Host Evolutionary Lineage Shapes Assembly, Network Topology, and Metabolic Potential of Coral Skeletal Endolithic Microbiomes
Chuanzhu Bai, Huimin Ju, Jian Zhang, Jie Li

TL;DR
The evolutionary history of corals shapes the structure and function of their skeletal microbiomes, with different lineages supporting distinct microbial networks and metabolic strategies.
Contribution
This study reveals how coral evolutionary lineage influences endolithic microbiome assembly and nitrogen cycling potential.
Findings
Bacterial diversity is higher in Complex clade corals compared to Robust clade corals.
Complex clade corals have modular microbial networks and enriched nitrogen cycling genes.
Robust clade corals show dense microbial networks and limited nitrogen cycling potential.
Abstract
Evolutionary history of the host may influence the skeletal morphology of scleractinian corals. However, its effects on the assembly and function of endolithic microbiomes remain unknown. We analyzed bacterial and archaeal microbiomes from the coral skeleton by using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. We collected the samples of seven coral genera distributed among the diverse “Complex” and “Robust” clades. In this study, bacterial α-diversity was significantly higher in the Complex clade relative to the Robust clade. Archaea, on the other hand, remained stable and showed no significant differences between the two host clades, and were most abundantly Nanoarchaeota and Thermoproteota. Analysis of the network topologies showed that network structures were different between the Complex group and the Robust clade. The Robust clade formed a dense and closely knit network among bacteria and archaea.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCoral and Marine Ecosystems Studies · Microbial Community Ecology and Physiology · Paleontology and Stratigraphy of Fossils
