4.7 Article

Coral Holobionts Possess Distinct Lipid Profiles That May Be Shaped by Symbiodiniaceae Taxonomy

Journal

MARINE DRUGS
Volume 20, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/md20080485

Keywords

corals; thylakoid; Symbiodiniaceae; lipidome; mass-spectrometry; genetic analysis

Funding

  1. Russian Foundation for Basic Research [21-54-54002]
  2. Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology [QTRU01.10/21-22]

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The study analyzed and compared the thylakoid lipidomes of three different coral holobionts, showing distinctive features in lipid profiles associated with thermal tolerance in some symbionts. Understanding the lipid composition of symbionts may help predict coral adaptation in changing environments.
Symbiotic relationships are very important for corals. Abiotic stressors cause the acclimatization of cell membranes in symbionts, which possess different membrane acclimatization strategies. Membrane stability is determined by a unique lipid composition and, thus, the profile of thylakoid lipids can depend on coral symbiont species. We have analyzed and compared thylakoid lipidomes (mono- and digalactosyldiacylglycerols (MGDG and DGDG), sulfoquinovosyldiacylglycerols (SQDG), and phosphatidylglycerols (PG)) of crude extracts from symbiotic reef-building coral Acropora sp., the hydrocoral Millepora platyphylla, and the octocoral Sinularia flexibilis. S. flexibilis crude extracts were characterized by a very high SQDG/PG ratio, a DGDG/MGDG ratio < 1, a lower degree of galactolipid unsaturation, a higher content of SQDG with polyunsaturated fatty acids, and a thinner thylakoid membrane which may be explained by the presence of thermosensitive dinoflagellates Cladocopium C3. In contrast, crude extracts of M. platyphylla and Acropora sp. exhibited the lipidome features of thermotolerant Symbiodiniaceae. M. platyphylla and Acropora sp. colonies contained Cladocopium C3u and Cladocopium C71/C71a symbionts, respectively, and their lipidome profiles showed features that indicate thermotolerance. We suggest that an association with symbionts that exhibit the thermotolerant thylakoid lipidome features, combined with a high Symbiodiniaceae diversity, may facilitate further acclimatization/adaptation of M. platyphylla and Acropora sp. holobionts in the South China Sea.

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