日本地球惑星科学連合2021年大会

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[J] ポスター発表

セッション記号 A (大気水圏科学) » A-CG 大気海洋・環境科学複合領域・一般

[A-CG41] 沿岸海洋生態系─2.サンゴ礁・藻場・マングローブ

2021年6月3日(木) 17:15 〜 18:30 Ch.07

コンビーナ:梅澤 有(東京農工大学)、宮島 利宏(東京大学 大気海洋研究所 海洋地球システム研究系 生元素動態分野)、渡邉 敦(笹川平和財団 海洋政策研究所)、樋口 富彦(東京大学大気海洋研究所)

17:15 〜 18:30

[ACG41-P04] サンゴの白化対応策の検討—遺伝子発現レベルでの評価—

*湯山 育子1、安田 直子2、比嘉 彩也香2、Yang Sung-Yin3、Agostini Sylvain3、樋口 富彦4、宮島 利宏4、中村 隆志5、藤村 弘行2 (1.山口大学、2.琉球大学、3.筑波大学、4.東京大学、5.東京工業大学)

キーワード:サンゴ礁、白化現象、遺伝子発現解析

Under high temperature stress, the reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated from symbiotic algae triggers the coral bleaching response. There is a possibility that the antioxidant enzymes containing metal ions such as Fe, Mn, and Zn, have an effect on the mitigation of ROS stress. Therefore, we hypothesized that the supply of metal ions promotes antioxidant activity and mitigates the bleaching response. In this study, the corals were fed with a metal-containing diet, and investigated the effect on the bleaching response at gene expression level.

We used Acropora hyacinthus collected around Sesoko Island, and they were fed with Artemia and metal-fortified yeast. Furthermore, the coral was incubated at an increasing temperature, and physiological responses and gene expression change of coral and their symbiotic algae were investigated. Coral was fixed at the time point when the bleaching response was observed, and large-scale gene expression analysis by Next Generation Sequencing was performed. We identified 25,069 contigs derived from Acropora hyacinthus by de novo assembled of the short reads. Then, expression levels of each contigs were estimated, and the gene expression related to the physiological response of corals was investigated. Results showed that the expression level of genes related to proto-oncogene and CuZnSOD of corals was increased by temperature stress. [H1] These gene expression changes tended to be mitigated by feeding with artemia or yeast. Furthermore, a result of canonical correlation analysis (CCA) using the physiological data and the gene expression data showed that genes related to mucin metabolism and vitamin B12 were associated with the changes in symbiont density. Based on these gene expression levels, we discussed the effects of metal-containing diet on mitigating coral bleaching reactions.