浮游寄主内共生微藻的转运体重塑

Caroline Juéry, Adria Auladell, Zoltan Füssy, Fabien Chevalier, Daniel P Yee, Eric Pelletier, Erwan Corre, Andrew E Allen, Daniel J Richter, Johan Decelle
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摘要

代谢交换是生物间共生关系的基础之一,也是生物进化的驱动力。在海洋中,异养寄主和微藻之间的光共生由光合作用提供动力,并依赖于有机碳向寄主(如糖)的转移。然而,转移的碳水化合物的身份以及驱动这种交换的分子机制在很大程度上仍然未知,特别是在开放海洋中广泛存在的单细胞光共生中。结合基因组学、单全生物转录组学和环境超转录组学,我们揭示了棘胞内共生的海洋微藻Phaeocystis的转运体,重点研究了糖转运体。在基因组水平上,Phaeocystis的糖转运组与非共生的触生生物相当。相比之下,我们发现与自由生长阶段相比,共生微藻中转运体的表达有显著的重塑。更具体地说,36%的糖转运基因存在差异表达。以葡萄糖、三磷酸糖和甘油为潜在底物的GLUTs、TPTs和水通道蛋白在全生物和群落水平上上调。我们还发现,藻类糖转运基因在白天表现出不同的时间表达模式。这种重编程的转运体表明,共生关系对藻类细胞内外的糖通量有重大影响,并突出了伙伴之间代谢交换的复杂性和动态性。这项研究提高了我们对浮游光共生生态成功的代谢连通性的分子参与者的理解,并为更多关于光共生模式转运体的研究铺平了道路。
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Transportome remodeling of a symbiotic microalga inside a planktonic host
Metabolic exchange is one of the foundations of symbiotic associations between organisms and is a driving force in evolution. In the ocean, photosymbiosis between heterotrophic hosts and microalgae is powered by photosynthesis and relies on the transfer of organic carbon to the host (e.g. sugars). Yet, the identity of transferred carbohydrates as well as the molecular mechanisms that drive this exchange remain largely unknown, especially in unicellular photosymbioses that are widespread in the open ocean. Combining genomics, single-holobiont transcriptomics, and environmental metatranscriptomics, we revealed the transportome of the marine microalga Phaeocystis in symbiosis within acantharia, with a focus on sugar transporters. At the genomic level, the sugar transportome of Phaeocystis is comparable to non-symbiotic haptophytes. By contrast, we found significant remodeling of the expression of the transportome in symbiotic microalgae compared to the free-living stage. More particularly, 36% of sugar transporter genes were differentially expressed. Several of them, such as GLUTs, TPTs, and aquaporins, with glucose, triose-phosphate sugars, and glycerol as potential substrates, were upregulated at the holobiont and community level. We also showed that algal sugar transporter genes exhibit distinct temporal expression patterns during the day. This reprogrammed transportome indicates that symbiosis has a major impact on sugar fluxes within and outside the algal cell, and highlights the complexity and the dynamics of metabolic exchanges between partners. This study improves our understanding of the molecular players of the metabolic connectivity underlying the ecological success of planktonic photosymbiosis and paves the way for more studies on transporters across photosymbiotic models.
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