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1.
Marine actinomycetes provide a rich source of structurally unique and bioactive secondary metabolites. Numerous genera of marine actinomycetes have been isolated from marine sediments as well as several sponge species. In this study, 16 different species of Caribbean sponges were collected from four different locations in the coastal waters off Puerto Rico in order to examine diversity and bioactive metabolite production of marine actinomycetes in Caribbean sponges. Sediments were also collected from each location, in order to compare actinomycete communities between these two types of samples. A total of 180 actinomycetes were isolated and identified based on 16S rRNA gene analysis. Phylogenetic analysis revealed the presence of at least 14 new phylotypes belonging to the genera Micromonospora, Verruscosispora, Streptomyces, Salinospora, Solwaraspora, Microbacterium and Cellulosimicrobium. Seventy-eight of the isolates (19 from sediments and 59 from sponges) shared 100 % sequence identity with Micromonospora sp. R1. Despite having identical 16S rRNA sequences, the bioactivity of extracts and subsequent fractions generated from the fermentation of both sponge- and sediment-derived isolates identical to Micromonospora sp. R1 varied greatly, with a marked increase in antibiotic metabolite production in those isolates derived from sponges. These results indicate that the chemical profiles of isolates with high 16S rRNA sequence homology to known strains can be diverse and dependent on the source of isolation. In addition, seven previously reported dihydroquinones produced by five different Streptomyces strains have been purified and characterized from one Streptomyces sp. strain isolated in this study from the Caribbean sponge Agelas sceptrum.  相似文献   

2.
A disease-like syndrome is currently affecting a large percentage of the Ianthella basta populations from the Great Barrier Reef and central Torres Strait. Symptoms of the syndrome include discolored, necrotic spots leading to tissue degradation, exposure of the skeletal fibers, and disruption of the choanocyte chambers. To ascertain the role of microbes in the disease process, a comprehensive comparison of bacteria, viruses, fungi, and other eukaryotes was performed in healthy and diseased sponges using multiple techniques. A low diversity of microbes was observed in both healthy and diseased sponge communities, with all sponges dominated by an Alphaproteobacteria, a Gammaproteobacteria, and a group I crenarchaeota. Bacterial cultivation, community analysis by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (Bacteria and Eukarya), sequencing of 16S rRNA clone libraries (Bacteria and Archaea), and direct visual assessment by electron microscopy failed to reveal any putative pathogens. In addition, infection assays could not establish the syndrome in healthy sponges even after direct physical contact with affected tissue. These results suggest that microbes are not responsible for the formation of brown spot lesions and necrosis in I. basta.Sponges harbor a highly diverse range of microorganisms, including representatives from 28 bacterial phyla and both major lineages of the Archaea (reference 34 and references cited therein; 40). Microorganisms can comprise up to 40% of sponge biomass, although sponges with more developed aquiferous systems and looser mesohyl often have lower microbial abundances (35). Some sponge-microbe associations may be considered symbiotic (34), while others are nonspecific and may include potentially pathogenic microorganisms (7, 41).Diseases of marine organisms have been attributed to bacteria, fungi, viruses, protozoans, and a variety of metazoan parasites (18). In sponges, bacteria and fungi are the most commonly reported pathogens, but the exact etiological agents are rarely identified, and little is known about the disease processes (38). In the past decade there has been an increase in reports of sponge disease around the globe, including the Caribbean, Panama, Papua New Guinea, and Slovenia (7, 14, 27, 29, 41, 44). Disease-like symptoms in sponges may also arise from environmental stressors (4, 17), physical damage (46), predation (20), or competitive interactions (22).Since 2006, two studies have reported a disease-like syndrome in the sponge Ianthella basta, which is commonly distributed in Papua New Guinea (7) and along the Great Barrier Reef (24). A large percentage of I. basta sponges from the Torres Strait and the Palm Islands in the Great Barrier Reef were found to exhibit signs of disease, which included discolored, necrotic spots and exposed skeletal fibers (24). In sponges affected by this syndrome there was a high level of cellular degradation and debris within the remnants of the choanocyte chambers. In Papua New Guinea, I. basta exhibited high mortality between 1996 and 2000, with the affected sponges exhibiting mottled brown lesions, rotted tissue, and large holes (7). The etiological agent of disease in I. basta was not unequivocally ascertained in either study.Previous research using 454 tag pyrosequencing has assessed the microbial community in I. basta and reported high diversity, with 1,099 operational taxonomic units (OTU) at 95% sequence similarity (40). However, most of this diversity was composed of rare organisms represented by only one or a few sequences. The community was dominated by the Alpha- and Gammaproteobacteria with a single Gammaproteobacteria OTU actually comprising 49% of all sequence tags (40). The rare microbial biosphere in I. basta included Acidobacteria, Actinobacteria, Bacteroidetes, Chlamydiae, Chloroflexi, Cyanobacteria, Deinococcus-Thermus, Firmicutes, Gemmatimonadetes, Lentisphaerae, Nitrospira, Planctomyces, Poribacteria, Spirochaetes, TM7, Verrucomicrobia, and the beta, delta, and epsilon classes of the Proteobacteria (40).With bacteria commonly implicated in sponge disease processes and shifts in microbial communities being used to detect putative pathogens in corals and sponges (3, 7, 33, 41), we sought to ascertain the role of microorganisms in the disease-like syndrome affecting I. basta and to determine how disease affects the symbiotic microbial population.  相似文献   

