Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Los Angeles, California, 90095, USA.
Moreton Bay Research Station, Centre for Marine Science, School of Biological Sciences, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, 4072, Australia.
Ecology. 2017 Jun;98(6):1710-1721. doi: 10.1002/ecy.1849. Epub 2017 May 15.
Keystone species structure ecological communities and are major determinants of biodiversity. A synthesis of research on keystone species is nonetheless missing a critical component - the sensory mechanisms for behavioral interactions that determine population- and community-wide attributes. Here, we establish the chemosensory basis for keystone predation by sea stars (Pisaster ochraceus) on mussels. This consumer-resource interaction is prototypic of top-down driven trophic cascades. Each mussel species (Mytilus californianus and M. galloprovincialis) secretes a glycoprotein orthologue (29.6 and 28.1 kDa, respectively) that acts, singularly, to evoke the sea star predatory response. The orthologues (named "KEYSTONEin") are localized in the epidermis, extrapallial fluid, and organic shell coating (periostracum) of live, intact mussels. Thus, KEYSTONEin contacts chemosensory receptors on tube feet as sea stars crawl over rocky surfaces in search of prey. The complete nucleotide sequences reveal that KEYSTONEin shares 87% (M. californianus) or 98% (M. galloprovincialis) homology with a calcium-binding protein in the shell matrix of a closely related congener, M. edulis. All three molecules cluster tightly within the Complement Component 1 Domain Containing (C1qDC) protein family; each exhibits a large globular domain, low complexity region(s), coiled coil, and at least four of five histidine-aspartic acid tandem motifs. Collective results support the hypothesis that KEYSTONEin evolved ancestrally in immunological, and later, in biomineralization roles. More recently, the substance has become exploited by sea stars as a contact cue for prey recognition. As the first identified compound to evoke keystone predation, KEYSTONEin provides valuable sensory information, promotes biodiversity, and shapes community structure and function. Without this molecule, there would be no predation by sea stars on mussels.
关键种结构生态群落,是生物多样性的主要决定因素。然而,对关键种的综合研究缺少一个关键组成部分,即决定种群和群落范围属性的行为相互作用的感觉机制。在这里,我们确定了海星(Pisaster ochraceus)捕食贻贝的化学感觉基础。这种消费者-资源相互作用是顶级驱动的营养级联的典型范例。每个贻贝物种(Mytilus californianus 和 M. galloprovincialis)分泌一种糖蛋白同源物(分别为 29.6 和 28.1 kDa),单独作用可引发海星捕食反应。这些同源物(命名为“KEYSTONEin”)位于活贻贝的表皮、外套膜外液和有机壳涂层(壳皮)中。因此,当海星在岩石表面爬行寻找猎物时,KEYSTONEin 与管足上的化学感觉受体接触。完整的核苷酸序列表明,KEYSTONEin 与亲缘关系密切的近缘种贻贝(M. edulis)壳基质中的钙结合蛋白具有 87%(M. californianus)或 98%(M. galloprovincialis)的同源性。这三个分子在补体成分 1 结构域包含蛋白(C1qDC)家族中紧密聚类;每个分子都具有一个大的球形结构域、低复杂度区域、卷曲螺旋和至少四个五组组氨酸-天冬氨酸串联基序。综合结果支持这样的假设,即 KEYSTONEin 最初在免疫功能中进化,后来在生物矿化功能中进化。最近,这种物质被海星利用作为识别猎物的接触线索。作为第一个被确定的引发关键捕食的化合物,KEYSTONEin 提供了有价值的感官信息,促进了生物多样性,并塑造了群落结构和功能。如果没有这种物质,海星就不会捕食贻贝。