Supplementary information and georeferenced photomosaic of the Chapopote bubble site during RV METEOR cruise M114/2

Sponges host a remarkable diversity of microbial symbionts, however, the benefit their microbes provide is rarely understood. Here, we describe two new sponge species from deep-sea asphalt seeps and show that they live in a nutritional symbiosis with methane-oxidizing (MOX) bacteria. Metagenomics and imaging analyses revealed unusually high amounts of MOX symbionts in hosts from a group previously assumed to have low microbial abundances. These symbionts belonged to the Marine Methylotrophic Group 2 clade. They are host-specific and likely vertically transmitted, based on their presence in sponge embryos and streamlined genomes, which lacked genes typical of related free-living MOX. Moreover, genes known to play a role in host–symbiont interactions, such as those that encode eukaryote-like proteins, were abundant and expressed. Methane assimilation by the symbionts was one of the most highly expressed metabolic pathways in the sponges. Molecular and stable carbon isotope patterns of lipids confirmed that methane-derived carbon was incorporated into the hosts. Our results revealed that two species of sponges, although distantly related, independently established highly specific, nutritional symbioses with two closely related methanotrophs. This convergence in symbiont acquisition underscores the strong selective advantage for these sponges in harboring MOX bacteria in the food-limited deep sea.

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Cite this as

Rubin-Blum, Maxim, Antony, Chakkiath Paul, Sayavedra, Lizbeth, Martínez-Pérez, Clara, Birgel, Daniel, Peckmann, Jörn, Wu, Yu-Chen, Cárdenas, Paco, MacDonald, Ian R, Marcon, Yann, Sahling, Heiko, Hentschel, Ute, Dubilier, Nicole (2019). Dataset: Supplementary information and georeferenced photomosaic of the Chapopote bubble site during RV METEOR cruise M114/2. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.899964

DOI retrieved: 2019

Additional Info

Field Value
Imported on November 29, 2024
Last update November 29, 2024
License CC-BY-4.0
Source https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.899964
Author Rubin-Blum, Maxim
Given Name Maxim
Family Name Rubin-Blum
More Authors
Antony, Chakkiath Paul
Sayavedra, Lizbeth
Martínez-Pérez, Clara
Birgel, Daniel
Peckmann, Jörn
Wu, Yu-Chen
Cárdenas, Paco
MacDonald, Ian R
Marcon, Yann
Sahling, Heiko
Hentschel, Ute
Dubilier, Nicole
Source Creation 2019
Publication Year 2019
Resource Type application/zip - filename: Rubin-Blum-etal_2018
Subject Areas
Name: Biosphere

Name: Ecology

Related Identifiers
Title: Fueled by methane: deep-sea sponges from asphalt seeps gain their nutrition from methane-oxidizing symbionts
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41396-019-0346-7
Type: DOI
Relation: IsSupplementTo
Year: 2019
Source: The ISME Journal
Authors: Rubin-Blum Maxim , Antony Chakkiath Paul , Sayavedra Lizbeth , Martínez-Pérez Clara , Birgel Daniel , Peckmann Jörn , Wu Yu-Chen , Cárdenas Paco , MacDonald Ian R , Marcon Yann , Sahling Heiko , Hentschel Ute , Dubilier Nicole .