3.
This review highlights recent findings of our group on bioactive marine natural products isolated from marine sponges and marine derived fungi. The activated chemical defence of the Mediterranean sponge Aplysina aerophoba is introduced as an example of a dynamic response of marine sponges to wounding. Following tissue disrupture preformed brominated isoxazoline alkaloids are enzymatically cleaved and thereby give rise to aeroplysinin-1 which is believed to protect sponges from invasion of pathogenic bacteria. A preliminary characterization of the membrane bound enzyme(s) involved in the cleavage reaction is presented. Bromotyrosine derived, oxime group bearing peptides, the so called bastadins, obtained from the sponge Ianthella basta and some of their synthetic derivatives were shown to exhibit pronounced antifouling activity against larvae of the barnacle Balanus improvisus. The antifouling activity could be traced to the oxime group as an important pharmacophore that was also found to be present in other sponge derived natural products exhibiting antifouling activity. Marine derived fungi that reside within invertebrates such as sponges or inside Mangrove plants are emerging as a new source of bioactive metabolites as demonstrated for Aspergillus ustus and Alternaria sp. that were isolated from the sponge Suberites domuncula or from the Mangrove plant Sonneratia alba, respectively. The former fungus yielded new moderately cytotoxic sesquiterpenoids of the drimane type whereas the latter was found to produce polyketides such as alternariol that exhibited strong and selective inhibitory activity against several protein kinases, for instance Aurora A and B which are targets for anticancer chemotherapy.  相似文献   

4.
Sponges often exhibit tissue regression in response to stressful conditions. This study investigated whether handling stress invoked tissue regression in Ianthella basta and assessed whether sponges could recover from this regressed tissue state. Six necrotic specimens and 12 healthy explants were collected at Orpheus Is. Australia and transported to aquarium facilities. Sponges were photographed daily and an integrated density (ID) measurement was used to quantify tissue regression. Histological samples were taken from sponge explants to compare cellular organization. Bacterial communities of regressed and recovered tissue were compared using Denaturing Gradient Gel Electrophoresis (DGGE). After 12 h both necrotic and healthy sponges displayed substantial tissue regression. However, within 72 h all sponges recovered to their original condition. The ID of the sponge tissue doubled, confirming tissue recovery in I. basta. Sponges affected by tissue regression had significantly fewer choanocyte chambers and more densely packed granulated cells than recovered sponges. DGGE revealed the same microbial symbionts in both regressed and recovered sponges. Handling stress associated with collection and transportation is sufficient to invoke tissue regression in this species, but sponges can rapidly recover. This study contributes to our understanding of how sponges respond to environmental pressures, influencing population resilience and persistence.  相似文献   

5.
6.
The effects of invasive species on native fauna are understudied, even though their consequences should be taken into consideration for the proper conservation and management of marine systems. Furthermore, bioinvasions may have greater consequences if they affect key structural species with slow dynamics such as marine sponges. We propose that reproductive output could be used as a potential early warning signal to detect possible future changes in population trends of long-lived species (i.e. sponges) as a result of biological invasions. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of invasive algal (Womersleyella setacea) overgrowth on sponge reproduction by comparing the presence of reproductive elements (spermatic cysts, oocytes, embryos, and larvae) in sponges covered by a thick carpet of the invasive algae and in sponges dwelling in the same habitat but without the invasive algae. Three variables were calculated to assess the impact of the invasive alga on sponge reproduction: the reproductive effort, the proportion of individuals in reproduction, and the size of the reproductive structures. We studied eight sponge species representing the main components of the deep rocky reefs of the area. Our results showed that W. setacea had a strong negative effect on sponge reproduction in six out of eight sponge species studied, with lower and even nil reproductive structures on the sponges subjected to the algal overgrowth. Thus, considering that sexual reproduction is necessary for the persistence of most sponge populations, a significant and constant reduction of the reproductive effort may compromise their viability and affect future trends in these benthic systems.  相似文献   

