Department of Conservation Science and Policy, Defenders of Wildlife, Washington, DC 20036, USA.
Mol Ecol. 2013 Sep;22(17):4499-515. doi: 10.1111/mec.12416.
The Aiptasia-Symbiodinium symbiosis is a promising model for experimental studies of cnidarian-dinoflagellate associations, yet relatively little is known regarding the genetic diversity of either symbiotic partner. To address this, we collected Aiptasia from 16 localities throughout the world and examined the genetic diversity of both anemones and their endosymbionts. Based on newly developed SCAR markers, Aiptasia consisted of two genetically distinct populations: one Aiptasia lineage from Florida and a second network of Aiptasia genotypes found at other localities. These populations did not conform to the distributions of described Aiptasia species, suggesting that taxonomic re-evaluation is needed in the light of molecular genetics. Associations with Symbiodinium further demonstrated the distinctions among Aiptasia populations. According to 18S RFLP, ITS2-DGGE and microsatellite flanker region sequencing, Florida anemones engaged in diverse symbioses predominantly with members of Symbiodinium Clades A and B, but also C, whereas anemones from elsewhere harboured only S. minutum within Clade B. Symbiodinium minutum apparently does not form a stable symbiosis with other hosts, which implies a highly specific symbiosis. Fine-scale differences among S. minutum populations were quantified using six microsatellite loci. Populations of S. minutum had low genotypic diversity and high clonality (R = 0.14). Furthermore, minimal population structure was observed among regions and ocean basins, due to allele and genotype sharing. The lack of genetic structure and low genotypic diversity suggest recent vectoring of Aiptasia and S. minutum across localities. This first ever molecular-genetic study of a globally distributed cnidarian and its Symbiodinium assemblages reveals host-symbiont specificity and widely distributed populations in an important model system.
海葵-共生藻共生体是研究刺胞动物-甲藻共生关系的有前途的模型,但对于共生伙伴的遗传多样性相对知之甚少。为了解决这个问题,我们从世界各地的 16 个地点收集了海葵,并研究了海葵及其内共生体的遗传多样性。基于新开发的 SCAR 标记,海葵由两个具有遗传差异的种群组成:一个来自佛罗里达州的海葵谱系和另一个在其他地点发现的海葵基因型网络。这些种群不符合已描述的海葵物种的分布,这表明需要根据分子遗传学对分类进行重新评估。与共生藻的关联进一步证明了海葵种群之间的区别。根据 18S RFLP、ITS2-DGGE 和微卫星侧翼区域测序,佛罗里达州的海葵与共生藻 Clade A 和 B 的成员进行了多样化的共生,但也与 C 进行了共生,而其他地方的海葵仅在 B 中含有 S. minutum。S. minutum 显然不能与其他宿主形成稳定的共生关系,这意味着共生关系具有高度的特异性。使用六个微卫星位点量化了 S. minutum 种群之间的细微差异。S. minutum 种群的基因型多样性低,克隆性高(R = 0.14)。此外,由于等位基因和基因型共享,在区域和海洋盆地之间观察到最小的种群结构。缺乏遗传结构和低基因型多样性表明,Aiptasia 和 S. minutum 最近在各地之间进行了载体传播。这是首次对全球分布的刺胞动物及其共生藻组合进行分子遗传研究,揭示了宿主-共生体的特异性和重要模型系统中广泛分布的种群。