FN Archimer Export Format PT J TI Bacterial community structure of the marine diatom Haslea ostrearia BT AF LEPINAY, Alexandra CAPIAUX, Herve TURPIN, Vincent MONDEGUER, Florence LEBEAU, Thierry AS 1:1,2;2:3;3:1;4:4;5:2; FF 1:;2:;3:;4:PDG-ODE-DYNECO-PHYC;5:; C1 Univ Nantes, Fac Sci & Tech, MMS, EA 2160, 2 Rue Houssiniere,BP 92208, F-44322 Nantes, France. Univ Nantes, CNRS, LPGN, UMR 6112, 2 Rue Houssiniere,BP 92208, F-44322 Nantes, France. IUT Dept Genie Biol, Plateforme Anal Mol Biodiversite Environm, 18 Blvd Gaston Defferre, F-85035 La Roche Sur Yon, France. IFREMER, Lab Phycotoxines, Rue Ile Yeu, F-44311 Nantes 03, France. C2 UNIV NANTES, FRANCE UNIV NANTES, FRANCE UNIV NANTES, FRANCE IFREMER, FRANCE SI NANTES SE PDG-ODE-DYNECO-PHYC IN WOS Ifremer jusqu'en 2018 copubli-france copubli-univ-france IF 3.994 TC 3 UR https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00326/43737/43344.pdf LA English DT Article DE ;Biofilm;Ecology;Metabolic fingerprinting;Microalgae;Phycosphere;TTGE AB Haslea ostrearia produces a water-soluble, blue-green pigment, called marennine, with proven economic benefits (as a bioactive compound used to green oysters, which improves their market value). Incomplete knowledge of the ecological features of this marine diatom complicates its cultivation. More specifically, the ecology of bacteria surrounding H. ostrearia in ponds is what remains unknown. The structure of this bacterial community was previously analyzed by means of PCR-TTGE before and after isolating H. ostrearia cells recovered from 4 localities in order to distinguish the relative parts of the biotope and biocenose and to describe the temporal dynamics of the bacterial community structure at two time scales (2 weeks vs. 9 months). The bacterial structure of the phycosphere differed strongly from that of bulk sediment. The level of similarity between bacteria recovered from the biofilm and suspended bacteria did not exceed 10%. On the other hand, similarities among the bacterial community structures in biofilms were above 90% regardless of the geographic origin of the algal isolates, while the percentages were lower for suspended bacteria. The differences in bacterial structures of two H. ostrearia isolates (HO-R and HO-BM) resulted in specific metabolomic profiles. The nontargeted metabolomic investigation revealed more distinct profiles in the case of this bacteria-alga association than for the H. ostrearia monoculture. At the culture cycle scale under laboratory conditions, the bacterial community depended on the growth stage. When H. ostrearia was subcultured for 9 months, a shift in the bacterial structure was observed as of 3 months, with the bacterial structure stabilizing afterwards (70%–86% similarities), in spite of the size reduction of the H. ostrearia frustule. Based on these results, an initial insight into the relationships between H. ostrearia and its surrounding bacteria could be drawn, leading to a better understanding of the ecological feature of this marine diatom. PY 2016 PD JUL SO Algal Research-biomass Biofuels And Bioproducts SN 2211-9264 PU Elsevier Science Bv VL 16 UT 000375610000047 BP 418 EP 426 DI 10.1016/j.algal.2016.04.011 ID 43737 ER EF