7.
This study analyzed the bioactivity of extracts from 25 Antarctic demosponge species against 20 bacterial isolates and 1 diatom species collected from the waters off the western Antarctic Peninsula. All sponge species had lipophilic and hydrophilic extracts assayed at two concentrations (1× and 3× natural concentration) against 16 strains of Gamma Proteobacteria, 1 Flavobacterium, and 3 unidentified species of bacteria isolated from sympatric sponges. The majority of the bacterial isolates had no growth inhibition with only one isolate found to consistently have any growth inhibition due to sponge extracts. The sponges also had lipophilic and hydrophilic extracts assayed at three concentrations (0.3×, 1×, and 3× natural concentration) against the chain-forming pennate diatom Syndroposis sp. Almost every sponge’s lipophilic extract (96%) resulted in significant diatom mortality at the estimated natural concentration with the majority of the extracts (60%) still resulting in significant mortality at 30% of the natural concentration. The hydrophilic extracts of 60% of the sponges resulted in significant diatom mortality at the natural concentration. Even at 30% of the natural concentration, 24% of the hydrophilic sponge extracts resulted in significant diatom mortality. These sponges appear to have stronger defenses against diatom fouling than bacterial growth suggesting that there may be more selective pressure for chemical defenses against diatoms.  相似文献   

8.
Chemical and physical defenses of sessile organisms against consumers are well described for both terrestrial and marine systems. However, previous studies have focused on chemical or physical defenses in isolation, and have not considered their interaction. Marine sponges provide a model system for testing this interaction. Some sponge species produce secondary metabolites that deter predation; they may also contain siliceous spicules, but previous studies have provided little evidence that spicules in isolation offer any defense against generalist fish predators. To determine whether the two components have an additive, antagonistic, or synergistic interaction, crude organic extracts and spicules from individuals of 8 Caribbean sponge species were isolated and tested in laboratory feeding assays. These included one chemically defended reef sponge (Agelas clathrodes) and seven known to be intermediately deterrent: six from reef habitats (Cinachyrella alloclada, Clathria virgultosa, Cribrochalina infundibulum, Niphates digitalis, Svenzea zeai, and Xestospongia muta) and one from mangrove habitats (Tedania ignis). Extracts and spicules were assayed at various concentrations, both individually and in combination, in laboratory feeding assays with the bluehead wrasse, Thalassoma bifasciatum. A SAS based GENMOD procedure based on an isobolographic analysis model was used for statistical comparisons. Four sponges (A. clathrodes, C. alloclada, C. virgultosa, and one of three individuals of X. muta) showed evidence of synergisms. Of these, synergy in C. alloclada, C. virgultosa, and X. muta was caused by approximately natural concentrations of extracts and spicules. The extract of A. clathrodes was deterrent, but combination assays required nearly a 3-fold reduction in extract concentration and an 8-fold increase in spicule concentration to show the synergistic effect. Contrary to previous findings, spicules from C. infundibulum and two of three individuals of X. muta were deterrent at natural concentrations. Sponge spicules may be defensive in isolation, or may enhance chemical defenses against consumers, but the lack of synergisms for individuals in 4 of 7 species with intermediate levels of chemical defense suggests that defensive synergy is not the general rule and, when present, may be an example of an exaptation.  相似文献   

9.
Microbial communities are linked with marine sponge are diverse in their structure and function. Our understanding of the sponge-associated microbial diversity is limited especially from Red Sea in Saudi Arabia where few species of sponges have been studied. Here we used pyrosequencing to study two marine sponges and coral species sampled from Obhur region from Red sea in Jeddah. A total of 168 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were identified from Haliclona caerulea, Stylissa carteri and Rhytisma fulvum. Taxonomic identification of tag sequences of 16S ribosomal RNA revealed 6 different bacterial phyla and 9 different classes. A proportion of unclassified reads were was also observed in sponges and coral sample. We found diverse bacterial communities associated with two sponges and a coral sample. Diversity and richness estimates based on OUTs revealed that sponge H. caerulea had significantly high bacterial diversity. The identified OTUs showed unique clustering in three sponge samples as revealed by Principal coordinate analysis (PCoA). Proteobacteria (88–95%) was dominant phyla alonwith Bacteroidetes, Planctomycetes, Cyanobacteria, Firmicutes and Nitrospirae. Seventeen different genera were identified where genus Pseudoalteromonas was dominant in all three samples. This is first study to assess bacterial communities of sponge and coral sample that have never been studied before to unravel their microbial communities using 454-pyrosequencing method.  相似文献   

