Co-option of lysosomal machinery shapes the symbiosis supporting coral reefs
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Abstract
Intracellular photosymbiosis has evolved across life and forms the foundation of coral reef ecosystems. Using the sea anemone Aiptasia as a model, we generated a high-quality proteome of the symbiosome, the organelle that houses algal symbionts. This proteome revealed protein trafficking mechanisms and the types of biomolecules exchanged during symbiosis. Symbiosomal enrichment of lysosomal proteins, visualization of lysosomal fusion, along with reduced symbiosis following knockdown of lysosomal genes, supports its phagolysosomal identity and that extensive co-option of lysosomal proteins shapes the symbiosome. CRISPR/Cas9-induced mutations in the symbiosomal and lysosomal bicarbonate/sulfate transporter, SLC26A11, disrupted symbiosis in both Aiptasia and a reef-building coral. These findings support that anemones and corals independently evolved a carbon-concentrating and sulfate transport mechanism to fuel photosymbiosis by co-opting an orthologous lysosomal transporter.
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Raw proteomics data is available in PRIDE repository XXX. Raw sequences and metadata have been deposited in the NCBI BioProject database (accession no. XXXXXX).
Hi, I was interested in the full dataset but it looks like the data either have not yet been deposited or the placeholders have accidentally not been replaced here. I was also unable to also find them via an admittedly cursory search directly in the appropriate repos (recognizing that the US government shutdown may be delaying updating of NCBI).
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