4.5 Article

Metabolomic signatures of coral bleaching history

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NATURE ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION
卷 5, 期 4, 页码 495-+

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41559-020-01388-7

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  1. Paul G. Allen Family Foundation

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This study demonstrates a stable impact of coral bleaching on the metabolomics of both the coral host and algal symbiont, leading to different physiological responses to temperature stress. Metabolomic differences help predict bleaching phenotype and offer new insights into the biochemical mechanisms of coral bleaching.
Coral bleaching has a profound impact on the health and function of reef ecosystems, but the metabolomic effects of coral bleaching are largely uncharacterized. Here, untargeted metabolomics was used to analyse pairs of adjacent Montipora capitata corals that had contrasting bleaching phenotypes during a severe bleaching event in 2015. When these same corals were sampled four years later while visually healthy, there was a strong metabolomic signature of bleaching history. This was primarily driven by betaine lipids from the symbiont, where corals that did not bleach were enriched in saturated lyso-betaine lipids. Immune modulator molecules were also altered by bleaching history in both the coral host and the algal symbiont, suggesting a shared role in partner choice and bleaching response. Metabolomics from a separate set of validation corals was able to predict the bleaching phenotype with 100% accuracy. Experimental temperature stress induced phenotype-specific responses, which magnified differences between historical bleaching phenotypes. These findings indicate that natural bleaching susceptibility is manifested in the biochemistry of both the coral animal and its algal symbiont. This metabolome difference is stable through time and results in different physiological responses to temperature stress. This work provides insight into the biochemical mechanisms of coral bleaching and presents a valuable new tool for resilience-based reef restoration. Coral bleaching could leave a lasting impact on the physiological functioning of corals. The authors show divergent metabolomic profiles in coral hosts and algal symbionts associated with bleaching history.

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