4.3 Article

Spatial Variability in Secondary Metabolites of the Indo-Pacific Sponge Stylissa massa

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ECOLOGY
Volume 38, Issue 5, Pages 463-475

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10886-012-0124-8

Keywords

Porifera; Chemical defense; Geographic variability; Stylissa; Antimicrobial activity

Funding

  1. NOAA/NIUST [NA16RU1496]
  2. NIH MBRS SCORE [S06-GM-44796]
  3. German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD)

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Chemical diversity represents a measure of selective pressures acting on genotypic variability. In order to understand patterns of chemical ecology and biodiversity in the environment, it is necessary to enhance our knowledge of chemical diversity within and among species. Many sponges produce variable levels of secondary metabolites in response to diverse biotic and abiotic environmental factors. This study evaluated intra-specific variability in secondary metabolites in the common Indo-Pacific sponge over various geographic scales, from local to ocean basin. Several major metabolites were quantified in extracts from sponges collected in American Samoa, Pohnpei, Saipan, and at several sites and depths in Guam. Concentrations of several of these metabolites varied geographically across the Pacific basin, with American Samoa and Pohnpei exhibiting the greatest differences, and Guam and Saipan more similar to each other. There were also significant differences in concentrations among different sites and depths within Guam. The crude extract of exhibited feeding deterrence against the omnivorous pufferfish at natural concentrations, however, none of the isolated compounds was deterrent at the maximum natural concentrations observed, nor were mixtures of these compounds, thus emphasizing the need for bioassay-guided isolation to characterize specific chemical defenses. Antibacterial activity against a panel of ecologically relevant pathogens was minimal. Depth transplants, predator exclusion, and UV protection experiments were performed, but although temporal variability in compound concentrations was observed, there was no evidence that secondary metabolite concentration in was induced by any of these factors. Although the reasons behind the variability observed in the chemical constituents of are still in question, all sponges are not created equal from a chemical standpoint, and these studies provide further insights into patterns of chemical diversity within .

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