4.8 Article

Discovery of chemoautotrophic symbiosis in the giant shipworm Kuphus polythalamia (Bivalvia: Teredinidae) extends wooden-steps theory

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1620470114

Keywords

symbiosis; shipworm; thioautotrophy; Teredinidae; chemoautotrophy

Funding

  1. Fogarty International Center of the National Institutes of Health [U19TW008163]
  2. National Science Foundation [1442759]
  3. US Department of Energy (DOE) Joint Genome Institute, a DOE Office of Science User Facility by Office of Science of the DOE [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  4. Division Of Integrative Organismal Systems
  5. Direct For Biological Sciences [1442759] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The wooden-steps hypothesis [Distel DL, et al. (2000) Nature 403: 725-726] proposed that large chemosynthetic mussels found at deep-sea hydrothermal vents descend from much smaller species associated with sunken wood and other organic deposits, and that the endosymbionts of these progenitors made use of hydrogen sulfide from biogenic sources (e.g., decaying wood) rather than from vent fluids. Here, we show that wood has served not only as a stepping stone between habitats but also as a bridge between heterotrophic and chemoautotrophic symbiosis for the giant mud-boring bivalve Kuphus polythalamia. This rare and enigmatic species, which achieves the greatest length of any extant bivalve, is the only described member of the wood-boring bivalve family Teredinidae (shipworms) that burrows in marine sediments rather than wood. We show that K. polythalamia harbors sulfur-oxidizing chemoautotrophic (thioautotrophic) bacteria instead of the cellulolytic symbionts that allow other shipworm species to consume wood as food. The characteristics of its symbionts, its phylogenetic position within Teredinidae, the reduction of its digestive system by comparison with other family members, and the loss of morphological features associated with wood digestion indicate that K. polythalamia is a chemoautotrophic bivalve descended from wood-feeding (xylotrophic) ancestors. This is an example in which a chemoautotrophic endosymbiosis arose by displacement of an ancestral heterotrophic symbiosis and a report of pure culture of a thioautotrophic endosymbiont.

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