| Literature DB >> 35383179 |
Emma F Camp1, Tim Kahlke2, Brandon Signal3, Clinton A Oakley4, Adrian Lutz5, Simon K Davy4, David J Suggett2, William P Leggat6.
Abstract
The Symbiodiniaceae are a taxonomically and functionally diverse family of marine dinoflagellates. Their symbiotic relationship with invertebrates such as scleractinian corals has made them the focus of decades of research to resolve the underlying biology regulating their sensitivity to stressors, particularly thermal stress. Research to-date suggests that Symbiodiniaceae stress sensitivity is governed by a complex interplay between phylogenetic dependent and independent traits (diversity of characteristics of a species). Consequently, there is a need for datasets that simultaneously broadly resolve molecular and physiological processes under stressed and non-stressed conditions. Therefore, we provide a dataset simultaneously generating transcriptome, metabolome, and proteome data for three ecologically important Symbiodiniaceae isolates under nutrient replete growth conditions and two temperature treatments (ca. 26 °C and 32 °C). Elevated sea surface temperature is primarily responsible for coral bleaching events that occur when the coral-Symbiodiniaceae relationship has been disrupted. Symbiodiniaceae can strongly influence their host's response to thermal stress and consequently it is necessary to resolve drivers of Symbiodiniaceae heat stress tolerance. We anticipate these datasets to expand our understanding on the key genotypic and functional properties that influence the sensitivities of Symbiodiniaceae to thermal stress.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35383179 PMCID: PMC8983644 DOI: 10.1038/s41597-022-01258-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Data ISSN: 2052-4463 Impact factor: 6.444
Isolate information.
| Genus | Species | ITS2 Major type profile | Culture isolate identity | Internal isolate label | Geographic origin | Host isolate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| sp. | B1 | B (UTS) | B1-UTS-B | South Taiwan (Indo-Pacific) | ||
| C1 | SCF055-06 | C1-124/SCF124 | Magnetic Island (Pacific) | |||
| D1a | amur‐D‐MI, UTS-D, (UTS_D) | SCF082 | Magnetic Island (Pacific) |
Information on the Symbiodiniaceae origin (host isolate or free-living and geographic location) and ITS2 major type profile. Culture isolate identification is also provided as found in the literature and as labelled internally at the University of Technology of Sydney (UTS).
Cell counts and maximum quantum yield of PSII (F/F).
| Isolate | Time Point | Treatment | Cell mL−1 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | SE | Mean | SE | |||
| D1a | T0 | Control | 164134 | 8436 | 0.55 | 0.01 |
| TE | 126282 | 12680 | 0.43 | 0.01 | ||
| T0 | Treatment | 173596 | 17762 | 0.53 | 0.00 | |
| TE | 78151 | 7263 | 0.36 | 0.00 | ||
| B1 | T0 | Control | 156750 | 8413 | 0.53 | 0.00 |
| TE | 155405 | 19992 | 0.51 | 0.01 | ||
| T0 | Treatment | 131500 | 19506 | 0.53 | 0.01 | |
| TE | 72441 | 4191 | 0.10 | 0.03 | ||
| C1-124 | T0 | Control | 138675 | 8405 | 0.59 | 0.02 |
| TE | 121877 | 18468 | 0.50 | 0.00 | ||
| T0 | Treatment | 122000 | 19877 | 0.58 | 0.02 | |
| TE | 49925 | 3544 | 0.33 | 0.02 | ||
Data is expressed as means ± SE (n = 4) for each Symbiodiniaceae isolate (Breviolum sp. (B1), Cladocopium goreaui (C1-124), and Durusdinium trenchii (D1a)) at day 0, (T0), and at the end of the experiment (day 10, TE).
Fig. 1Experimental scheme. Three Symbiodiniaceae isolates (C1, Cladocopium goreaui, (identifier: C1-124), D1a, Durusdinium trenchii, B1, Breviolum sp.) were grown in replicate (n = 4) at 26 °C and 32 °C (1). Culture health was regularly monitored via cell counts and fluorometry (see Table 2) (2). At three time points, 25 mL × 3, per culture was removed for subsequent analysis (3). For RNA extraction and sequencing, the culture aliquot was immediately snap-frozen and stored at −80 °C (4a), prior to thawing and pelleting (4b), and RNA extraction (4c). For protein extraction, culture aliquots were pelleted at 4 °C (5a), before snap-freezing in liquid nitrogen (5b) ahead of subsequent extraction protocols (5c). For metabolite extraction, culture aliquots were pelleted at 4 °C (6a). Pellets were then re-suspended with an internal standard (analytical grade 0.005 mM 2-Aminoanthracene) and stored at −80 °C (6b) prior to metabolite extraction protocols (see methods text) (6c).
