Abstract

BackgroundThe deep-sea mussels Bathymodiolus azoricus (Bivalvia: Mytilidae) are the dominant macrofauna subsisting at the hydrothermal vents site Menez Gwen in the Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR). Their adaptive success in such challenging environments is largely due to their gill symbiotic association with chemosynthetic bacteria. We examined the response of vent mussels as they adapt to sea-level environmental conditions, through an assessment of the relative abundance of host-symbiont related RNA transcripts to better understand how the gill microbiome may drive host-symbiont interactions in vent mussels during hypothetical venting inactivity.ResultsThe metatranscriptome of B. azoricus was sequenced from gill tissues sampled at different time-points during a five-week acclimatization experiment, using Next-Generation-Sequencing. After Illumina sequencing, a total of 181,985,262 paired-end reads of 150 bp were generated with an average of 16,544,115 read per sample. Metatranscriptome analysis confirmed that experimental acclimatization in aquaria accounted for global gill transcript variation. Additionally, the analysis of 16S and 18S rRNA sequences data allowed for a comprehensive characterization of host-symbiont interactions, which included the gradual loss of gill endosymbionts and signaling pathways, associated with stress responses and energy metabolism, under experimental acclimatization. Dominant active transcripts were assigned to the following KEGG categories: “Ribosome”, “Oxidative phosphorylation” and “Chaperones and folding catalysts” suggesting specific metabolic responses to physiological adaptations in aquarium environment.ConclusionsGill metagenomics analyses highlighted microbial diversity shifts and a clear pattern of varying mRNA transcript abundancies and expression during acclimatization to aquarium conditions which indicate change in bacterial community activity. This approach holds potential for the discovery of new host-symbiont associations, evidencing new functional transcripts and a clearer picture of methane metabolism during loss of endosymbionts. Towards the end of acclimatization, we observed trends in three major functional subsystems, as evidenced by an increment of transcripts related to genetic information processes; the decrease of chaperone and folding catalysts and oxidative phosphorylation transcripts; but no change in transcripts of gluconeogenesis and co-factors-vitamins.

Highlights

  • Deep-sea hydrothermal vents are regarded as extreme environments

  • We have previously shown that the bacterial community structure deduced from 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) sequencing analyses pointed to an unanticipated similarity of endosymbiont bacterial prevalence between Menez Gwen and Lucky Strike B. azoricus gills [8]

  • Assessing the microbial diversity in B. azoricus gill tissues will likely bring insight into how bacteria community structures are affected by acclimatization processes at atmospheric pressure in aquaria conditions and how bacterial gene expression is influenced by host physiological status under experimental challenges

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Summary

Introduction

Deep-sea hydrothermal vents are regarded as extreme environments. Despite their challenging physicochemical environmental conditions, life is supported by chemosynthetic systems where highly specialized vent organisms have emerged throughout evolution [1]. Bathymodiolus azoricus mussels have adapted well to deep-sea extreme environments and represent the dominating faunal component from hydrothermal vent sites of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. They owe their successful adaptation and high biomass to specialized exploitation of methane and sulfide sources resulting from venting activity, from their gill endosymbiont bacteria [2,3]. The deep-sea mussels Bathymodiolus azoricus (Bivalvia: Mytilidae) are the dominant macrofauna subsisting at the hydrothermal vents site Menez Gwen in the Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) Their adaptive success in such challenging environments is largely due to their gill symbiotic association with chemosynthetic bacteria. Results: The metatranscriptome of B. azoricus was sequenced from gill tissues sampled at different time-points during a five-week acclimatization experiment, using Next-Generation-Sequencing

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