4.8 Article

Towards enhancing coral heat tolerance: a microbiome transplantation treatment using inoculations of homogenized coral tissues

Journal

MICROBIOME
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s40168-021-01053-6

Keywords

Microbiome transplantation; Marine microbiomes; Climate change; Microbiome flexibility; Thermal tolerance; Beneficial bacteria; 16S rRNA gene; Coral bleaching; Assisted evolution

Categories

Funding

  1. DFG (German National Science Foundation) excellence initiative Future Ocean [CP1782]
  2. DFG research center Origin and Function of Metaorganisms [CRC1182-TP B1]
  3. Projekt DEAL

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The study found that coral recipients who received microbiome transplantation from heat-tolerant donors showed lower bleaching rates when exposed to short-term heat stress. Specific bacterial species from donors were identified in the microbial communities of recipients, indicating successful transmission. These findings suggest that recipient corals may preferentially take up putative bacterial symbionts, supporting resistance to heat stress more effectively than native symbionts. Further research is needed to understand the mechanisms underlying the beneficial effects of microbiome manipulation and to test the long-term persistence of these effects in field conditions.
Background: Microbiome manipulation could enhance heat tolerance and help corals survive the pressures of ocean warming. We conducted coral microbiome transplantation (CMT) experiments using the reef-building corals, Pocillopora and Porites, and investigated whether this technique can benefit coral heat resistance while modifying the bacterial microbiome. Initially, heat-tolerant donors were identified in the wild. We then used fresh homogenates made from coral donor tissues to inoculate conspecific, heat-susceptible recipients and documented their bleaching responses and microbiomes by 16S rRNA gene metabarcoding. Results: Recipients of both coral species bleached at lower rates compared to the control group when exposed to short-term heat stress (34 degrees C). One hundred twelve (Pocillopora sp.) and sixteen (Porites sp.) donor-specific bacterial species were identified in the microbiomes of recipients indicating transmission of bacteria. The amplicon sequence variants of the majority of these transmitted bacteria belonged to known, putatively symbiotic bacterial taxa of corals and were linked to the observed beneficial effect on the coral stress response. Microbiome dynamics in our experiments support the notion that microbiome community evenness and dominance of one or few bacterial species, rather than host-species identity, were drivers for microbiome stability in a holobiont context. Conclusions: Our results suggest that coral recipients likely favor the uptake of putative bacterial symbionts, recommending to include these taxonomic groups in future coral probiotics screening efforts. Our study suggests a scenario where these donor-specific bacterial symbionts might have been more efficient in supporting the recipients to resist heat stress compared to the native symbionts present in the control group. These findings urgently call for further experimental investigation of the mechanisms of action underlying the beneficial effect of CMT and for field-based long-term studies testing the persistence of the effect.

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