Apoptosis and the selective survival of host animals

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Apoptosis and the selective survival of host animals following thermal bleaching in zooxanthellate corals Noelia I. Aponte Silva Graduate Student Environmental Science University of Puerto Rico Rio Piedras Campus Tchernov, D., Kvitt, H., Haramaty, L., Bibby, T. S., Gorbunov, M. Y., Rosenfeld, H., & Falkowski, P. G. (2011). Apoptosis and the selective survival of host animals following thermal bleaching in zooxanthellate corals. PNAS, 108(24), 9905-9909.

Transcript of Apoptosis and the selective survival of host animals

Apoptosis and the selective survival

of host animals following thermal

bleaching in zooxanthellate corals

Noelia I. Aponte SilvaGraduate Student – Environmental Science

University of Puerto Rico – Rio Piedras Campus

Tchernov, D., Kvitt, H., Haramaty, L., Bibby, T. S., Gorbunov, M. Y., Rosenfeld, H., & Falkowski, P. G. (2011).Apoptosis and the selective survival of host animals following thermal bleaching in zooxanthellate corals. PNAS,108(24), 9905-9909.

Authors

• Israel▫ Dan Tchernov▫ Hagit Kvitt▫ Hanna Rosenfeld

• Rutgers, NJ▫ Liti Haramaty▫ Thomas S. Bibby▫ Maxim Y. Gorbunov▫ Paul G. Falkowski

Coral bleaching

• Environmental triggers

▫ Increase sea surface temperature

• Expulsion, digestion, or loss of pigmentation

▫ Photosynthetic dinoflagellate symbiotic algae

▫ Selective survival of host animals

▫ Zooxanthellate corals

Apoptosis

• Genetically directed cell self-destruction▫ Programmed cell death▫ Presence or removal of a stimulus▫ Eliminate damaged or unwanted DNA

• Cell morphological changes▫ Cytoplasmic shrinkage▫ Chromatin condensation▫ Plasma membrane blebbing▫ DNA degradation or fragmentation

Apoptotic cascade

• Environmental trigger▫ Coral stress (thermal stress)

• Reactive oxygen species (ROS)▫ Coral endodermal cells▫ Photosynthetic activity of the symbiotic algae▫ Aerobic respiration activity in the host mitochondria

• Cysteine proteases (caspases)▫ Caspase activity regulated by ROS

Objective

• Experimentally demonstrate

▫ Caspase-induced apoptotic pathway initiated bythe production of ROS plays a key role inzooxanthellate coral bleaching and death

▫ Regulation of the apoptotic cascade can preventzooxanthellate coral death

Methodology

• Zooxanthellate corals

• Relationship▫ Irradiance▫ Caspase activity▫ Increased temperature (thermal stress)

• Conditions▫ Aquaria - highly controlled▫ Field - natural environmental

Collection and maintenance of corals

• Seriatopora hystrix and Stylophora pistillata▫ Grown at 26°C for 6 mo▫ Transferred to 32°C for 2 mo▫ Osborn Laboratories, New York Aquarium

• Montipora capitata and Pocillopora damicornis▫ Kaneohe Bay, Oahu, Hawaii▫ Full natural sunlight and low light▫ Ambient temperature 26°C▫ Increased temperature 32°C▫ Induced bleaching: 9 mo darkness stress ▫ Caspase inhibitor Z-VAD-FMK (VAD)

Transmission electron micrographs

• Transmission electron microscope

• Samples

▫ Thin sections

▫ Preserve

▫ Chemically fixed

▫ Dehydrated

▫ Embedded in a polymer resin

Fenton reaction and ROS assay

• Fenton reaction

▫ Reaction mixture

▫ Production of hydroxyl radicals anions (OH-)

• ROS assay

▫ Dihydrorhodamine (DHR 123) fluorescence

▫ Oxidation

▫ Rhodamine 123 (fluoresces at 515nm)

Caspase activity determination

• Incubation of cell lysate

▫ Fluorogenic substrate for caspases

Fluorescence measured every 5 min

▫ Irreversible caspase inhibitor VAD and Fluorogenic substrate for caspases

• Statistical significance

▫ Control vs. treatment

▫ ANOVA and t-test

Western blots

• Immunochemical analysis

▫ Equal protein basis

▫ Separated

Gel electrophoresis (12% polyacrylamide gels)

