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A Rhesus channel in the coral symbiosome membrane suggests a novel mechanism to regulate NH 3 and CO 2 delivery to algal symbionts

Authors :
Angus B. Thies
Alex R. Quijada-Rodriguez
Haonan Zhouyao
Dirk Weihrauch
Martin Tresguerres
Source :
Science Advances. 8
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2022.

Abstract

Reef-building corals maintain an intracellular photosymbiotic association with dinoflagellate algae. As the algae are hosted inside the symbiosome, all metabolic exchanges must take place across the symbiosome membrane. Using functional studies in Xenopus oocytes, immunolocalization, and confocal Airyscan microscopy, we established that Acropora yongei Rh (ayRhp1) facilitates transmembrane NH 3 and CO 2 diffusion and that it is present in the symbiosome membrane. Furthermore, ayRhp1 abundance in the symbiosome membrane was highest around midday and lowest around midnight. We conclude that ayRhp1 mediates a symbiosomal NH 4 + -trapping mechanism that promotes nitrogen delivery to algae during the day—necessary to sustain photosynthesis—and restricts nitrogen delivery at night—to keep algae under nitrogen limitation. The role of ayRhp1-facilitated CO 2 diffusion is less clear, but it may have implications for metabolic dysregulation between symbiotic partners and bleaching. This previously unknown mechanism expands our understanding of symbioses at the immediate animal-microbe interface, the symbiosome.

Subjects

Subjects :
Multidisciplinary

Details

ISSN :
23752548
Volume :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science Advances
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........94a6bd2c4d0564b6231f9bcea537f42a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abm0303