Resource Usage Using Heterogeneous Feature Spaces with Local Exceptions

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    Abstract. We describe a method for tracking usage of resources in a web environment by representing the resources as a feature space in which usage instances appear as trails, so that common access patterns are shown as similar trails. To improve the analysis of usage data, prior knowledge about usage patterns can be specified by the server administrator as local exceptions to the standard dissimilarity measure, or local dissimilarity measures, which can be combined in non-linear ways. We outline a method to find similar trails under user-defined restrictions within this heterogeneous feature space and an associated similarity space, and to describe progressions of trails representing a web access history. This information can then be used to reassign resources, e.g. by a web site administrator, to address deficiencies or shifting priorities in accessing web-based materials.

    E-Commerce Security Resource

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    As the Internet continues to play an increasingly important role in supporting business-to-business and business-to-customer transactions, it is crucial for the participants in these transactions to be informed about and to understand the involved risks and how to guard against them. Most websites presenting Internet and e-commerce security issues provide only specific, technical information aimed at system specialists, leaving out a more interdisciplinary audience of business professionals and entrepreneurs. The EcomRISK.org resource was created to fill this need, by providing an educational background for a more general audience, as well as the means of communicating concerns, problems, and solutions between users and experts, and research tools for future development
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