10.
By forming symbiotic interactions with microbes, many animals and plants gain access to the products of novel metabolic pathways. We investigated the transfer of symbiont-derived carbon and nitrogen to the sponges Aplysina cauliformis, Aplysina fulva, Chondrilla caribensis, Neopetrosia subtriangularis and Xestospongia bocatorensis, all of which host abundant microbial populations, and Niphates erecta, which hosts a sparse symbiont community. We incubated sponges in light and dark bottles containing seawater spiked with 13C- and 15N-enriched inorganic compounds and then measured 13C and 15N enrichment in the microbial (nutrient assimilation) and sponge (nutrient transfer) fractions. Surprisingly, although most sponges hosting abundant microbial communities were more enriched in 13C than N. erecta, only N. subtriangularis was more enriched in 15N than N. erecta. Although photosymbiont abundance varied substantially across species, 13C and 15N enrichment was not significantly correlated with photosymbiont abundance. Enrichment was significantly correlated with the ratio of gross productivity to respiration (P:R), which varied across host species and symbiont phylotype. Because irradiance impacts P:R ratios, we also incubated A. cauliformis in 13C-enriched seawater under different irradiances to determine whether symbiont carbon fixation and transfer are dependent on irradiance. Carbon fixation and transfer to the sponge host occurred in all treatments, but was greatest at higher irradiances and was significantly correlated with P:R ratios. Taken together, these results demonstrate that nutrient transfer from microbial symbionts to host sponges is influenced more by host–symbiont identities and P:R ratios than by symbiont abundance.  相似文献   

11.
Although coral reef health across the globe is declining as a result of anthropogenic impacts, relatively little is known of how environmental variability influences reef organisms other than corals and fish. Sponges are an important component of coral reef fauna that perform many important functional roles and changes in their abundance and diversity as a result of environmental change has the potential to affect overall reef ecosystem functioning. In this study, we examined patterns of sponge biodiversity and abundance across a range of environments to assess the potential key drivers of differences in benthic community structure. We found that sponge assemblages were significantly different across the study sites, but were dominated by one species Lamellodysidea herbacea (42% of all sponges patches recorded) and that the differential rate of sediment deposition was the most important variable driving differences in abundance patterns. Lamellodysidea herbacea abundance was positively associated with sedimentation rates, while total sponge abundance excluding Lamellodysidea herbacea was negatively associated with rates of sedimentation. Overall variation in sponge assemblage composition was correlated with a number of variables although each variable explained only a small amount of the overall variation. Although sponge abundance remained similar across environments, diversity was negatively affected by sedimentation, with the most sedimented sites being dominated by a single sponge species. Our study shows how some sponge species are able to tolerate high levels of sediment and that any transition of coral reefs to more sedimented states may result in a shift to a low diversity sponge dominated system, which is likely to have subsequent effects on ecosystem functioning.  相似文献   

12.
Interactions between organisms add complexity to ecosystem function, particularly on coral reefs. The Caribbean orange icing sponge Mycale laevis is semi-cryptic, often growing under coral colonies or between coral branches. This association is reportedly a mutualism, with the sponge deterring boring sponges from invading the coral skeleton and the coral providing an expanding surface for sponge growth. But is there an alternative explanation for the proximity of sponge and coral? We examined the importance of fish predation on the growth of the sponge. While the semi-cryptic growth form of M. laevis predominates on reefs off the Florida Keys and the Bahamas Islands, M. laevis grows with a non-cryptic, erect morphology off Bocas del Toro, Panama. Surveys revealed that sponge-eating fishes were rare or absent at Bocas del Toro compared to sites in the Florida Keys. Because past studies were inconsistent about the palatability of M. laevis to fish predators, we conducted feeding experiments with sponges from all three sites. Crude organic extracts of M. laevis from all three sites were palatable to generalist fish predators in aquarium assays, and field feeding assays and caging experiments conducted in the Florida Keys confirmed that spongivorous fishes readily ate exposed fragments of M. laevis. Our results suggest that M. laevis is restricted to its semi-cryptic growth form by spongivorous predators, with corals providing a physical refuge from predation. This alternative explanation supports the broader hypothesis that Caribbean reef sponges can be categorized on the basis of chemical defense into defended, palatable, and preferred species, the last of which are restricted to refugia.  相似文献   

