Host starvation and in hospite degradation of algal symbionts shape the heat stress response of the Cassiopea-Symbiodiniaceae symbiosis.
Gaëlle ToullecNils RädeckerClaudia PogoreutzGuilhem Banc-PrandiStéphane EscrigChristel GenoudCristina Martin OlmosJorge E SpangenbergAnders MeibomPublished in: Microbiome (2024)
Overall, our study highlights the importance of the nutritional status in the heat stress response of the Cassiopea holobiont. Compared with other symbiotic cnidarians, the large mesoglea of Cassiopea, with its structural sugar and protein content, may constitute an energy reservoir capable of delaying starvation. It seems plausible that this anatomical feature at least partly contributes to the relatively high stress tolerance of these animals in rapidly warming oceans. Video Abstract.