The microbiome of the sponge Aplysina caissara in two sites with different levels of anthropogenic impact

Author:

Hardoim Cristiane C P12ORCID,Hardoim Pablo R1,Lôbo-Hajdu Gisele3,Custódio Márcio R4,Thomas Torsten5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. São Paulo State University , Praça Infante Dom Henrique s/nº, Parque Bitaru, São Vicente, São Paulo, CEP 11.330-900 , Brazil

2. Graduate Program in Evolution and Diversity of the Federal University of ABC , Av. dos Estados, 5001, Bairro Bangu, Santo André, São Paulo, CEP 09210–580 , Brazil

3. Department of Genetics, Biology Institute Roberto Alcântara Gomes, Rio de Janeiro State University , Rua São Francisco Xavier, 524, Maracanã, Rio de Janeiro, CEP: 20550-013 , Brazil

4. Department of Physiology, Institute of Biosciences, University of São Paulo , Rua do Matão, Travessa 14 , 101, São Paulo, CEP 05508-090 , Brazil

5. Centre for Marine Science and Innovation, School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of New South Wales, Sydney , New South Wales 2052 , Australia

Abstract

Abstract Despite the important roles that marine sponges play in ecosystem functioning and structuring, little is known about how the sponge holobiont responds to local anthropogenic impacts. Here we assess the influence of an impacted environment (Praia Preta) on the microbial community associated with the endemic sponge Aplysina caissara in comparison to a less-impacted area (Praia do Guaecá) from the coast of São Paulo state (Brazil, southwestern Atlantic coast). We hypothesized that the local anthropogenic impacts will change the microbiome of A. caissara and that the community assembly will be driven by a different process (i.e. deterministic versus stochastic) under distinct levels of impact. The microbiome at the amplicon sequence variants level was found to be statistically distinct between sponges from the different sites, and this was also seen for the microbial communities of the surrounding seawater and sediments. Microbial communities of A. caissara from both sites were found to be assembled by deterministic processes, even though the sites presented distinct anthropogenic impacts, showing a pivotal role of the sponge host in selecting its own microbiome. Overall, this study revealed that local anthropogenic impacts altered the microbiome of A. caissara; however, assembly processes are largely determined by the sponge host.

Funder

Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Microbiology

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