AI Article Synopsis

  • Sponges from South America and Antarctica are closely related but have distinct microbiomes, which this study aimed to explore.
  • A total of 71 sponge samples were analyzed using advanced sequencing techniques, revealing that most symbionts were heterotrophic and dominated by Proteobacteria and Bacteroidota.
  • The study found significant differences in microorganism abundance between the regions, with South American sponges having more photosynthetic microbes and Antarctic sponges exhibiting a higher presence of chemosynthetic organisms, likely influenced by environmental factors like light and temperature.

Article Abstract

Sponges from South America and Antarctica are evolutionarily closely related. Specific symbiont signatures that could differentiate these two geographic regions are unknown. This study aimed to investigate the microbiome diversity of sponges from South America and Antarctica. In total 71 sponge specimens were analyzed (Antarctica: N = 59, 13 different species; South America: N = 12, 6 different species). Illumina 16S rRNA sequences were generated (2.88 million sequences; 40K ± 29K/sample). The most abundant symbionts were heterotrophic (94.8 %) and belonged mainly to Proteobacteria and Bacteroidota. EC94 was the most abundant symbiont and dominated the microbiome of some species (70-87 %), comprising at least 10 phylogroups. Each of the EC94 phylogroups was specific to one genus or species of sponge. Furthermore, South America sponges had higher abundance of photosynthetic microorganisms (2.3 %) and sponges from Antarctica, the highest abundance of chemosynthetic (5.5 %). Sponge symbionts may contribute to the function of their hosts. The unique features from each of these two regions (e.g., light, temperature, and nutrients) possibly stimulate distinct microbiome diversity from sponges biogeographically distributed across continents.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.163256DOI Listing

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