Affiliation:
1. ARC Centre for Excellence in Reef Studies and Global Change Institute, University of Queensland, St. Lucia 4072, Queensland, Australia
2. UMR 7208 “Biologie des Organismes et Ecosytèmes Aquatiques” MNHN-CNRS-IRD-UPMC, Case postale 53, 75231 Paris Cedex 05, France
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Exposure to heat stress has been recognized as one of the major factors leading to the breakdown of the coral-alga symbiosis and coral bleaching. Here, we describe the presence of three new cytochrome P450 (
CYP
) genes from the reef-building coral endosymbiont
Symbiodinium
(type C3) and changes in their expression during exposure to severe and moderate heat stress conditions. Sequence analysis of the
CYP
C-terminal region and two conserved domains, the “PERF” and “heme-binding” domains, confirmed the separate identities of the
CYP
genes analyzed. In order to explore the effects of different heat stress scenarios, samples of the scleractinian coral
Acropora millepora
were exposed to elevated temperatures incrementally over an 18-h period (rapid thermal stress) and over a 120-h period (gradual thermal stress). After 18 h of gradual heating and incubation at 26°C, the
Symbiodinium CYP
mRNA pool was approximately 30% larger, while a further 6°C increase to a temperature above the average sea temperature (29°C after 72 h) resulted in a 2- to 4-fold increase in
CYP
expression. Both rapid heat stress and gradual heat stress at 32°C resulted in 50% to 90% decreases in
CYP
gene transcript abundance. Consequently, the initial upregulation of expression of
CYP
genes at moderately elevated temperatures (26°C and 29°C) was followed by a decrease in expression under the greater thermal stress conditions at 32°C. These findings indicate that in the coral-alga symbiosis under heat stress conditions there is production of chemical stressors and/or transcriptional factors that regulate the expression of genes, such as the genes encoding cytochrome P450 monooxygenases, that are involved in the first line of an organism's chemical defense.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
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