Journal article
Chlamydiae in corals: shared functional potential despite broad taxonomic diversity
J Maire, A Collingro, M Horn, MJH van Oppen
Isme Communications | OXFORD UNIV PRESS | Published : 2024
Abstract
Cnidarians, such as corals and sea anemones, associate with a wide range of bacteria that have essential functions, including nutrient cycling and the production of antimicrobial compounds. Within cnidarians, bacteria can colonize all microhabitats including the tissues. Among them are obligate intracellular bacteria of the phylum Chlamydiota (chlamydiae) whose impact on cnidarian hosts and holobionts, especially corals, remain unknown. Here, we conducted a meta-analysis of previously published 16S rRNA gene metabarcoding data from cnidarians (e.g. coral, jellyfish, and anemones), eight metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) of coral-associated chlamydiae, and one MAG of jellyfish-associated ch..
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Awarded by University of Melbourne
Funding Acknowledgements
We thank the Melbourne Research Cloud (University of Melbourne) and the Life Science Compute Cluster (University of Vienna) for providing the high-performance computing instances needed for this work.