13.
Lysmata pederseni, a protandric simultaneously hermaphroditic shrimp that inhabits the tube sponge Callyspongia vaginalis, is monogamous in the central and southeastern Caribbean Sea. We tested the null hypothesis of monogamy in a northern Caribbean population. In the Florida Keys, shrimps did not inhabit host individuals in pairs with a frequency greater than expected by chance alone. Hermaphrodites inhabited sponges solitarily and often brooded embryos. Hermaphrodites do not store sperm and need to be inseminated shortly after molting to fertilize a new batch of eggs. Thus, males and/or other hermaphrodites are likely switching among host individuals in search of sexual partners. Field experiments demonstrated low shrimp host fidelity. Host residence time was ~2 times shorter for males than for hermaphrodites. We inferred a polygynandrous mating system in L. pederseni from the Florida Keys, with male-role and young hermaphrodites often moving among sponges in search of older, more sedentary, female-role hermaphrodites. We expected shrimps to use water-borne chemical cues originating from conspecifics or sponges to locate sexual partners. Experiments demonstrated that shrimps were attracted to water-borne cues originating from sponges but not conspecifics. We have described the mating system of a reef-associated shrimp in a fast-pace shifting seascape increasingly dominated by sponges and vanishing stony corals. In the central and southeastern Caribbean Sea, with greater coral cover and lower sponge abundance than in the Florida Keys, the same species is monogamous. Whether or not similar shifts in the social organization of other coral reef-dwelling marine organisms are occurring due to contemporary changes in seascapes is a relevant topic that deserves further attention.  相似文献   

14.
The need to produce bioactive compounds from marine sponges leads several groups of research to the culture of primmorphs from different species, which are generally maintained in aquaria for long time before processing. Here we present a study where the importance of several parameters on primmorphs production from the symbiotic sponge Petrosia ficiformis has been evaluated: (i) the sterility of sea water, (ii) the maintenance in aquarium before processing, (iii) the seasonal cycle. Sterility of sea water does not improve primmorphs production in this species. The maintenance of sponges in aquaria before processing negatively affects cell cultures. Regarding seasonality, it is evident that both the number and the size of primmorphs can deeply change depending on the period of the year the sponge is collected. April and July are the months that lead to the highest number of primmorphs, May and June are the months that lead to their biggest sizes. Possible relationships of these results with the life cycle of P. ficiformis are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
The relationships between the morphology of sponges and variables describing their harbored polychaete fauna were analyzed along Rocas, the only known South Atlantic Atoll, together with the location on host and feeding habits. The identification and quantification of all the associated organisms highlighted the dominance of polychaetes. The adults of the symbiotic species Haplosyllis spongicola were the most dominant sponge endobionts. However, both juveniles and epitokes (reproductive individuals) of H. spongicola were also found, suggesting that this species completes its life cycle inside the host. Polychaete density was significantly greater in lobate sponges than in massive and encrusting forms. Conversely, the highly specific symbiotic mode of life of H. spongicola species seems to play a major role in structuring the composition of the polychaete fauna in relation to sponge morphotypes along Rocas Atoll.  相似文献   

16.
Marine sponges represent one of the few eukaryotic groups that frequently harbour symbiotic members of the Thaumarchaeota, which are important chemoautotrophic ammonia-oxidizers in many environments. However, in most studies, direct demonstration of ammonia-oxidation by these archaea within sponges is lacking, and little is known about sponge-specific adaptations of ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA). Here, we characterized the thaumarchaeal symbiont of the marine sponge Ianthella basta using metaproteogenomics, fluorescence in situ hybridization, qPCR and isotope-based functional assays. ‘Candidatus Nitrosospongia ianthellae’ is only distantly related to cultured AOA. It is an abundant symbiont that is solely responsible for nitrite formation from ammonia in I. basta that surprisingly does not harbour nitrite-oxidizing microbes. Furthermore, this AOA is equipped with an expanded set of extracellular subtilisin-like proteases, a metalloprotease unique among archaea, as well as a putative branched-chain amino acid ABC transporter. This repertoire is strongly indicative of a mixotrophic lifestyle and is (with slight variations) also found in other sponge-associated, but not in free-living AOA. We predict that this feature as well as an expanded and unique set of secreted serpins (protease inhibitors), a unique array of eukaryotic-like proteins, and a DNA-phosporothioation system, represent important adaptations of AOA to life within these ancient filter-feeding animals.  相似文献   

