Coral mucus is a hot spot of viral infections


Yvan Bettarel1, Hanh Nguyen-Kim3, Thierry Bouvier2

1Institute of Research for Development (IRD). UMR MARBEC, Université Montpellier, MONTPELLIER, France
2CNRS, UMR MARBEC, Université Montpellier, Montpellier, France
3Institute of Oceanography, VAST, Nha Trang, Vietnam


There is increasing suspicion that viral communities play a pivotal role in maintaining coral health, yet their main ecological traits still remain poorly characterized. In this study, we examined the seasonal distribution and reproduction pathways of viruses inhabiting the mucus of the scleractinians Fungia repanda and Acropora formosa collected in the Nha Trang Bay (Viet Nam), during a 11-month survey. The strong coupling between epibiotic viral and bacterial abundance suggested that phages are dominant among coral-associated viral communities. Mucosal viruses also exhibited significant differences in their main features between the two coral species and were also remarkably contrasted with their planktonic counterparts. For example, their abundance (inferred from epifluorescence counts), lytic production rates (KCN incubations), and the proportion of lysogenic cells (Mitomycin-C inductions) were respectively 2.6, 9.5, and 2.2 fold higher in mucus than in the surrounding water. Both lytic and lysogenic indicators were tightly coupled with temperature and salinity, suggesting that the life strategy of viral epibionts is strongly dependent upon environmental circumstances. Finally, our results suggest that coral mucus may represent a highly favorable habitat for viral proliferation, promoting the development of both temperate and virulent phages. Herein, we discuss on how such an optimized viral arsenal could be crucial for coral viability by presumably forging complex links with both symbiotic and adjacent non-symbiotic microorganisms.






Reference:
Posters Day 2-T03-Pos-26
Session:
Posters Covering Ecology, Host population control, Co-Evolutionary dynamics and Subversion/Evasion of Host Defences
Presenters:
Yvan Bettarel
Session:
Day 2 Posters Covering: Ecology, Host population control, Co-evolutionary dynamics and Subversion/Evasion of host defences
Presentation type:
Poster presentation
Room:
Poster Halls
Date:
Tuesday, 19 July 2016
Time:
12:05 - 15:00