Trade-off between photo-symbiosis and innate immunity influences cnidarian’s response to pathogenic bacteria
Mutualistic relationships with photosynthetic organisms are common in cnidarians, which form an intracellular symbiosis with dinoflagellates in the family Symbiodiniaceae. The establishment and maintenance of these symbionts are associated with the suppression of key host immune factors. Due to this...
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Zusammenfassung: | Mutualistic relationships with photosynthetic organisms are common in
cnidarians, which form an intracellular symbiosis with dinoflagellates in
the family Symbiodiniaceae. The establishment and maintenance of these
symbionts are associated with the suppression of key host immune factors.
Due to this, there are potential trade-offs between the nutrition
cnidarian hosts gain from their symbionts and their ability to
successfully defend themselves from pathogens. To investigate this
potential trade-off, we utilized the facultatively symbiotic polyps of the
upside-down jellyfish Cassiopea xamachana and exposed aposymbiotic and
symbiotic polyps to the pathogen Serratia marcescens. Symbiotic polyps had
a lower probability of survival following S. marcescens exposure. Gene
expression analyses 24 hours following pathogen exposure indicate that
symbiotic animals mounted a more damaging immune response, with higher
levels of inflammation and oxidative stress likely resulting in more
severe disruptions to cellular homeostasis. Underlying this more damaging
immune response may be differences in constitutive and pathogen-induced
expression of immune transcription factors between aposymbiotic and
symbiotic polyps rather than broadscale immune suppression during
symbiosis. Our findings indicate that in facultatively symbiotic polyps,
hosting symbionts limits C. xamachana’s ability to survive pathogen
exposure, indicating a trade-off between symbiosis and immunity that has
potential implications for coral disease research. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.02v6wwq9z |