UTA study examines coral response to devastating disease

Team led by UTA biologists examines effects of stony coral tissue loss diseases

Thursday, Jul 06, 2023 • Katherine Egan Bennett : Contact

Laura Mydlarz (left) with Kelsey Beavers" _languageinserted="true
Laura Mydlarz (left) with Kelsey Beavers

A new published study from biologists at The University of Texas at Arlington examines how different coral species respond to a devastating disease and which species are more vulnerable. The project examines the effects of stony coral tissue loss disease (SCTLD), which first appeared in 2014 in the waters around Florida and began spreading to the Caribbean in 2018-19.

Laura Mydlarz, UTA professor of biology, led the research effort in collaboration with colleagues in the U.S. Virgin Islands and elsewhere. The paper, “Stony coral tissue loss disease induces transcriptional signatures of in situ degradation of dysfunctional Symbiodiniaceae,” was published in the May 22 edition of Nature Communications. Kelsey Beavers, a Ph.D. student in Mydlarz’s lab, is lead author of the study.

SCTLD is a devastating, rapidly spreading disease characterized by rapid tissue loss and high mortality rates in coral. It has affected corals along the entire 350-plus miles of Florida’s Coral Reef and in 22 Caribbean countries and territories, including the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico. Corals are under stress and more susceptible to disease due to the effects of climate change, Mydlarz said.

The team examined gene expression in five coral species in order to understand which are more susceptible to the disease, which are affected more severely and how fast the disease spreads in specific coral.

“We really wanted to figure out what are some conserved responses to the disease and whether that could give us an idea of what the disease is, because even after all this time since 2014, the field doesn’t know what is causing stony coral tissue loss disease,” Beavers said.

“We did see a difference in species susceptibility that provided this amazing framework for gene expression, and we found this new potential mechanism of this disease that is the coral getting rid of its own symbionts,” Mydlarz said. “The symbionts provide the food and the energy for the coral.”

A symbiont is an organism living in a mutually beneficial relationship with another organism. In this case, the symbiont is Symbiodiniaceae, which are algae that live inside coral. The coral provides a safe home for the symbiont, which in turn uses sunlight to produce food for the coral.

The researchers found that SCTLD infection causes an increased expression of the gene rab7, which has been found in corals to be involved in a process called symbiophagy, where coral will digest dead or dysfunctional symbionts.

“Basically, this is the first disease where we’ve found that the coral may actually be mounting a response against this symbiont instead of just a general immune response,” Beavers said. “This indicates that the symbionts that typically live happily inside the coral and give it energy could actually be the source of the disease.”

Data gathered during the study showed that in addition to trying to digest their own symbionts to get rid of them, the corals are also undergoing some measure of starvation.

“We found lots of lines of evidence implicating the symbiont as the source, because the symbionts are also experiencing stress in their photosynthesis, either going haywire or just turning off,” Beavers said. “Also, most likely as a consequence of that, we see genes indicative of starvation in the coral. So, if they’re not getting food from their symbiont, it would make sense that they’re having starvation responses.”

Mydlarz noted that the severely high mortality rates among corals have prompted scientists to take drastic measures. This includes removing healthy corals from reefs before disease can strike them and transporting them to aquariums, zoos or other facilities where they’ll be safe. Some corals from Florida have even ended up at the Fort Worth Zoo.

“The positive aspect of this is we’re closer to figuring out what’s going on with this disease, which would mean we could predict it better for management purposes, like treating corals on the reef or moving corals,” Mydlarz said.

Co-authors of the study include current and former members of Mydlarz’s lab—Emily Van Buren, Madison Emery, Nicholas MacKnight, and Bradford Dimos—as well as Marilyn Brandt from the University of the Virgin Islands (UVI), St. Thomas, and members of UVI’s Center for Marine and Environmental Studies. Researchers from Mote Marine Laboratory in Florida, Rice University and Louisiana State University also contributed to the project.

The study was funded by two grants from the National Science Foundation.

- Written by Greg Pederson, College of Science