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The reef-building coralGalaxea fascicularis: a new model system for coral symbiosis research

Authors :
Giulia Puntin
Jamie Craggs
Róisín Hayden
Kara E. Engelhardt
Shelby McIlroy
Michael Sweet
David M. Baker
Maren Ziegler
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

Reef-building corals owe their evolutionary success to their symbiosis with unicellular algae (Symbiodiniaceae). However, increasingly frequent heat waves lead to coral mass-bleaching events and pose a serious threat to the survival of reef ecosystems. Despite significant efforts, a mechanistic understanding of coral-algal symbiosis functioning, what leads to its breakdown and what can prevent it, remains incomplete. The main obstacles are low amenability of corals to experimental handling and, owing to its obligatory nature, the difficulties of manipulating the coral-algal association. Indeed, many studies on the symbiotic partnership are conducted on other cnidarian model organisms and their results may therefore not be fully transferable to tropical reef-building corals. Here, we identify the tropical stony coral speciesGalaxea fascicularisas a novel candidate coral model system. Individual polyps of this species can be separated, enabling highly replicated genotype studies, and are well suited to experimental investigation of the symbiosis as they can be easily and effectively rid of their algal symbionts (bleached). We show that bleached adult individuals can reestablish symbiosis with non-native symbionts, and we report the completion of the gametogenic cycleex-situ, with the successful spawning in aquaria over multiple years. These achievements help overcome several of the major limitations to direct research on corals and highlight the potential ofG. fascicularisas an important new model system for investigations of symbiosis functioning and manipulation.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........d04a0e6bf60a68d915b6b7284f578dfe