Project description:In the seabed, chemical defences mediate inter- and intraspecific interactions and may determine organisms’ success, shaping the diversity and function of benthic communities. Sponges represent a prominent example of chemically-defended marine organisms with great ecological success. The ecological factors controlling the production of their defensive compounds and the evolutionary forces that select for these defences remain little understood. Each sponge species produces a specific and diverse chemical arsenal with fish-deterrent, antifouling and antimicrobial properties. However, some small animals (mesograzers), mainly sea slugs, have specialized in living and feeding on sponges. Feeding on chemically-defended organisms provides a strategy to avoid predators, albeit the poor nutritional value of sponges. In order to investigate the mechanisms that control sponge chemical defence, with particular focus on the response to specialist grazers, we investigated the interaction between the sponge Aplysina aerophoba and the sea slug Tylodina perversa. Here we performed controlled experiments and collected sponge samples at different time points (3h, 1d and 6d after treatment). To further elucidate if the sponge response is specific to grazing by T. perversa, we also included a treatment in which sponges were mechanically damaged with a scalpel. We compared gene expression between treatments based on RNA-Seq data.
Project description:Vertebrates have highly methylated genomes at CpG positions while most invertebrates have sparsely methylated genomes. Therefore, hypermethylation is considered a major innovation that shaped the genome and the regulatory roles of DNA methylation in vertebrates. However, here we report that the marine sponge Amphimedon queenslandica, belonging to one of the earliest branching animal lineages, has evolved a hypermethylated genome with remarkable similarities to that of a vertebrate. Despite major differences in genome size and architecture, independent acquisition of hypermethylation reveal common distribution patterns and repercussions for genome regulation between both lineages. Genome wide depletion of CpGs is counterbalanced by CpG enrichment at unmethylated promoters, mirroring CpG islands. Furthermore, a subset of CpG-bearing transcription factor motifs are enriched at Amphimedon unmethylated promoters. We find that the animal-specific transcription factor NRF has conserved methyl-sensitivity over 700 million years, indicating an ancient cross-talk between transcription factors and DNA methylation. Finally, the sponge shows vertebrate-like levels of 5-hydroxymethylcytosine, the oxidative derivative of cytosine methylation involved in active demethylation. Hydroxymethylation is concentrated in regions that are enriched for transcription factor motifs and show developmentally dynamic demethylation. Together, these findings push back the links between DNA methylation and its regulatory roles to the early steps of animal evolution. Thus, the Amphimedon methylome challenges the prior hypotheses about the origins of vertebrate genome hypermethylation and its implications for regulatory complexity.