▫ Transferred to membrane

PVDF

▫ Probed

Polyclonal antibodies for recombinant human caspase 3

▫ Chemiluminescence detection

Horse-radish peroxidase enzyme (HRP)

Thermal stress

• Grown at 26°C and transferred to 32°C

• Seriatopora hystrix▫ Bleached▫ Morphological integrity▫ Decreased caspase activity

• Stylophora pistillata▫ Bleached▫ Shift in chromatin ▫ Membrane blebbing▫ Lost all recognizable tissue▫ Increased caspase activity

Tchernov, D., Kvitt, H., Haramaty, L., Bibby, T. S., Gorbunov, M. Y., Rosenfeld, H., & Falkowski, P. G. (2011). Apoptosis and the selective survival of host animals following thermal bleaching in zooxanthellate corals. PNAS, 108(24), 9905-9909.

Cascade triggers

• Irradiance and Temperature (4)▫ Increased temperature (32°C) Increased caspase activity (full sunlight)

• Montipora capitata

• Pocillopora damicornis▫ Fragmentation of DNA▫ Lost all recognizable tissue

• Caspase inhibitor VAD▫ Caspase activity reduced ▫ Bleaching and apoptosis prevented

Tchernov, D., Kvitt, H., Haramaty, L., Bibby, T. S., Gorbunov, M. Y., Rosenfeld, H., & Falkowski, P. G. (2011). Apoptosis and the selective survival of host animals following thermal bleaching in zooxanthellate corals. PNAS, 108(24), 9905-9909.

Role and source of ROS

• Measured steady-state pool of ROS

• Montipora capitata▫ Zooxanthellae colonies▫ Dark-bleached colonies▫ Thermal stress

• Increased temperature (32°C)▫ Higher ROS production in zooxanthellae colonies▫ Higher caspase activity in zooxanthellae colonies

Caspase activity induced by ROS

• Add exogenous ROS

▫ Hydroxyl anion radicals

• Montipora capitata colonies grown at 26°C

▫ Higher caspase activity in dark-bleached colonies

▫ Host animal death

• Montipora capitata colonies grown at 32°C

▫ Higher caspase activity in zooxanthellae colonies

Phenotypic combinatorial matrix

• Two components

▫ Factors that trigger the apoptotic response Zooxanthellae thermally sensitive

Lipid composition of thylakoid membranes

High temperature and irradiance

Production of ROS

▫ Initiation of the caspase cascade Host cell

ROS production threshold

Bleach and apoptosis

Physiological model

• Relates mortality and bleaching

• Two factors

▫ Algal symbiont thermal sensitivity

▫ Activation of the caspase cascade by host

• Two responses *

▫ Bleach / Death

Sensitive symbiont

Activation

▫ Bleach / Recovery

Sensitive symbiont

No activation / down-regulationTchernov, D., Kvitt, H., Haramaty, L., Bibby, T. S., Gorbunov, M. Y., Rosenfeld, H., & Falkowski, P. G. (2011). Apoptosis and the

selective survival of host animals following thermal bleaching in zooxanthellate corals. PNAS, 108(24), 9905-9909.

Conclusions

• Bleaching and host death▫ Independent

▫ Species-specific processes

• Apoptosis▫ Induces host mortality

• Caspases▫ Involved in apoptotic

response

• Caspase cascade▫ Not activated

▫ Down-regulated

▫ Interrupted

▫ Inhibitor of caspases

▫ Avoid apoptosis and bleaching

Discussion

• Personal opinion

• If sea surface temperatures continue to increase:

▫ What will be the future of corals?

▫ Would global climate change favor a particularsymbiotic phenotype?

Discussion

• If sea surface temperatures continue to increase:

▫ A strong selection of corals with algal symbiontsthat generate less ROS or hosts that do notactivate a caspase cascade in response to theproduction of ROS is to be expected.

▫ High temperature resistant symbiotic phenotypeshave persisted in some locations and arepotentially poised to become increasinglydominant.