4.6 Article

Genomic Insights Into the Lifestyles of Thaumarchaeota Inside Sponges

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FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
卷 11, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.622824

关键词

sponge (Porifera); archaea; thaumarchaeota; symbiosis; Petrosia ficiformis; Theonella swinhoei; Hymedesmia (Stylopus) methanophila

资金

  1. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation [GBMF9352]
  2. Inter-Institutional fellowship of the University of Haifa
  3. Helmsley fellowship
  4. Israeli Science Foundation (ISF grant) [913/19]
  5. Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology
  6. Max Planck Society

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Sponges are ancient metazoans with diverse microbial symbionts, including Thaumarchaeota. Analysis of 11 Thaumarchaeota sponge symbiont genomes revealed adaptations for life inside sponge hosts, such as enriched transposases and toxin-antitoxin systems. Unique features like exopolyphosphatases and specific interactions with host sponges suggest a highly specific relationship between Thaumarchaeota and their sponge hosts.
Sponges are among the oldest metazoans and their success is partly due to their abundant and diverse microbial symbionts. They are one of the few animals that have Thaumarchaeota symbionts. Here we compare genomes of 11 Thaumarchaeota sponge symbionts, including three new genomes, to free-living ones. Like their free-living counterparts, sponge-associated Thaumarchaeota can oxidize ammonia, fix carbon, and produce several vitamins. Adaptions to life inside the sponge host include enrichment in transposases, toxin-antitoxin systems and restriction modifications systems, enrichments previously reported also from bacterial sponge symbionts. Most thaumarchaeal sponge symbionts lost the ability to synthesize rhamnose, which likely alters their cell surface and allows them to evade digestion by the host. All but one archaeal sponge symbiont encoded a high-affinity, branched-chain amino acid transporter system that was absent from the analyzed free-living thaumarchaeota suggesting a mixotrophic lifestyle for the sponge symbionts. Most of the other unique features found in sponge-associated Thaumarchaeota, were limited to only a few specific symbionts. These features included the presence of exopolyphosphatases and a glycine cleavage system found in the novel genomes. Thaumarchaeota have thus likely highly specific interactions with their sponge host, which is supported by the limited number of host sponge species to which each of these symbionts is restricted.

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