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Gene Expression Normalization in a Dual- compartment System: a Real- time Quantitative Polymerase Chain Reaction Protocol For Symbiotic Anthozoans Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon
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Page 1: Genetics Presentation - Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon - works cited

Gene Expression Normalization in a Dual-compartment System: a Real-time Quantitative Polymerase Chain

Reaction Protocol For Symbiotic Anthozoans

Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon

Page 2: Genetics Presentation - Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon - works cited

Introduction Coral reefs are ecologically and economically important

ecosystems

“Bleaching” of Coral reefs

Biological capacity of the anthozoan-dinoflagellate symbiosis to accommodate altered temperature regimes

Monitoring expression of genes across a range of temperatures

Goal—Developing the capacity to quantify the endosymbiont contribution to a given extraction

Page 3: Genetics Presentation - Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon - works cited

Challenges ◦Common real-time quantitative

polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) technique pitfalls

◦Varying RNA composition of the DNA/RNA samples

Page 4: Genetics Presentation - Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon - works cited

“Symbiont molecular proxy (SMP)”

RNA/DNA spiking approach◦Control for other technical issues

Total RNA and total protein (evaluate quantity of biological material)

Proteins, DNA, and RNA

Page 5: Genetics Presentation - Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon - works cited

Materials and methodsCollections of anemones and corals

and isolation of dinoflagellate symbionts◦Coconut Island◦Dinoflagellate cells were pelleted by

centrifugation◦Dinoflagellate cell pellets were re-

suspended in FSW◦Haemacytometer counts

Page 6: Genetics Presentation - Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon - works cited

Aiptasia pulchella infection◦A. pulchella were artifically infected

with Symbiodinium For each of five clonal lines, 6

anemones were infected, 2 uninfected as controls

Page 7: Genetics Presentation - Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon - works cited

…….

Page 8: Genetics Presentation - Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon - works cited
Page 9: Genetics Presentation - Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon - works cited

Results – HSP70 CorrelationsM. capitata

◦<0.5% dinoflagellate cells w/ membrane damage

◦r2>0.87 (HSP70 genome copies vs. symbiont cells)

◦r2=0.97 (coral-derived dilution series, 0.125–1 × 106 cells)

◦2-2.5 x 106 SMP is too highr2=0.88 (A. pulchella - 0.125 – 2 × 106 cells)

Page 10: Genetics Presentation - Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon - works cited

Figure 2 - Freshly isolated Symbiodinium cell dilutions and HSP70 genome copies

Page 11: Genetics Presentation - Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon - works cited

HSP70 Levels After InfectionAfter infection HSP70 increases,

regardless of:◦Non-normalization◦Exogenous DNA spike only◦DNA spike & protein◦DNA spike & total RNA

Uninfected controls remained uninfected

Page 12: Genetics Presentation - Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon - works cited

Figure 3 - Symbiodinium densities and HSP70 genome copies in Aiptasia pulchella

Page 13: Genetics Presentation - Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon - works cited

Figure 4 - Symbiodinium HSP70 expression in Aiptasia pulchella

Page 14: Genetics Presentation - Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon - works cited

Data Relevance

rt-PCR (qPCR) has been used to identify adaptive advantages in symbiotes

Bleached anthozoans account for most RNA due to up-regulation

Must interpret data in vivoStrong correlation for anemone-derived

symbionts (r2=0.92) & coral-derived symbionts (r2=0.97)◦Valid for 106 cells

Page 15: Genetics Presentation - Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon - works cited

Discussion – Best Protocol

Standard errors for 2 and 2.5 × 106 cell counts◦Too great for predictive abilities◦Pipetting errors

Findings demonstrate need to normalize gene expression to SMP◦ If not, no accurate measurement of symbiotic

ratioNormalization to RNA better than to

protein◦Pipetting errors

Page 16: Genetics Presentation - Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon - works cited

Discussion - HousekeepingHousekeeping genes (cell scaffolding

and volume)◦ACTB & a-tubulin◦Thermal stress – cell volume changes◦Breakdown of symbiosis

“Heat Specific Protein (HSP) 70”

Page 17: Genetics Presentation - Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon - works cited

Efficiency of StudyNormalizing to DNA/RNA spikes

◦Extraction/reverse transcription efficiencySMP account for differential extraction

of SymbiodiniumTotal RNA proxy for comparison

Page 18: Genetics Presentation - Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon - works cited

ConclusionAnthozoans and dinoflagellates are in

symbiosisSymbiodinium undergoes

photosynthesis, while anthozoans undergo respiration

Heat stress causes production of HSP70 in Symbiodinium

Page 19: Genetics Presentation - Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon - works cited

Conclusion contd.

qPCR quantification can be carried out in a “dual-compartment’ system

Must be quantified and normalizedLinear correlation up to 106 cells

Page 20: Genetics Presentation - Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon - works cited

Further Questions/EndeavorsHow can one quantify symbiont levels

that exceed 106 cells?Protocol now developed for future

researchFind possible alternative symbiotic

relationshipsDetermine levels of heat stress in

such organisms

Page 21: Genetics Presentation - Meiping Sun and Jason Dillon - works cited

Works Cited

Mayfield, Anderson, Marissa Hurst, and Ruth Gates. Gene expression normalization in a dual-compartment system: a real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction protocol for symbiotic anthozoans. Hoboken, NJ: Blackwell Publishing, 2009.