Coral bleaching (defined by the loss of zooxanthellae) can
be brought about by a variety of environmental stressors eg, temperature
fluctuation, chemical pollutants, high light intensity and many others. However,
other possible mechanisms for coral bleaching have also been recorded. The digestion
of symbiotic unicellular algae was first documented in cnidarian corals as early
as 1883, though it has since been disputed by the theory that coral zooxanthellae
is expelled rather than digested. The
theory suggesting the digestion of unicellular symbionts by their host (termed symbiophagy by the authors) has since
gained evidence and momentum through more recent investigation. The theory
suggests a transformation of the coral vacuolar membrane from a site for
nutrient transfer to a digestive organelle, due to a stress-related
destabilisation of the mechanism that maintains symbiosis.
To gain more evidence for the symbiophagy theory, the authors
conducted further research using the coral species Pocillopora damicornis. Nubbins from this coral were harvested and
allowed to acclimatise in darkness at 25oC for 8 hours before being
tested in 6 situations: 1) low light at 25oC 2) low light at 32oC
3) high light at 25oC 4) high light at 32oC 5) darkness
at 25oC 6) darkness at 32oC. All variables were carried
out in triplicate and subjects were left in these conditions for 10 hours, 48
hours or 5 days.
The results showed that zooxanthellae experienced the
initial stages of lysis by their coral host at higher temperatures and to a lower
degree at high light levels, which suggests that heat and light can affect
coral-zooxanthellae symbiosis independently of each other. High light and high
temperature combined produced an amplified but similar affect on the
zooxanthellae, meaning that the symbiophagic process was accelerated when
stressful factors were combined. There has been no mention of any change found
in the samples with time. The specimens kept in the dark showed no change to
the coral-zooxanthellae symbiotic relationship, despite cellular morphological
changes to the coral itself. The authors of this paper suggest that bleaching
of coral in the dark is a longer process than time of the investigation allowed
for, which would explain the lack of change.
It is possible that symbiophagy has evolved from other
defensive techniques that coral are known to employ to prevent damage from
foreign bodies. Xenophagy for example, is the process of coral lysing and
consuming foreign bacterial cells. It is thought that symbiophagy may be the
result of this becoming non-specific due to environmental stressors.
This paper has tried to underline the importance of
understanding multiple mechanisms for coral bleaching, and a possible way that
defensive strategies can go wrong in coral and other phyla. This subject would
benefit from extensive further research to increase our knowledge innate defence
mechanisms and the consequences it could have on some species of coral.
A review of Downs,
C.A., Kramarsky-Winter, E., Martinez, J., Kushmaro, A., Woodley, C.M., Loya,
Y., Ostrander, G.K. (2009) Symbiophagy as
a cellular mechanism for coral bleaching, Autophagy, 5, 211-216
2 comments:
The only thing I could think to compare this process to is an allergic reaction, as the coral seems to be attacking what is beneficial to it in times of stress. I would appreciate any opinions you may have on this! It's a real shame there isn't further research on this topic as it could change a lot of our ideas on coral bleaching.
Hi Jen, this is a really nice review.
Its amazing that people have been studying this since the 1880s and yet there is still so much we don't know. I can't seem to find much about symbiophagy, but like you say it does appear to be some sort of immune response. It would definitely be interesting to find out more about how it works.
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