PeerJ (Nov 2024)

Viral metagenomic investigation of two Caribbean echinoderms, Diadema antillarum (Echinoidea) and Holothuria floridana (Holothuria)

  • Ian Hewson,
  • Marilyn Brandt,
  • Kayla Budd,
  • Mya Breitbart,
  • Christopher DeRito,
  • Samuel Gittens Jr,
  • Michael W. Henson,
  • Alwin Hylkema,
  • Moriah Sevier,
  • Matthew Souza,
  • Brayan Vilanova-Cuevas,
  • Sarah Von Hoene

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.18321
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12
p. e18321

Abstract

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Background Echinoderms play crucial roles in coral reef ecosystems, where they are significant detritivores and herbivores. The phylum is widely known for its boom and bust cycles, driven by food availability, predation pressure and mass mortalities. Hence, surveillance of potential pathogens and associates of grossly normal specimens is important to understanding their roles in ecology and mass mortality. Methods We performed viral surveillance in two common coral reef echinoderms, Diadema antillarum and Holothuria floridana, using metagenomics. Urchin specimens were obtained during the 2022 Diadema antillarum scuticociliatosis mass mortality event from the Caribbean and grossly normal H. floridana specimens from a reef in Florida. Viral metagenomes were assembled and aligned against viral genomes and protein encoding regions. Metagenomic reads and previously sequenced transcriptomes were further investigated for putative viral elements by Kraken2. Results D. antillarum was devoid of viruses typically seen in echinoderms, but H. floridana yielded viral taxa similar to those found in other sea cucumbers, including Pisoniviricetes (Picornaviruses), Ellioviricetes (Bunyaviruses), and Magsaviricetes (Nodaviruses). The lack of viruses detected in D. antillarum may be due to the large amount of host DNA in viral metagenomes, or because viruses are less abundant in D. antillarum tissues when compared to H. floridana tissues. Our results also suggest that RNA amplification approach may influence viral representation in viral metagenomes. While our survey was successful in describing viruses associated with both echinoderms, our results indicate that viruses are less pronounced in D. antillarum than in other echinoderms. These results are important in context of wider investigation on the association between viruses and D. antillarum mass mortalities, since the conventional method used in this study was unsuccessful.

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