
Highlights
- Combined ocean acidification and BaP induce holobiont dysregulation, evidencing by a decoupled Symbiodiniaceae proliferation and a collapse of the archaeal Nanoarchaeota-Halobacterota symbiosis.
- The coral host shifts its defense strategy from antioxidant capacity to cellular homeostasis, while the bacterial community increases functional redundancy, revealing a costly acclimation mechanism.
- The multi-level dysregulation demonstrates an underestimated ecological risk, highlighting that current single-stressor risk assessments are inadequate for protecting corals under complex pollution scenarios.
Abstract
Reef-building corals are increasingly threatened by the combined effects of global climate change and localized organic pollutants. However, the holistic impacts of co-exposure to ocean acidification (OA) and benzo[a]pyrene (BaP) on coral holobionts remain poorly understood. Here, we investigated the multi-level responses of the reef-building coral Porites lutea to short-term (7-day) exposure to OA (pH 7.80), BaP (10 µg/L), and their combination, by integrating physiological measurements with microbiome profiling (ITS2 and 16S rRNA). We found that combined stress was associated with a dysregulated response in Symbiodiniaceae, characterized by a significant increase in cell density without a parallel rise in chlorophyll content, suggesting a possible compensatory but inefficient proliferation response. Despite this, the dominant symbiont Cladocopium C15 remained stable. The bacterial diversity increased (e.g., enrichment of Ruegeria and Acanthopleuribacter, decline of Endozoicomonas), which may suggest enhanced functional redundancy, while the archaeal community was significantly restructured, most notably a marked decline of the putative obligate Nanoarchaeota–Halobacterota symbiosis. At the host level, combined stress was associated with suppressed antioxidant enzyme activities (SOD/POD) but upregulated genes related to protein folding (Hsp90) and calcium homeostasis (NCX1, VAMP4). These findings suggest a complex holobiont reconfiguration under combined stress, involving a stabilized core symbiont, altered microbiomes, and a shifted host defense strategy. Our study suggests that the ecological risk of combined OA and organic pollution may not be extrapolated from single-stressor responses, indicating the need to incorporate multi-stressor frameworks into coral reef risk assessments.
Chen Y., Qi Z., Yin L., Chang F., Ju H., Jing H. & Diao X., 2026 Multi-level holobiont dysregulation increases the ecological risk of combined ocean acidification and benzo[a]pyrene pollution to the reef-building coral Porites lutea. Journal of Hazardous Materials: 141743. doi: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2026.141743. Article (restricted access).



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