4.8 Article

A genomic view of the microbiome of coral reef demosponges

Journal

ISME JOURNAL
Volume 15, Issue 6, Pages 1641-1654

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41396-020-00876-9

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Funding

  1. R&D project (UFRJ/Shell Brasil/ANP) - Shell Brasil under the ANP RD levy [ANP 21005-4]

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Sponges harbor diverse symbiotic microbes that can degrade organic matter in coral reef ecosystems. These symbionts contain functional compositions that can degrade coral reef organic matter, and many sponge-enriched genes are laterally transferred between microbial taxa.
Sponges underpin the productivity of coral reefs, yet few of their microbial symbionts have been functionally characterised. Here we present an analysis of similar to 1200 metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) spanning seven sponge species and 25 microbial phyla. Compared to MAGs derived from reef seawater, sponge-associated MAGs were enriched in glycosyl hydrolases targeting components of sponge tissue, coral mucus and macroalgae, revealing a critical role for sponge symbionts in cycling reef organic matter. Further, visualisation of the distribution of these genes amongst symbiont taxa uncovered functional guilds for reef organic matter degradation. Genes for the utilisation of sialic acids and glycosaminoglycans present in sponge tissue were found in specific microbial lineages that also encoded genes for attachment to sponge-derived fibronectins and cadherins, suggesting these lineages can utilise specific structural elements of sponge tissue. Further, genes encoding CRISPR and restriction-modification systems used in defence against mobile genetic elements were enriched in sponge symbionts, along with eukaryote-like gene motifs thought to be involved in maintaining host association. Finally, we provide evidence that many of these sponge-enriched genes are laterally transferred between microbial taxa, suggesting they confer a selective advantage within the sponge niche and therefore play a critical role in host ecology and evolution.

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