Dg. Bard et Bb. Ward, A SPECIES-SPECIFIC BACTERIAL PRODUCTIVITY METHOD USING IMMUNOMAGNETICSEPARATION AND RADIOTRACER EXPERIMENTS, Journal of microbiological methods, 28(3), 1997, pp. 207-219
A species-specific bacterial productivity assay, combining radiotracer
methods with immunomagnetic bead separation, was developed and tested
in the marine environment. The capture method was optimized using cul
tures of the marine denitrifying strain, Pseudomonas stutzeri (ATCC 14
405). Immunocapture was optimal at a bead to target cell ratio of 10:
1 using an indirect antibody technique,in which the target cell is fir
st incubated with specific (primary) polyclonal antiserum and then wit
h the secondary antibody-coated beads. Primary antibody concentration
was less important than target cell concentration in determining the e
fficiency of target cell recovery. Reproducible recovery efficiencies
of 75% could be obtained using cultures, but at natural seawater abund
ance levels, efficiency was much lower, around 20%. Estimates of total
heterotrophic bacterial production and P. stutzeri production, based
on radiotracer incorporation, were obtained for seawater samples from
Monterey Bay, CA. To measure species-specific production, samples were
incubated with radiotracers (methyl-[H-3]-thymidine and [C-14]-leucin
e), fixed, and concentrated. After separating P. stutzeri cells from t
he bacterial assemblage using immunomagnetic separation, target cell f
raction radioactivity was measured. P. stutzeri abundance, estimated b
y immunofluorescence, represented less than 0.1% of the total bacteria
l abundance, whereas radiotracer incorporation by the target fraction
represented 1-3% of the total assemblage tracer incorporation. (C) 199
7 Elsevier Science Ireland Ltd.