Morphological and Transcriptional Effects of Crude Oil and Dispersant Exposure on the Marine Sponge Cinachyrella Alloclada

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Marine sponges play important roles in benthic ecosystems. More than providing shelter and food to other species, they help maintain water quality by regulating nitrogen and ammonium levels in the water, and bioaccumulate heavy metals. This system, however, is particularly sensitive to sudden environmental changes including catastrophic pollution event such as oil spills. Hundreds of oil platforms are currently actively extracting oil and gas in the Gulf of Mexico. To test the vulnerability of the benthic ecosystems to oil spills, we utilized the Caribbean reef sponge, Cinachyrella alloclada, as a novel experimental indicator. We have exposed organisms to crude oil and oil dispersant for up to 24 h and measured resultant gene expression changes. Our findings indicate that 1-hour exposure to water accommodated fractions (WAF) was enough to elicit massive shifts in gene expression in sponges and host bacterial communities (8052 differentially expressed transcripts) with the up-regulation of stress related pathways, cancer related pathways, and cell integrity pathways. Genes that were upregulated included heat shock proteins, apoptosis, oncogenes (Rab/Ras, Src, CMYC), and several E3 ubiquitin ligases. 24-hour exposure of chemically enhanced WAF (CE-WAF) had the greatest impact to benthic communities, resulting in mostly downregulation of gene expression (4248 differentially expressed transcripts). Gene deregulation from 1-hour treatments follow this decreasing trend of toxicity: WAF > CE-WAF > Dispersant, while the 24-hour treatment showed a shift to CE-WAF > Dispersant > WAF in our experiments. Thus, this study supports the development of Cinachyrella alloclada as a research model organism and bioindicator species for Florida reefs and underscores the importance of developing more efficient and safer ways to remove oil in the event of a spill catastrophe.
Original languageAmerican English
Article number162832
Number of pages14
JournalScience of The Total Environment
Volume878
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 20 2023

Bibliographical note

Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Funding

This work was initiated and partially supported by a Year 1 BP Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative grant to the Florida Institute of Oceanography . We thank Dr. Rebecca Vega Thurber for her input into the basic experimental design during this first phase of the project. We would like to thank Dr. Lauren Krausfeldt for providing guidance during the data analysis process, the technical support of Lexogen Inc. for their help in the library preparation process, and Dr. Shirley Pomponi for her help in the interpretation and analysis of the histological data. Finally, we would like to thank Nova Southeastern University Sequencing Core for their services and help during the data generation process. This Project was partially funded by a Nova Southeastern University President's Faculty Research Development Grant (PFRDG) to Y.D. and J.V.L. The authors declare no competing interest between all parties.

Funders
Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative
Florida Institute of Oceanography
Nova Southeastern University

    ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

    • Pollution
    • Waste Management and Disposal
    • Environmental Engineering
    • Environmental Chemistry

    Keywords

    • CE-WAF
    • Cinachyrella alloclada
    • Gene expression
    • Gulf of Mexico
    • Porifera
    • Transcriptomics
    • WAF
    • Petroleum Pollution
    • Animals
    • Ecosystem
    • Water Pollutants, Chemical/toxicity
    • Petroleum/toxicity

    Disciplines

    • Biology
    • Life Sciences

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Morphological and Transcriptional Effects of Crude Oil and Dispersant Exposure on the Marine Sponge Cinachyrella Alloclada'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this