Abstract

Marine sponges have been a prolific source of unique bioactive compounds that are presumed to act as a deterrent to predation. Many of these compounds have potential therapeutic applications; however, the lack of efficient and sustainable synthetic routes frequently limits clinical development. Here, we describe a metagenomic investigation of Mycale hentscheli, a chemically gifted marine sponge that possesses multiple distinct chemotypes. We applied shotgun metagenomic sequencing, hybrid assembly of short- and long-read data, and metagenomic binning to obtain a comprehensive picture of the microbiome of five specimens, spanning three chemotypes. Our data revealed multiple producing species, each having relatively modest secondary metabolomes, that contribute collectively to the chemical arsenal of the holobiont. We assembled complete genomes for multiple new genera, including two species that produce the cytotoxic polyketides pateamine and mycalamide, as well as a third high-abundance symbiont harboring a proteusin-type biosynthetic pathway that appears to encode a new polytheonamide-like compound. We also identified an additional 188 biosynthetic gene clusters, including a pathway for biosynthesis of peloruside. These results suggest that multiple species cooperatively contribute to defensive symbiosis in M. hentscheli and reveal that the taxonomic diversity of secondary-metabolite-producing sponge symbionts is larger and richer than previously recognized.IMPORTANCEMycale hentscheli is a marine sponge that is rich in bioactive small molecules. Here, we use direct metagenomic sequencing to elucidate highly complete and contiguous genomes for the major symbiotic bacteria of this sponge. We identify complete biosynthetic pathways for the three potent cytotoxic polyketides which have previously been isolated from M. hentscheli Remarkably, and in contrast to previous studies of marine sponges, we attribute each of these metabolites to a different producing microbe. We also find that the microbiome of M. hentscheli is stably maintained among individuals, even over long periods of time. Collectively, our data suggest a cooperative mode of defensive symbiosis in which multiple symbiotic bacterial species cooperatively contribute to the defensive chemical arsenal of the holobiont.

Highlights

  • Marine sponges have been a prolific source of unique bioactive compounds that are presumed to act as a deterrent to predation

  • Our search for the pateamine, mycalamide, and peloruside biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) began with a specimen of M. hentscheli collected in November 2014 from Capsize Point in the South Island of New Zealand

  • Differential centrifugation and microscopic examination of our sample using previously described differential centrifugation protocols failed to detect any evidence of bacteria with fluorescent or filamentous morphologies, leading us to hypothesize that the producer(s) in M. hentscheli

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Summary

Introduction

Marine sponges have been a prolific source of unique bioactive compounds that are presumed to act as a deterrent to predation. We identified an additional 188 biosynthetic gene clusters, including a pathway for biosynthesis of peloruside These results suggest that multiple species cooperatively contribute to defensive symbiosis in M. hentscheli and reveal that the taxonomic diversity of secondary-metabolite-producing sponge symbionts is larger and richer than previously recognized. The ecological benefits of this interaction, when maintained over an evolutionary time frame, appear to have driven interdependence and exclusivity between some host-symbiont pairs In several cases, this has resulted in symbiont genome specialization, reduction, and degradation, while secondary metabolite biosynthesis remains functional and under positive selective pressure [1, 6, 7]. It is likely that additional symbiotic bacterial genera and the symbiotic systems that produce complex natural products remain to be discovered [20]

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