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Thermal stress responses in the bacterial biosphere of the Great Barrier Reef sponge,Rhopaloeides odorabile
Authors:Rachel Simister  Michael W Taylor  Peter Tsai  Lu Fan  Timothy J Bruxner  Mark L Crowe  Nicole Webster
Institution:1. Centre for Microbial Innovation, University of Auckland, , Auckland, 1142 New Zealand;2. Bioinformatics Institute, School of Biological Sciences, University of Auckland, , Auckland, 1142 New Zealand;3. School of Biotechnology and Biomolecular Sciences & Centre for Marine Bio‐Innovation, University of New South Wales, , Sydney, NSW, 2052 Australia;4. Australian Genome Research Facility, Level 5 Gehrmann Laboratories, The University of Queensland, , St Lucia, Qld, 4072 Australia;5. Queensland Centre for Medical Genomics, Institute for Molecular Bioscience, The University of Queensland, , St Lucia, Qld, 4072 Australia;6. Australian Institute of Marine Science, PMB 3, Townsville Mail Centre, , Townsville, Qld, 4810 Australia
Abstract:Marine sponges are diverse, abundant and provide a crucial coupling point between benthic and pelagic habitats due to their high filtration rates. They also harbour extensive microbial communities, with many microbial phylotypes found exclusively in sponge hosts and not in the seawater or surrounding environment, i.e. so‐called sponge‐specific clusters (SCs) or sponge‐ and coral‐specific clusters (SCCs). We employed DNA (16S rRNA gene) and RNA (16S rRNA)‐based amplicon pyrosequencing to investigate the effects of sublethal thermal stress on the bacterial biosphere of the Great Barrier Reef sponge Rhopaloeides odorabile. A total of 8381 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) (97% sequence similarity) were identified, affiliated with 32 bacterial phyla from seawater samples, 23 bacterial phyla from sponge DNA extracts and 18 bacterial phyla from sponge RNA extracts. Sublethal thermal stress (31°C) had no effect on the present and/or active portions of the R. odorabile bacterial community but a shift in the bacterial assemblage was observed in necrotic sponges. Over two‐thirds of DNA and RNA sequences could be assigned to previously defined SCs/SCCs in healthy sponges whereas only 12% of reads from necrotic sponges could be assigned to SCs/SCCs. A rapid decline in host health over a 1°C temperature increment suggests that sponges such as R. odorabile may be highly vulnerable to the effects of global climate change.
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