17.
Sponges (Porifera), in general, are pumping water through their bodies. This water contains planktonic eukaryotic and procaryotic organisms as well as particulate and dissolved organic matter as potential food source. We analyzed the eukaryotic unicellular plankton fraction from water surrounding sponges of the species Aplysina aerophoba, Nardo 1886, from sponge tissue, as well as from water expelled from those sponges. We found sponges without any remnants of plankton in their tissue, as well as specimens which incorporated high numbers of remnants of organisms after planktonic “blooms”. In laboratory experiments, sponges were not showing any uptake of plankton from their surrounding water. Sponges are generally considered as inner filter feeders. However, our results indicate that eukaryotic unicellular plankton organisms are not the main food resource of the common sponge A. aerophoba. This raises the question if filter feeding is actually the main characteristic of the poriferan lifestyle.  相似文献   

18.
The fatty acid (FA) composition of Demospongiae species from the Sea of Okhotsk was studied. Fifteen sponge species were investigated for the first time, and the previously studied species Desmacella rosea and Myxilla incrustans were reexamined for their FA composition. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry revealed 150 different fatty acids, of which 15 have not been identified in sponge lipids previously. The relative content of saturated FAs varied from 7.6 in Melonachora kobjakovae to 29.6% in Amphilectus digitata, with an average of 14.6% of total FAs. The relative content of monoenic FAs ranged from 12.8 in T. dirhaphis to 27.0% in Polymastia sp., with an average of 20.6% of total FAs. Non-methylen-interrupted, primarily unsaturated Δ5,9-FAs contributed a significantly to the amount of polyunsaturated fatty acids of sponges; this being a distinguishing feature of the FA composition of the investigated group of organisms.  相似文献   

19.
Aplysina aerophoba, Nardo 1886 is a common and well examined demosponge in the Mediterranean Sea. For sponges, as sessile, inner filter feeders, the most important function is pumping water through their canal system. This flow through is actively generated, supplies the sponge with oxygen and food particles and washes out waste products. Oxygen measurements ex situ, as a given example, show high oxygen saturations inside pumping sponges and oxygen depletion in non-pumping sponges. Thus, the oxygen situation within the sponge, like the food particle supply, waste washout and others, are directly related to its active pumping. To learn more about the poriferan function, it is important to know more about its undisturbed in situ pumping activity and consequently about the correlated conditions inside the sponge body.We conducted a tracer experiment in situ and tested sponge activity in terms of active pumping. Our technique excluded stress and disturbance to the sponges, hence minimizing experimental artefacts. The results show Aplysina aerophoba to be permanently pumping, which is implying a permanent supply of oxygen and of course food particles as well as a permanent washout of waste products and a permanent, presumably high energy consumption.We therefore conclude, that Aplysina aerophoba is always well supplied with oxygen, and that tissue anoxia or anaerobic metabolisms are of no significant importance in this sponge species. This fact of a permanent flow through in sponges will have to be taken into account for past and future hypotheses on the physiology of the sponge-microbial systems.  相似文献   

20.
Sponges are abundant, diverse and functionally important organisms of coral reef ecosystems. Sponge-associated microorganisms have been receiving greater attention because of their significant contribution to sponge biomass, biogeochemical cycles and biotechnological potentials. However, our understanding of the sponge microbiome is limited to a few species of sponges from restricted geographical locations. Here, we report for the first time the bacterial diversity of two cohabiting sponges, viz. Cinachyra cavernosa and Haliclona pigmentifera, as well as that in the ambient water from the coral reef ecosystems of the Gulf of Mannar, located along the southeast coast of India. Two hundred and fifty two clones in the 16S rRNA gene library of these sponges were grouped into eight distinct phyla, of which four belonged to the core group that are associated only with sponges. Phylogenetic analysis of the core bacteria showed close affinity to other sponge-associated bacteria from different geographical locations. γ-Proteobacteria, Chloroflexi, Planctomycetes and Deferribacter were the core groups in C. cavernosa while β and δ-Proteobacteria performed this role in H. pigmentifera. We observed greater OTU diversity for C. cavernosa (Hǀ 2.07) compared to H. pigmentifera (Hǀ 1.97). UniFrac analysis confirmed the difference in bacterial diversity of the two sponge species and also between the sponges and the reef water (p<0.001). The results of our study restate the existence of a host driven force in shaping the sponge microbiome.  相似文献   

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