Abstract

BackgroundSymbiotic relationships between microbes and their hosts are widespread and diverse, often providing protection or nutrients, and may be either obligate or facultative. However, the genetic mechanisms allowing organisms to maintain host-symbiont associations at the molecular level are still mostly unknown, and in the case of bacterial-animal associations, most genetic studies have focused on adaptations and mechanisms of the bacterial partner. The gutless tubeworms (Siboglinidae, Annelida) are obligate hosts of chemoautotrophic endosymbionts (except for Osedax which houses heterotrophic Oceanospirillales), which rely on the sulfide-oxidizing symbionts for nutrition and growth. Whereas several siboglinid endosymbiont genomes have been characterized, genomes of hosts and their adaptations to this symbiosis remain unexplored.ResultsHere, we present and characterize adaptations of the cold seep-dwelling tubeworm Lamellibrachia luymesi, one of the longest-lived solitary invertebrates. We sequenced the worm’s ~ 688-Mb haploid genome with an overall completeness of ~ 95% and discovered that L. luymesi lacks many genes essential in amino acid biosynthesis, obligating them to products provided by symbionts. Interestingly, the host is known to carry hydrogen sulfide to thiotrophic endosymbionts using hemoglobin. We also found an expansion of hemoglobin B1 genes, many of which possess a free cysteine residue which is hypothesized to function in sulfide binding. Contrary to previous analyses, the sulfide binding mediated by zinc ions is not conserved across tubeworms. Thus, the sulfide-binding mechanisms in sibgolinids need to be further explored, and B1 globins might play a more important role than previously thought. Our comparative analyses also suggest the Toll-like receptor pathway may be essential for tolerance/sensitivity to symbionts and pathogens. Several genes related to the worm’s unique life history which are known to play important roles in apoptosis, cell proliferation, and aging were also identified. Last, molecular clock analyses based on phylogenomic data suggest modern siboglinid diversity originated in 267 mya (± 70 my) support previous hypotheses indicating a Late Mesozoic or Cenozoic origins of approximately 50–126 mya for vestimentiferans.ConclusionsHere, we elucidate several specific adaptations along various molecular pathways that link phenome to genome to improve understanding of holobiont evolution. Our findings of adaptation in genomic mechanisms to reducing environments likely extend to other chemosynthetic symbiotic systems.

Highlights

  • Symbiotic relationships between microbes and their hosts are widespread and diverse, often providing protection or nutrients, and may be either obligate or facultative

  • To investigate the genomic basis related to tubeworm symbiosis, we report the genomic assembly of the seepdwelling Lamellibrachia luymesi van der Land and Nørrevang 1975

  • We found that 94 orthology groups (OGs) appear to have undergone a genomic expansion, and 92 genes appear to be positively selected for in the L. luymesi lineage compared to other lophotrochozoan genomes (Additional file 1: Tables S5, S6), and many of them are directly related to the chemosynthetic symbiosis

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Summary

Introduction

Symbiotic relationships between microbes and their hosts are widespread and diverse, often providing protection or nutrients, and may be either obligate or facultative. Vestimentiferan tubeworms inhabit some of the Earth’s most extreme environments, such as deep-sea hydrothermal vents and cold seeps, and are obligately dependent on symbiosis for survival. These animals lack a digestive tract and rely on sulfide-oxidizing bacterial symbionts for nutrition and growth. Previous molecular studies primarily focus on symbionts associated with host lineages living in hydrothermal vents, especially the giant tubeworm Riftia pachyptila which is among the beststudied chemoautotrophic symbioses. Given the obligate nature of the symbiosis between tubeworms and their gammaproteobacterial chemoautotrophic endosymbiont, one may reasonably expect adaptations in several cellular mechanisms and pathways (e.g., nutrition, gas exchange, selfdefense/self-recognition, control of cell proliferation) to promote efficacy in the symbiotic relationship

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