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Bleaching as a pathogenic response in scleractinian corals, evidenced by high concentrations of apoptotic and necrotic Zooxanthellae

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posted on 2024-11-01, 04:16 authored by K Strychar, M Coates, P Sammarco, Terrence PivaTerrence Piva
The study of symbiont cells lost from bleached scleractinian corals Acropora hyacinthus, Favites complanata, and Porites solida and octocorals Sarcophyton ehrenbergi, Sinularia sp., and Xenia sp. using flow cytometry shows that Symbiodinium die from either apoptosis or necrosis. Despite the majority of lost Symbiodinium cells being viable at 28 °C, the predominance of apoptotic and necrotic symbiont cells at higher temperatures indicates that the proportion of live cells decreases with increasing temperature. This implies that reinfection of corals at high temperatures by Symbiodinium lost from scleractinian corals may be less frequent than previously described, since many of the symbiont cells exhibit nonreversible symptoms of approaching cell death. The fraction of viable Symbiodinium cells lost from S. ehrenbergi, Xenia sp., and Sinularia at 32 °C was greater than that at 28 °C. At 34 °C, the fraction of viable cells lost from S. ehrenbergi and Xenia sp. fell but not from Sinularia sp., which suggests that their symbionts have higher temperature tolerances. Thus, Symbiodinium from octocorals may represent 'pools' of genetically resistant symbionts available for reinfection of other reef organisms. This has been proposed previously for Symbiodinium in some scleractinian corals, but this is the first evidence for such, particularly for an octocoral. Many of the viable cells, determined using Trypan blue staining techniques, are in fact actually undergoing apoptosis or necrosis, when examined using Annexin V-fluor and propidium iodide staining profiles. The characterization of more apoptotic and necrotic cells than viable cells is critical, as this indicates that the loss of Symbiodinium cells cannot be beneficial to other bleached corals for symbiotic reassociation.

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    ISSN - Is published in 00220981

Journal

Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology

Volume

304

Start page

99

End page

121

Total pages

23

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

Netherlands

Language

English

Copyright

Copyright © 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Former Identifier

2006004436

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2010-08-27

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