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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2023-03-08
    Description: We aimed to investigate the cellular and chemical response of the chemically defended sponge Aplysina aerophoba (Phylum Porifera: Class Demospongiae) to grazing by its specialist Tylodina perversa (Phylum Mollusca: Class Opistobranchia). Three treatments were applied: control, grazing, and mechanical damage. Samples were collected 3 hours, 1 day, 3 days, and 6 days after treatment. The behavior of sea slugs after directly contact with sponge specimen was recorded by using a GoPro Hero 4 camera with the program time lapse (1 picture every 5 sec) for 1.5 to 2 hours. Our results showed that spherulous cells were recruited to the wounded site in a time-dependent manner. MALDI-imaging MS showed that both brominated compounds (aerophobin-2 and aeroplysinin-1) localized usually at the sponge surface and accumulated at the damaged surface upon wounding. As spherulous cells are common in many members of the class Demospongiae, the recruitment of defensive cells may also occur in other sponges for protecting these filter-feeders. Our study contributes to understanding the evolutionary mechanisms in sponges for facing grazing and wounding.
    Keywords: Comment; Compounds; Experiment; File format; File name; File size; grazing; Image resolution; Magnification; MALDI-imaging mass spectrometry; microscopy; Porifera; Replicate; response to wounding; spherulous cells; sponge; Tissue, sampling; transmission electron microscopy; Treatment; Type; Uniform resource locator/link to image; Uniform resource locator/link to movie
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 994 data points
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  • 2
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Rubin-Blum, Maxim; Antony, Chakkiath Paul; Sayavedra, Lizbeth; Martínez-Pérez, Clara; Birgel, Daniel; Peckmann, Jörn; Wu, Yu-Chen; Cárdenas, Paco; MacDonald, Ian R; Marcon, Yann; Sahling, Heiko; Hentschel, Ute; Dubilier, Nicole (2019): Fueled by methane: deep-sea sponges from asphalt seeps gain their nutrition from methane-oxidizing symbionts. The ISME Journal, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41396-019-0346-7
    Publication Date: 2023-11-20
    Description: Sponges host a remarkable diversity of microbial symbionts, however, the benefit their microbes provide is rarely understood. Here, we describe two new sponge species from deep-sea asphalt seeps and show that they live in a nutritional symbiosis with methane-oxidizing (MOX) bacteria. Metagenomics and imaging analyses revealed unusually high amounts of MOX symbionts in hosts from a group previously assumed to have low microbial abundances. These symbionts belonged to the Marine Methylotrophic Group 2 clade. They are host-specific and likely vertically transmitted, based on their presence in sponge embryos and streamlined genomes, which lacked genes typical of related free-living MOX. Moreover, genes known to play a role in host–symbiont interactions, such as those that encode eukaryote-like proteins, were abundant and expressed. Methane assimilation by the symbionts was one of the most highly expressed metabolic pathways in the sponges. Molecular and stable carbon isotope patterns of lipids confirmed that methane-derived carbon was incorporated into the hosts. Our results revealed that two species of sponges, although distantly related, independently established highly specific, nutritional symbioses with two closely related methanotrophs. This convergence in symbiont acquisition underscores the strong selective advantage for these sponges in harboring MOX bacteria in the food-limited deep sea.
    Keywords: asphalt; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; Chapopote; Gulf of Mexico; LAPM; MARUM; Mosaic; Photomosaic; seep; TAR
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2023-11-20
    Keywords: asphalt; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; Chapopote; File content; File format; File name; File size; Gulf of Mexico; LAPM; MARUM; Mosaic; Photomosaic; seep; TAR; Uniform resource locator/link to file
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 20 data points
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