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Subcellular view of host-microbiome nutrient exchange in sponges: insights into the ecological success of an early metazoan-microbe symbiosis.

Meggie HudspithLaura RixMichelle AchlatisJeremy BougourePaul GuagliardoPeta L ClodeNicole Suzanne WebsterGerard MuyzerMathieu PerniceJasper M de Goeij
Published in: Microbiome (2021)
Here, we provide empirical evidence indicating that the prokaryotic communities of a high and a low microbial abundance sponge obtain nutritional benefits from their host-associated lifestyle. The metabolic interaction between the highly efficient filter-feeding host and its microbial symbionts likely provides a competitive advantage to the sponge holobiont in the oligotrophic environments in which they thrive, by retaining and recycling limiting nutrients. Sponges present a unique model to link nutritional symbiotic interactions to holobiont function, and, via cascading effects, ecosystem functioning, in one of the earliest metazoan-microbe symbioses. Video abstract.
Keyphrases
  • highly efficient
  • microbial community
  • climate change
  • metabolic syndrome
  • cardiovascular disease
  • weight loss
  • antibiotic resistance genes