Heat-stressed coral microbiomes are stable and potentially beneficial at
the level of taxa and functional genes
Abstract
Coral reef health is tightly connected to the coral microbiome. Coral
bleaching and disease outbreaks have caused an unprecedented loss in
coral cover worldwide, particularly correlated to a warming ocean.
Coping mechanisms of the coral holobiont under high temperatures are not
completely described, but the associated microbial community is a
potential source of acquired heat-tolerance. The relationship between
stress and stability in the microbiome is key to understanding the role
that the coral microbiome plays in thermal tolerance. According to the
Anna Karenina Principle (AKP), stress or disease will increase
instability and stochasticity among animal microbiomes. Here we
investigate whether heat stress results in microbiomes that follow the
AKP. We used shotgun metagenomics in an experimental setting to
understand the dynamics of microbial taxa and genes in the surface
mucous layer (SML) microbiome of the coral Pseudodiploria strigosa under
heat treatment. The metagenomes of corals exposed to heat stress showed
high similarity, indicating a deterministic and stable response of the
coral microbiome to disturbance, in opposition to the AKP. We
hypothesize that this stability is the result of a selective pressure
towards a coral microbiome that is assisting the holobiont to withstand
heat stress. The coral SML microbiome responded to heat stress with an
increase in the relative abundance of taxa with probiotic potential, and
functional genes for nitrogen and sulfur acquisition. These consistent
and specific microbial taxa and gene functions that significantly
increased in proportional abundance in corals exposed to heat are
potentially beneficial to coral health and thermal resistance.