Flashlight fishes (family Anomalopidae) have light organs that contain luminous bacterial symbionts. Although the symbionts have not yet been successfully cultured, the luciferase genes have been cloned directly from the light organ of the Caribbean species,
Kryptophanaron alfredi. The goal of this project was to evaluate the relationship of the symbiont to free-living luminous bacteria by comparison of genes coding for bacterial luciferase (
lux genes). Hybridization of a
luxAB probe from the
Kryptophanaron alfredi symbiont to DNAs from 9 strains (8 species) of luminous bacteria showed that none of the strains tested had
lux genes highly similar to the symbiont. The most similar were a group consisting of
Vibrio harveyi, Vibrio splendidus and
Vibrio orientalis. The nucleotide sequence of the luciferase

subunit gene
luxA of the
Kryptophanaron alfredi symbiont was determined in order to do a more detailed comparison with published
luxA sequences from
Vibrio harveyi, Vibrio fischeri and
Photobacterium leiognathi. The hybridization results, sequence comparisons and the mol% G+C of the
Kryptophanaron alfredi symbiont
luxA gene suggest that the symbiont may be considered as a new species of luminous
Vibrio related to
Vibrio harveyi.
Key words Bioluminescence - Symbiosis -
Kryptophanaron alfredi
The nucleotide sequence reported in this article has been deposited in Genbank under accession number M36597