Transcriptome sequencing and characterization of Symbiodinium muscatinei and Elliptochloris marina, symbionts found within the aggregating sea anemone Anthopleura elegantissima

Brian L. Bingham, Jason Macrander, James L. Dimond

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

There is a growing body of literature using transcriptomic data to study how tropical cnidarians and their photosynthetic endosymbionts respond to environmental stressors and participate in metabolic exchange. Despite these efforts, our understanding of how essential genes function to facilitate symbiosis establishment and maintenance remains limited. The inclusion of taxonomically and ecologically diverse endosymbionts will enhance our understanding of these interactions. Here we characterize the transcriptomes of two very different symbionts found within the temperate sea anemone  Anthopleura elegantissima : the chlorophyte  Elliptochloris marina  and the dinoflagellate  Symbiodinium muscatinei . We use a multi-level approach to assess the diversity of genes found across  S. muscatinei  and  E. marina  transcriptomes, and compare their overall protein domains with other dinoflagellates and chlorophytes. Our analysis identified several genes that are potentially involved in mitigating stress response (e.g., heat shock proteins pathways for mediating reactive oxygen species) and metabolic exchange (e.g., ion transporters). Finally, we show that  S. muscatinei  and other  Symbiodinium  strains are equipped with a high salt peridinin-chl-protein (HSPCP) gene previously identified only in free-living dinoflagellates. The addition of these transcriptomes to the cnidarian-symbiont molecular toolkit will aid in understanding how these vitally important symbiotic relationships are established and maintained across a variety of environmental conditions.
Original languageAmerican English
JournalMarine Genomics
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2017

Keywords

  • Peridinin-chl-proteins
  • Symbiosis
  • Cnidaria
  • Trinity
  • Zoochlorellae
  • Zooxanthellae

Disciplines

  • Environmental Sciences

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