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Microbiology 146 (2000), 709-718
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Microbiology (2000), 146, 709-718.
© 2000 Society for General Microbiology


Environmental Microbiology

Occurrence of natural dixenic associations between the symbiont Photorhabdus luminescens and bacteria related to Ochrobactrum spp. in tropical entomopathogenic Heterorhabditis spp. (Nematoda, Rhabditida)

Isabelle Babic1, Marion Fischer-Le Saux1, Eric Giraud2 and Noël Boemare1

Laboratoire de Pathologie Comparée, INRA-CNRS, IFR 56 ‘Biologie cellulaire et Processus infectieux’, Université Montpellier II, CP 101, Place Eugène Bataillon, 34095 Montpellier Cedex 5, France1
Laboratoire des Symbioses Tropicales et Méditerranéennes, CIRAD-IRD-INRA-Agro-Montpellier, BP 5035, F-34032 Montpellier Cedex 1, France2

Author for correspondence: Noël Boemare. Tel: +33 4 67143740. Fax: +33 4 67144679. e-mail: boemare{at}ensam.inra.fr

Bacteria naturally associated with the symbiont Photorhabdus luminescens subsp. akhurstii were isolated from the entomopathogenic nematode Heterorhabditis indica. Bacterial isolates distinct from P. luminescens subsp. akhurstii were obtained from 33% of the samples. Fourteen bacterial isolates, from nematodes collected from three different Caribbean islands, were characterized by conventional phenotypic tests, restriction fragment length polymorphism and sequence analyses of PCR-amplified 16S rRNA genes (16S rDNAs). Isolates were grouped into three genotypes, each one being associated with one Caribbean island. Phenotypic characteristics and 16S rDNA analysis showed that the Photorhabdus-associated bacteria were closely related to Ochrobactrum anthropi for the group from Guadeloupe, and to Ochrobactrum intermedium for the two groups from the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico. No pathogenicity of the Ochrobactrum spp. to the insects Galleria mellonella and Spodoptera littoralis (Lepidoptera) was detected. Since Ochrobactrum spp. are considered as human opportunist pathogens, the mass production of entomopathogenic nematodes for biological control requires strict vigilance.

Keywords: Ochrobactrum spp., Photorhabdus luminescens, Heterorhabditis spp., 16S rRNA gene polymorphism and sequencing

The EMBL accession numbers for the 16S rDNA sequences reported in this paper are AJ245941 (PR17/sat), AJ249458 (FRG11/sat) and AJ249459 (DO23/sat).




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