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Metagenomic analysis reveals a green sulfur bacterium as a potential coral symbiont

Coral reefs are ecologically significant habitats. Coral-algal symbiosis confers ecological success on coral reefs and coral-microbial symbiosis is also vital to coral reefs. However, current understanding of coral-microbial symbiosis on a genomic scale is largely unknown. Here we report a potential...

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Published in:Scientific reports 2017-08, Vol.7 (1), p.9320-11, Article 9320
Main Authors: Cai, Lin, Zhou, Guowei, Tian, Ren-Mao, Tong, Haoya, Zhang, Weipeng, Sun, Jin, Ding, Wei, Wong, Yue Him, Xie, James Y., Qiu, Jian-Wen, Liu, Sheng, Huang, Hui, Qian, Pei-Yuan
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Language:English
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Summary:Coral reefs are ecologically significant habitats. Coral-algal symbiosis confers ecological success on coral reefs and coral-microbial symbiosis is also vital to coral reefs. However, current understanding of coral-microbial symbiosis on a genomic scale is largely unknown. Here we report a potential microbial symbiont in corals revealed by metagenomics-based genomic study. Microbial cells in coral were enriched for metagenomic analysis and a high-quality draft genome of “ Candidatus Prosthecochloris korallensis” was recovered by metagenome assembly and genome binning. Phylogenetic analysis shows “ Ca . P. korallensis” belongs to the Prosthecochloris clade and is clustered with two Prosthecochloris clones derived from Caribbean corals. Genomic analysis reveals “ Ca . P. korallensis” has potentially important ecological functions including anoxygenic photosynthesis, carbon fixation via the reductive tricarboxylic acid (rTCA) cycle, nitrogen fixation, and sulfur oxidization. Core metabolic pathway analysis suggests “ Ca . P. korallensis” is a green sulfur bacterium capable of photoautotrophy or mixotrophy. Potential host-microbial interaction reveals a symbiotic relationship: “ Ca . P. korallensis” might provide organic and nitrogenous nutrients to its host and detoxify sulfide for the host; the host might provide “ Ca . P. korallensis” with an anaerobic environment for survival, carbon dioxide and acetate for growth, and hydrogen sulfide as an electron donor for photosynthesis.
ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-017-09032-4