Newkirk Casandra R, Frazer Thomas K, Martindale Mark Q, Schnitzler Christine E
Whitney Laboratory for Marine Bioscience, University of Florida, St. Augustine, FL, United States.
Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences Program, School of Forest Resources and Conservation, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, United States.
Front Microbiol. 2020 May 5;11:822. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.00822. eCollection 2020.
The ability of some symbiotic cnidarians to resist and better withstand stress factors that cause bleaching is a trait that is receiving increased attention. The adaptive bleaching hypothesis postulates that cnidarians that can form a stable symbiosis with thermotolerant Symbiodiniaceae strains may cope better with increasing seawater temperatures. We used polyps of the scyphozoan, , as a model system to test symbiosis success under heat stress. We sought to determine: (1) if aposymbiotic polyps could establish and maintain a symbiosis with both native and non-native strains of Symbiodiniaceae that all exhibit different tolerances to heat, (2) whether polyps with these newly acquired Symbiodiniaceae strains would strobilate (produce ephyra), and (3) if thermally tolerant Symbiodiniaceae strains that established and maintained a symbiosis exhibited greater success in response to heat stress (even if they are not naturally occurring in ). Following recolonization of aposymbiotic polyps with different strains, we found that: (1) strains , , all established a stable symbiosis that promoted strobilation and (2) strains and did not establish a stable symbiosis and strobilation did not occur. Strains , , , and were used in a subsequent bleaching experiment; each of the strains was introduced to a subset of aposymbiotic polyps and once polyp tissues were saturated with symbionts they were subjected to elevated temperatures - 32°C and 34°C - for 2 weeks. Our findings indicate that, in general, pairings of polyps with Symbiodiniaceae strains that are native to and ) performed better than a non-native strain () even though this strain has a high thermotolerance. This suggests a degree of partner specificity that may limit the adaptive potential of certain cnidarians to increased ocean warming. We also observed that the free-living, non-native thermotolerant strain was relatively successful in resisting bleaching during experimental trials. This suggests that free-living Symbiodiniaceae may provide a supply of potentially "new" thermotolerant strains to cnidarians following a bleaching event.
一些共生刺胞动物抵抗并更好地承受导致白化的应激因素的能力是一个越来越受到关注的特性。适应性白化假说假定,能够与耐热的共生藻菌株形成稳定共生关系的刺胞动物可能能更好地应对海水温度升高的情况。我们使用钵水母纲的水螅体作为模型系统来测试热应激下的共生成功情况。我们试图确定:(1)无共生藻的水螅体是否能与对热耐受性各异的本地和非本地共生藻菌株建立并维持共生关系,(2)带有这些新获得的共生藻菌株的水螅体是否会横裂(产生碟状幼体),以及(3)建立并维持共生关系的耐热共生藻菌株在应对热应激时是否表现出更大的成功(即使它们并非自然存在于[该物种]中)。在用不同菌株对无共生藻的水螅体进行重新定殖后,我们发现:(1)菌株[具体菌株1]、[具体菌株2]、[具体菌株3]都建立了促进横裂的稳定共生关系,并且(2)菌株[具体菌株4]和[具体菌株5]没有建立稳定的共生关系且未发生横裂。菌株[具体菌株1]、[具体菌株2]、[具体菌株3]和[具体菌株4]被用于后续的白化实验;每个菌株都被引入到一部分无共生藻的水螅体中,一旦水螅体组织被共生体饱和,它们就会在32°C和34°C的高温下处理2周。我们的研究结果表明,总体而言,水螅体与[该物种]本地的共生藻菌株([具体本地菌株1]和[具体本地菌株2])配对的表现优于非本地菌株([具体非本地菌株]),尽管该非本地菌株具有很高的耐热性。这表明存在一定程度的伙伴特异性,可能会限制某些刺胞动物适应海洋变暖加剧的潜力。我们还观察到,自由生活的非本地耐热菌株[具体非本地耐热菌株]在实验试验中抵抗白化相对成功。这表明在白化事件后,自由生活的共生藻可能为刺胞动物提供潜在的“新”耐热菌株来源。