Background: The symbiosis between corals and the dinoflagellate alga Symbiodinium is essential for the development and survival of coral reefs. Yet this fragile association is highly vulnerable to environmental disturbance. A coral's ability to tolerate temperature stress depends on the fitness of its resident symbionts, whose thermal optima vary extensively between lineages. However, the in hospite population genetic structure of Symbiodinium is poorly understood and mostly based on analysis of bulk DNA extracted from thousands to millions of cells. Using quantitative single-cell PCR, we enumerated DNA polymorphisms in the symbionts of the reef-building coral Pocillopora damicornis, and applied a model selection approach to explore the potential for recombination between coexisting Symbiodinium populations.
Results: Two distinct Symbiodinium ITS2 sequences (denoted C100 and C109) were retrieved from all P. damicornis colonies analysed. However, the symbiont assemblage consisted of three distinct Symbiodinium populations: cells featuring pure arrays of ITS2 type C109, near-homogeneous cells of type C100 (with trace ITS2 copies of type C109), and those with co-dominant C100 and C109 ITS2 repeats. The symbiont consortia of some colonies consisted almost entirely of these putative C100 × C109 recombinants.
Conclusions: Our results are consistent with the occurrence of sexual recombination between Symbiodinium types C100 and C109. While the multiple-copy nature of the ITS2 dictates that the observed pattern of intra-genomic co-dominance may be a result of incomplete concerted evolution of intra-genomic polymorphisms, this is a less likely explanation given the occurrence of homogeneous cells of the C109 type. Conclusive evidence for inter-lineage recombination and introgression in this genus will require either direct observational evidence or a single-cell genotyping approach targeting multiple, single-copy loci.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12862-015-0325-1 | DOI Listing |
BMC Evol Biol
March 2015
School of Biological Sciences, Victoria University of Wellington, Kelburn Parade, Wellington, 6012, New Zealand.
Background: The symbiosis between corals and the dinoflagellate alga Symbiodinium is essential for the development and survival of coral reefs. Yet this fragile association is highly vulnerable to environmental disturbance. A coral's ability to tolerate temperature stress depends on the fitness of its resident symbionts, whose thermal optima vary extensively between lineages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCent Eur J Public Health
December 1996
Department of Epidemiology, Institute of Occupational Medicine and Environmental Health, Sosnowiec, Poland.
In two groups of children aged 7-9 years residing in two towns in the most industrial region of Poland, Chorzów (C - "higher air pollution") and Mikołów (M - "lower air pollution"), lung function testing was performed in a cross-sectional manner in order to examine if the spirometric indices in children depended on the ambient air pollution level as assessed by area measurements. The between-town difference in ambient air quality was statistically significant with respect to particulate and gaseous pollutants (SO2 and NO2). In Chorzów 855 and in Mikołów 356 children were studied.
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