Department of Marine Biology, Leon H. Charney School of Marine Sciences, University of Haifa, Mt. Carmel, Haifa 3498838, Israel.
Department of Chemical and Structural Biology, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot 7610001, Israel.
J Struct Biol. 2021 Dec;213(4):107782. doi: 10.1016/j.jsb.2021.107782. Epub 2021 Aug 26.
Despite their simple body plan, stony corals (order Scleractinia, phylum Cnidaria) can produce massive and complex exoskeletal structures in shallow, tropical and subtropical regions of Earth's oceans. The species-specific macromorphologies of their aragonite skeletons suggest a highly coordinated biomineralization process that is rooted in their genomes, and which has persisted across major climatic shifts over the past 400 + million years. The mechanisms by which stony corals produce their skeletons has been the subject of interest for at least the last 160 years, and the pace of understanding the process has increased dramatically in the past decade since the sequencing of the first coral genome in 2011. In this review, we detail what is known to date about the genetic basis of the stony coral biomineralization process, with a focus on advances in the last several years as well as ways that physical and chemical tools can be combined with genetics, and then propose next steps forward for the coming decade.
尽管石珊瑚(Scleractinia 目,刺胞动物门)的身体结构简单,但它们能在地球海洋的浅海热带和亚热带地区生成巨大而复杂的外骨骼结构。其方解石骨骼的种特异性宏观形态表明,这是一种高度协调的生物矿化过程,其根源在于基因组,并在过去 4000 多万年的主要气候变化中得以延续。至少在过去的 160 年中,石珊瑚生成骨骼的机制一直是人们关注的焦点,自 2011 年第一个珊瑚基因组测序以来,过去十年中人们对这一过程的理解速度大大提高。在这篇综述中,我们详细介绍了目前已知的石珊瑚生物矿化过程的遗传基础,重点介绍了过去几年的进展以及如何将物理和化学工具与遗传学相结合,并为未来十年提出了下一步的建议。