• Sponges and their microbiome: Interactin

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Thu Jun 29 22:30:24 2023
    Sponges and their microbiome: Interacting for millions of years

    Date:
    June 29, 2023
    Source:
    Ludwig-Maximilians-Universita"t Mu"nchen
    Summary:
    Researchers demonstrate that sponges react to changes in their
    microbiome with extensive modifications in gene regulation.


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    ==========================================================================
    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Researchers at LMU demonstrate that sponges react to changes in their microbiome with extensive modifications in gene regulation.

    For a number of years, mounting evidence has shown that the microbiome
    -- the totality of all microorganisms that inhabit a living being --
    interacts with its host in various ways and can influence key life
    processes. Sponges, which rank among the oldest multicellular life forms
    on Earth, likewise host a diverse array of microbial communities. A
    new study led by Assistant Professor Sergio Vargas and Professor Gert
    Wo"rheide from the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences and the GeoBio-Center of the LMU have now discovered molecular mechanisms in the
    model organism Lendenfeldia chondrodes via which the sponges respond
    actively to changes in their microbiome. The researchers see their
    findings as an indication of deep evolutionary origins for phylogenetic interaction between microbiome and host.

    Sponges are organisms with a very simple structure that, in the course
    of evolution, split off from the rest of the animal kingdom more than
    600 million years ago. Sponges possess proteins involved in regulating interactions between sponge and microbiome, and those appear to be
    responsible for the sponges' ability to modify their morphology in
    response to changes in the microbiome.

    "This suggests that the sponges' ability to interact with the microbiome
    was an evolutionary early development," Vargas says. "However, there
    has not yet been sufficient research into the underlying molecular
    mechanisms." Focusing on the Lendenfeldia chondrodes sponge, which is frequently kept in aquariums, the researchers have now investigated
    whether and how changes in the composition of the microbiome influence
    the sponge's gene activity.

    Defective microbiome triggers changes in the sponge Lendenfeldia
    chondrodes is a sponge species with a microbiome dominated by
    photosynthetic cyanobacteria. It obtains food by filtering microorganisms
    out of the water but is also supplied with carbon compounds by its
    symbionts. The sponges respond to the loss of cyanobacteria -- due to
    shading, for example - - with significant changes to their morphology:
    In the present study, initially blue sponges with foliose (leaf-like)
    growth forms transformed into white, thread-like morphotypes with a
    markedly different microanatomy.

    Applying transcriptomic methods enabled the scientists to prove for the
    first time that these changes are accompanied by extensive modifications
    to gene regulation. "We observed changes in gene activities that are
    involved in both immune response and development," Vargas notes. "This
    suggests that sponges can perceive changes in their microbiome and
    actively respond to them via development processes." The researchers
    suspect that shaded sponges modify their metabolism to make up for the
    fact that they receive fewer carbon compounds from their symbionts. "Our findings underscore the importance of the microbiome for the nutrition
    and development of animals in general and point to a deep evolutionary
    history shared by animals and their bacterial partners," Vargas says.

    * RELATED_TOPICS
    o Plants_&_Animals
    # Biotechnology # Nature # Evolutionary_Biology #
    Microbiology
    o Earth_&_Climate
    # Sustainability # Earth_Science # Geology # Geochemistry
    * RELATED_TERMS
    o Sponge o Levee_failures_in_Greater_New_Orleans,_2005 o
    Gene o Computational_genomics o Gene_therapy o Allele o
    Vector_(biology) o Homeostasis

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by
    Ludwig-Maximilians-Universita"t_Mu"nchen. Note: Content may be edited
    for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Sergio Vargas, Laura Leiva, Michael Eitel, Franziska Curdt,
    Sven Rohde,
    Christopher Arnold, Michael Nickel, Peter Schupp, William D Orsi,
    Maja Adamska, Gert Wo"rheide. Body-Plan Reorganization in a Sponge
    Correlates with Microbiome Change. Molecular Biology and Evolution,
    2023; 40 (6) DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msad138 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/06/230629125729.htm

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