Role of the bicarbonate transporter SLC4γ in stony-coral skeleton formation and evolution

Author:

Tinoco Amanda I.12ORCID,Mitchison-Field Lorna M. Y.13ORCID,Bradford Jacob45ORCID,Renicke Christian3,Perrin Dimitri45ORCID,Bay Line K.6,Pringle John R.3ORCID,Cleves Phillip A.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Embryology, Carnegie Institution for Science, Baltimore, MD 21218

2. Applied BioSciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia

3. Department of Genetics, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305

4. Centre for Data Science, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, QLD 4001, Australia

5. School of Computer Science, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, QLD 4001, Australia

6. Australian Institute of Marine Science, Townsville, QLD 4810, Australia

Abstract

Coral reefs are highly diverse ecosystems of immense ecological, economic, and aesthetic importance built on the calcium-carbonate-based skeletons of stony corals. The formation of these skeletons is threatened by increasing ocean temperatures and acidification, and a deeper understanding of the molecular mechanisms involved may assist efforts to mitigate the effects of such anthropogenic stressors. In this study, we focused on the role of the predicted bicarbonate transporter SLC4γ, which was suggested in previous studies to be a product of gene duplication and to have a role in coral-skeleton formation. Our comparative-genomics study using 30 coral species and 15 outgroups indicates that SLC4γ is present throughout the stony corals, but not in their non-skeleton-forming relatives, and apparently arose by gene duplication at the onset of stony-coral evolution. Our expression studies show that SLC4γ , but not the closely related and apparently ancestral SLC4β , is highly upregulated during coral development coincident with the onset of skeleton deposition. Moreover, we show that juvenile coral polyps carrying CRISPR/Cas9-induced mutations in SLC4γ are defective in skeleton formation, with the severity of the defect in individual animals correlated with their frequencies of SLC4γ mutations. Taken together, the results suggest that the evolution of the stony corals involved the neofunctionalization of the newly arisen SLC4γ for a unique role in the provision of concentrated bicarbonate for calcium-carbonate deposition. The results also demonstrate the feasibility of reverse-genetic studies of ecologically important traits in adult corals.

Funder

Carnegie Institution for Science

Simons Foundation

Australian Institute of Marine Science

Macquarie University

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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