Histopathological methods for the investigation of microbial communities associated with disease lesions in reef corals

0301 basic medicine disease Ecology 060205 Marine and Estuarine Ecology (incl. Marine Ichthyology) microbial communities spatial structure Environment Cyanobacteria Microbiology Adaptation, Physiological 630 Cnidaria 03 medical and health sciences 060504 Microbial Ecology Animals Symbiosis
DOI: 10.1046/j.1472-765x.2002.01097.x Publication Date: 2003-03-12T10:16:28Z
ABSTRACT
To determine the spatial structure of microbial communities associated with disease lesions of reef corals (Scleractinia).Agarose pre-embedding preserved the structure of the disease lesion and surrounding tissues prior to demineralization of the carbonate exoskeleton and embedding in resin. Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) was used to localize bacteria in the lesions of various diseases.The techniques successfully preserved the in situ spatial structure of degenerated coral tissues. In one case (white plague disease), significant bacterial populations were found only in fragmented remnants of degenerated coral tissues at the lesion boundary that would not have been detected using conventional histopathological techniques.Determining the composition, spatial structure and dynamics of microbial communities within the disease lesions is necessary to understand the process of disease progression. The methods described may be applicable to a wide range of diseases involving necrotic lesion formation and requiring extensive tissue processing, such as skeleton demineralization.
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