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Transcript
Please note:
This is a scientific communication for personal
use only. All data is an intellectual property of
Ana I. S. Esteves. Please do not copy or use
without consent. For more info or to obtain
permission, please email me at
[email protected]
Thank you
Evolution and function
of eukaryotic-like proteins
in bacterial sponge symbionts
Ana I. S. Esteves, Mary Nguyen, David Reynolds, Michael Liu, Lu Fan & Torsten Thomas
Centre for Marine Bio-Innovation &
School of Biotechnology and Biomolecular Sciences
University of New South Wales
Sydney, Australia
9th World Sponge Conference
6th November 2013, Fremantle - Australia
Lessons from sponge microbiology:
 Sponges feed on bacteria
 Sponges establish symbiotic relationships with bacteria
The bacterial paradox:
...or are they friends?
So are Bacteria food...
“Thus, the question is raised: are sponges able to recognise their
microbial symbionts or is recognition as food material and
phagocytosis prevented by protective extracellular layers around
the microorganisms?”
Wilkinson (1978) Marine Biology 49, 177-185.
Metagenomic functional characterisation of
planktonic and sponge-associated bacteria
Tropic of Capricorn
The Great
Barrier Reef
Sydney
n=3 plus seawater
1. Cell fractionation
2. Metagenomic
shotgun sequencing
(Titanium FLX; ~750K reads per n)
3. Assembly,
Filtering and
Annotation
Sponge symbionts have abundant
eukaryotic-like proteins (ELPs)
Ankyrin Repeat (ANK)
protein
motif
Leucine-Rich-Repeat (LRR)
protein
motif
** p<0.01; * p<0.05
Tetratricopeptide Repeat (TPR)
protein
motif
Fibronectin type 3 domain (FN3)
protein
motif
A quick guide to ELPs
 Repeat domains
Found in eukaryotic transcriptional initiators,
cell cycle regulators, cytoskeletal proteins,
ion transporters and signal transducers
Michaely et al. EMBO J. 2002
Involved in protein-protein interactions
 Function in bacteria
largely unknown
 Abundance increased
in symbiotic bacteria
** p<0.01; * p<0.05
Fan et al. PNAS USA 2012
Phylogeny of ankyrin-repeat proteins (ARP) from an
uncultured γ-proteobacterium of C. concentrica
SSA = sponge symbiont ankyrin
Some ARPs are more closely
related to sponge proteins than to
any other known protein
Horizontal gene transfer?
Nguyen et al. Molecular Ecology 2013
Function of ELPs:
a recombinant model for phagocytosis
Fosmid-clone from γ-proteobacterium
of C. concentrica
Subcloned individually into pBAD in gfp-E. coli (“symbiont”)
Expose to amoeba Acanthamoeba castellanii (phagocytic “host”)
no SSA
with SSA
Bacterial persistence in amoeba
ssa genes cloned individually
% of amoeba containing bacteria
Tukey’s test (n=9): ** p<0.01; * p<0.05
Average intracellular bacteria/amoeba
Nguyen et al. Molecular Ecology (accepted)
Number of extracellular bacteria is not significantly different between control and pBAD-SSA clones
High number of amoeba with many intracellular bacteria due to
prolonged persistence and survival
ARPs interfere at various steps of phagocytosis
Phylogeny and localisation of γ-proteobacterium in C. concentrica
endosymbiont of marine
wood-boring bivalves
uncultured
red: EUB338
yellow: γ-symbiont
FISH of C. concentrica tissue
• symbiont lives in close association with sponge cells
Effect of other ELPs classes
neg. control
Percentage of amoeba containing bacteria
(from in silico datasets)
Tukey’s test (n=6): ** p<0.01; * p<0.05
Reynolds et al. unpublished
Current model of ELP function
lysosome
phagosome
pH
ELPs
phagocytic cell
(e.g. amoebocyte)
bacteria/ symbiont
Function and evolution of ELPs
 Bacterial symbionts from sponges contain high abundance and diversity of ELPs
 ELPs have likely been acquired through HGT, possibly from the sponge host
 ELPs from sponge symbionts modulate phagocytosis
Importance for survival and proliferation in sponge?
Model:
Alteration of
host phenotype
eukaryotic
host lineage
horizontal
gene transfer
microbial
symbiont lineage
mutation of
acquired gene
transfer of ELP
expression
of ELP
Torsten Thomas & Group
Nicole Webster
Rachel Simister
Cheers, mateys!