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Unraveling Heterogeneity of Coral Microbiome Assemblages in Tropical and Subtropical Corals in the South China Sea

Sanqiang Gong, Xuejie Jin, Lijuan Ren, Yehui Tan, Xiaomin Xia

2020Microorganisms25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Understanding the coral microbiome is critical for predicting the fidelity of coral symbiosis with growing surface seawater temperature (SST). However, how the coral microbiome will respond to increasing SST is still understudied. Here, we compared the coral microbiome assemblages among 73 samples across six typical South China Sea coral species in two thermal regimes. The results revealed that the composition of microbiome varied across both coral species and thermal regimes, except for Porites lutea. The tropical coral microbiome displayed stronger heterogeneity and had a more un-compacted ecological network than subtropical coral microbiome. The coral microbiome was more strongly determined by environmental factors than host specificity. γ- (32%) and α-proteobacteria (19%), Bacteroidetes (14%), Firmicutes (14%), Actinobacteria (6%) and Cyanobacteria (2%) dominated the coral microbiome. Additionally, bacteria inferred to play potential roles in host nutrients metabolism, several keystone bacteria detected in human and plant rhizospheric microbiome were retrieved in explored corals. This study not only disentangles how different host taxa and microbiome interact and how such an interaction is affected by thermal regimes, but also identifies previously unrecognized keystone bacteria in corals, and also infers the community structure of coral microbiome will be changed from a compacted to an un-compacted network under elevated SST.

Topics & Concepts

CoralMicrobiomeBiologyEcologyHolobiontFirmicutesSymbiodiniumSubtropicsAnthozoaCoral reefBacteroidetesSymbiosisBacteriaGenetics16S ribosomal RNABioinformaticsCoral and Marine Ecosystems StudiesMarine and coastal plant biologyCoastal wetland ecosystem dynamics
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