Abstract

The upside-down jellyfish Cassiopea engages in symbiosis with photosynthetic microalgae that facilitate uptake and recycling of inorganic nutrients. By contrast to most other symbiotic cnidarians, algal endosymbionts in Cassiopea are not restricted to the gastroderm but are found in amoebocyte cells within the mesoglea. While symbiont-bearing amoebocytes are highly abundant, their role in nutrient uptake and cycling in Cassiopea remains unknown. By combining isotopic labelling experiments with correlated scanning electron microscopy, and Nano-scale secondary ion mass spectrometry (NanoSIMS) imaging, we quantified the anabolic assimilation of inorganic carbon and nitrogen at the subcellular level in juvenile Cassiopea medusae bell tissue. Amoebocytes were clustered near the sub-umbrella epidermis and facilitated efficient assimilation of inorganic nutrients. Photosynthetically fixed carbon was efficiently translocated between endosymbionts, amoebocytes and host epidermis at rates similar to or exceeding those observed in corals. The Cassiopea holobionts efficiently assimilated ammonium, while no nitrate assimilation was detected, possibly reflecting adaptation to highly dynamic environmental conditions of their natural habitat. The motile amoebocytes allow Cassiopea medusae to distribute their endosymbiont population to optimize access to light and nutrients, and transport nutrition between tissue areas. Amoebocytes thus play a vital role for the assimilation and translocation of nutrients in Cassiopea, providing an interesting new model for studies of metabolic interactions in photosymbiotic marine organisms.

Highlights

  • Animal–microbe symbioses represent a fundamental pillar of life in most habitats [1]

  • By contrast to corals and sea anemones that host their endosymbionts in the gastroderm tissue layer [43], the symbionts of juvenile Cassiopea sp. are predominantly found residing in amoebocyte host cells located within the mesoglea

  • The high resolution of quantitative NanoSIMS isotopic imaging allowed us to trace the fate of assimilated nutrients in the symbiosis, and quantify their anabolic partitioning across cells and tissues

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Animal–microbe symbioses represent a fundamental pillar of life in most habitats [1]. By coupling isotopic tracer (i.e. 13C-bicarbonate, 15N-ammonium and 15Nnitrate) incubation experiments with correlated ultrastructural imaging and Nano-scale secondary ion mass spectrometry (NanoSIMS) [28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35], we quantified the anabolic turnover in individual tissues and cellular compartments. This allowed us to disentangle the role of symbiotic amoebocytes for holobiont nutrition and illuminate the ecological advantages of this unique feature of the Cassiopea-Symbiodiniaceae symbiosis. See the electronic supplementary material, table S1 for the total number of technical replicates per tissue area per treatment

Results
Findings
Discussion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call