Sample identification and processing order.
| Sub-sample order | Sample ID | Experimental condition | Isolate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Round-1 | 1 | Control | D1a |
| 17 | Treatment | D1a | |
| 9 | Control | B1 | |
| 25 | Treatment | B1 | |
| 13 | Control | C1-124 | |
| 29 | Treatment | C1-124 | |
| Round-2 | 10 | Control | B1 |
| 26 | Treatment | B1 | |
| 14 | Control | C1-124 | |
| 30 | Treatment | C1-124 | |
| 2 | Control | D1a | |
| 18 | Treatment | D1a | |
| Round-3 | 11 | Control | B1 |
| 27 | Treatment | B1 | |
| 15 | Control | C1-124 | |
| 31 | Treatment | C1-124 | |
| 3 | Control | D1a | |
| 19 | Treatment | D1a | |
| Round-4 | 16 | Control | C1-124 |
| 32 | Treatment | C1-124 | |
| 4 | Control | D1a | |
| 20 | Treatment | D1a | |
| 12 | Control | B1 | |
| 28 | Treatment | B1 |
A systematic design was used to process samples in four rounds to ensure one replicate of each Symbiodiniaceae isolate and experimental condition. This design was undertaken to account for processing time. The sample ID is used throughout as an identifier, along with the experimental condition (control maintained at ca. 26 °C and treatment maintained at ca. 32 °C) and time points (day 0, (T0), after temperature ramping (day 3, TI), and then at the end of seven days (day 10, TE) (see methods and Table 3).
Information on the data reposited for each method within the experimental set-up.
| Isolate | Time-point | Treatment or Control | Transcriptomics | Metabolomics | Proteomics |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| T0 | Control | n = 4* | n = 4 | n = 3 | |
| n = 4* | n = 4 | n = 2 | |||
| n = 4* | n = 4 | n = 3 | |||
| Treatment | n = 4* | n = 4 | n = 1 | ||
| n = 4* | n = 4 | n = 1 | |||
| n = 4* | n = 4 | n = 1 | |||
| TI | Control | n = 4 | n = 4 | n = 1 | |
| n = 4 | n = 4 | n = 2 | |||
| n = 4 | n = 4 | n = 1 | |||
| Treatment | n = 4 | n = 4 | n = 4 | ||
| n = 4 | n = 4 | n = 4 | |||
| n = 4 | n = 4 | n = 4 | |||
| TE | Control | n = 4 | n = 4 | n = 1 | |
| n = 4 | n = 4 | n = 1 | |||
| n = 4 | n = 4 | n = 0 | |||
| Treatment | n = 4 | n = 4 | n = 4 | ||
| n = 4 | n = 4 | n = 4 | |||
| n = 4 | n = 4 | n = 4 |
*Indicates that the raw sequence files were uploaded but they are not included in the paper analyses. Samples were collected at three points in time, prior to temperature ramping (day 0, T0), after temperature ramping (day 3, TI), and then at the end of seven days (day 10, TE).
Fig. 2Metabolite pathway analysis at the end time-point (TE) for the three Symbiodiniaceae isolates (C1, Cladocopium goreaui, (identifier: C1-124), D1a, Durusdinium trenchii, B1, Breviolum sp.). Functional analysis using mummichog and a top-10% peak cut-off was undertaken in Metaboanalyst[51]. Data were median-normalised and log-transformed. For each isolate, TE control (n = 4 maintained at ca. 26 °C) versus treatment (n = 4 maintained at ca. 32 °C) were analysed. Results are visualised in a KEGG format pathway analysis that were searched against Arabidopsis thaliana (the best photosynthetic organism match based on available options and high pathway coverage). The coloured pathways indicated significant differences between the two treatments.
The transcript-based protein search databases results analysed with BUSCO (v5.2.2).
| Complete BUSCOs | 200 | 78.4% | 197 | 77.3% | 206 | 80.8% |
| Complete and single-copy BUSCOs | 160 | 62.7% | 169 | 66.3% | 152 | 59.6% |
| Complete and duplicated BUSCOs | 40 | 15.7% | 28 | 11.0% | 54 | 21.2% |
| Fragmented BUSCOs | 13 | 5.1% | 14 | 5.5% | 13 | 5.1% |
| Missing BUSCOs | 42 | 16.5% | 44 | 17.2% | 36 | 14.1% |
| Total searched | 255 | 255 | 255 | |||
The complete BUSCO values range from 77.3–80.8%, which are comparable to other datasets in non-model organisms (70–92% in 49 taxa across multiple invertebrate animal phyla[59]). From this analysis and the high number of identified proteins we conclude that these search databases are appropriate and of high quality.
| Measurement(s) | RNA sequences and counts • Metabolite abundance • Protein abundance |
| Technology Type(s) | Illumina HiSeq. 2500 • QTOF MS system • Orbitrap Fusion Lumos |
| Sample Characteristic - Organism | Symbiodiniaceae |
| Sample Characteristic - Environment | In culture |