TY - JOUR
T1 - Divergent expression of hypoxia response systems under deoxygenation in reef-forming corals aligns with bleaching susceptibility
AU - Alderdice, Rachel
AU - Suggett, David J.
AU - Cardenas, Anny
AU - Hughes, David J.
AU - Kühl, Michael
AU - Pernice, Mathieu
AU - Voolstra, Christian R.
N1 - KAUST Repository Item: Exported on 2020-11-24
Acknowledgements: We wish to particularly thank teams from James Cook University Cairns (led by Jamie Seymour, Katie Chartrand) and Southern Cross University (led by Peter Harrison, Nadine Boulotte) for their invaluable support in collecting corals used in this study (Vlasoff Reef, northern Great Barrier Reef) and subsequent holding in large-scale acclimation aquaria prior to experimentation. All corals were collected under a Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Zoning Plan 2003 Part 5.4 Authorization (MPA18/002 ‘Coral larval restoration and Symbiodinium co-culture collaborative project') to Peter Harrison. Also, immense thanks to the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology's Bioscience Core Lab (BCL) for assistance with Illumina sequencing. Funding for this work was supported by an Australian Research Council (ARC) Discovery Grant (DP180100074) to D.J.S., M.P., M.K. and C.R.V. M.K. acknowledges support by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation (grant number GBMF9206, https://doi.org/10.37807/GBMF9206). C.R.V. acknowledges support by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) project number 433042944. Open access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL. [Correction added on 19 November 2020, after first online publication: Projekt Deal funding statement has been added.
PY - 2020/11/16
Y1 - 2020/11/16
N2 - Exposure of marine life to low oxygen is accelerating worldwide via climate change and localized pollution. Mass coral bleaching and mortality have recently occurred where reefs have experienced chronic low oxygen events. However, the mechanistic basis of tolerance to oxygen levels inadequate to sustain normal functioning (i.e. hypoxia) and whether it contributes to bleaching susceptibility, remain unknown. We therefore experimentally exposed colonies of the environmentally resilient Acropora tenuis, a common reef-building coral from the Great Barrier Reef, to deoxygenation–reoxygenation stress that was aligned to their natural night–day light cycle. Specifically, the treatment involved removing the ‘night-time O2 buffer’ to challenge the inherent hypoxia thresholds. RNA-Seq analysis revealed that coral possess a complete and active hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-mediated hypoxia response system (HRS) homologous to other metazoans. As expected, A. tenuis exhibited bleaching resistance and showed a strong inducibility of HIF target genes in response to deoxygenation stress. We applied this same approach in parallel to a colony of Acropora selago, known to be environmnetally susceptible, which conversely exhibited a bleaching phenotype response. This phenotypic divergence of A. selago was accompanied by contrasting gene expression profiles indicative of varied effectiveness of their HIF-HRS. Based on our RNA-Seq analysis, we propose (a) that the HIF-HRS is central for corals to manage deoxygenation stress and (b) that key genes of this system (and the wider gene network) may contribute to variation in coral bleaching susceptibility. Our analysis suggests that heat shock protein (hsp) 70 and 90 are important for low oxygen stress tolerance and further highlights how hsp90 expression might also affect the inducibility of coral HIF-HRS in overcoming a metabolic crisis under deoxygenation stress. We propose that differences in coral HIF-HRS could be central in regulating sensitivity to other climate change stressors—notably thermal stress—that commonly drive bleaching.
AB - Exposure of marine life to low oxygen is accelerating worldwide via climate change and localized pollution. Mass coral bleaching and mortality have recently occurred where reefs have experienced chronic low oxygen events. However, the mechanistic basis of tolerance to oxygen levels inadequate to sustain normal functioning (i.e. hypoxia) and whether it contributes to bleaching susceptibility, remain unknown. We therefore experimentally exposed colonies of the environmentally resilient Acropora tenuis, a common reef-building coral from the Great Barrier Reef, to deoxygenation–reoxygenation stress that was aligned to their natural night–day light cycle. Specifically, the treatment involved removing the ‘night-time O2 buffer’ to challenge the inherent hypoxia thresholds. RNA-Seq analysis revealed that coral possess a complete and active hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-mediated hypoxia response system (HRS) homologous to other metazoans. As expected, A. tenuis exhibited bleaching resistance and showed a strong inducibility of HIF target genes in response to deoxygenation stress. We applied this same approach in parallel to a colony of Acropora selago, known to be environmnetally susceptible, which conversely exhibited a bleaching phenotype response. This phenotypic divergence of A. selago was accompanied by contrasting gene expression profiles indicative of varied effectiveness of their HIF-HRS. Based on our RNA-Seq analysis, we propose (a) that the HIF-HRS is central for corals to manage deoxygenation stress and (b) that key genes of this system (and the wider gene network) may contribute to variation in coral bleaching susceptibility. Our analysis suggests that heat shock protein (hsp) 70 and 90 are important for low oxygen stress tolerance and further highlights how hsp90 expression might also affect the inducibility of coral HIF-HRS in overcoming a metabolic crisis under deoxygenation stress. We propose that differences in coral HIF-HRS could be central in regulating sensitivity to other climate change stressors—notably thermal stress—that commonly drive bleaching.
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10754/666087
UR - https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/gcb.15436
U2 - 10.1111/gcb.15436
DO - 10.1111/gcb.15436
M3 - Article
C2 - 33197302
SN - 1354-1013
JO - Global Change Biology
JF - Global Change Biology
ER -