Journal article
Symbiodiniaceae-bacteria interactions: rethinking metabolite exchange in reef-building corals as multi-partner metabolic networks
JL Matthews, JB Raina, T Kahlke, JR Seymour, MJH van Oppen, DJ Suggett
Environmental Microbiology | Published : 2020
Abstract
The intimate relationship between scleractinian corals and their associated microorganisms is fundamental to healthy coral reef ecosystems. Coral-associated microbes (Symbiodiniaceae and other protists, bacteria, archaea, fungi and viruses) support coral health and resilience through metabolite transfer, inter-partner signalling, and genetic exchange. However, much of our understanding of the coral holobiont relationship has come from studies that have investigated either coral-Symbiodiniaceae or coral-bacteria interactions in isolation, while relatively little research has focused on other ecological and metabolic interactions potentially occurring within the coral multi-partner symbiotic n..
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Awarded by Human Frontier Science Program
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by Human Frontier Science Programme Long-term Postdoctoral fellowship LT000625/2018-L (awarded to J.L.M.), Australian Research Council Discovery grants DP180100838 (awarded to J-B.R. and J.R.S) and DP180100074 (awarded to D.J.S.), and Australian Research Council Laureate fellowship FL180100036 (awarded to M.J.H.v.O.). The authors would like to thanks Glynn Gorick for his work on Figures 2 and 3.