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Acrylate protects a marine bacterium from grazing by a ciliate predator.

Zhao-Jie TengPeng WangXiu-Lan ChenRichard GuillonneauChun-Yang LiSong-Bao ZouJun GongKai-Wen XuLin HanChao WangDavid John ScanlanYin ChenYu-Zhong Zhang
Published in: Nature microbiology (2021)
Cleavage of dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) can deter herbivores in DMSP-producing eukaryotic algae; however, it is unclear whether a parallel defence mechanism operates in marine bacteria. Here we demonstrate that the marine bacterium Puniceibacterium antarcticum SM1211, which does not use DMSP as a carbon source, has a membrane-associated DMSP lyase, DddL. At high concentrations of DMSP, DddL causes an accumulation of acrylate around cells through the degradation of DMSP, which protects against predation by the marine ciliate Uronema marinum. The presence of acrylate can alter the grazing preference of U. marinum to other bacteria in the community, thereby influencing community structure.
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