(Press-News.org) Sleep is essential for much of the animal kingdom. During the night, neuron and tissue repair mechanisms are activated to aid recovery from daily activity. This is risky: organisms that sleep are more vulnerable to predators. However, the phenomenon extends from mammals to invertebrates. Nevertheless, until now it was not known whether other, more ancient groups without neurons, such as corals, engage in any kind of nocturnal rest.
A study led by the Institute of Evolutionary Biology (IBE), a joint research center of the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) and Pompeu Fabra University (UPF), has revealed that corals also sleep, despite them not having a nervous system, while their microbiome remains awake.
For the first time, a biological day-night pattern that transcends the individual and helps sustain a symbiotic relationship has been identified in situ. Corals need to rest between sunset and sunrise to recover from the oxidative stress caused by their microbes during daylight hours, when they nourish them through photosynthesis.
The research, carried out by the group of Javier del Campo, principal investigator at the IBE (CSIC-UPF), suggests that sleep is an older evolutionary mechanism than previously thought, and it could have been contributing to maintaining the balance of host-microbe relationships billions of years ago.
Day and night in coral symbiosis
The work was carried out on the living coral reef off the island of Curaçao (Caribbean Sea), where the brain coral Pseudodiploria strigosa and its symbiont, the alga Breviolum - which lives inside its cells and provides it with nutrients when it photosynthesizes -, were studied.
To carry out the research, the team made dives every six hours over a three-day period, to a depth of about five meters and, for the first time, studied the activity of the coral and its microbiome in situ during the day and night.
Every six hours they analyzed the gene expression of the coral and its symbionts and discovered that the host sleeps at night, despite having no nervous system. "P. strigosa sleeps for a third of the day, like humans, and the day-night cycle regulates its biological clock, known as the circadian rhythm", explains Bradley Allen Weiler, first author of the study and previously a predoctoral researcher in del Campo's group at the IBE (CSIC-UPF). But while the coral rests, its microbes remain active and mostly stable.
Corals sleep to stay in balance with their microbes
When darkness falls, corals activate mechanisms to repair DNA damaged over the course of the day. In daylight, the symbionts photosynthesize within the coral cells. As a result, they produce organic matter that nourishes the coral, but they also generate reactive oxygen species that can damage both tissues and the host's genetic material.
By sleeping, the corals minimize these effects and balance their relationship with the microbes. “At night, the corals repair DNA damaged by their symbionts,” says del Campo, also an associate professor at the Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science at the University of Miami. “The microbes stop photosynthesizing, but they maintain other cellular functions and do not need a long rest.”
The study shows how mutualistic relationships can be beneficial, despite having side effects. Coral sleep allows it to recover from daily damage, and sustains a symbiosis over time that, without this rhythm, would be toxic. “It is possible that these microorganisms became trapped inside coral cells billions of years ago, and that this contact ended up giving rise to a mutually beneficial relationship. However, these relationships are not intentional and if they are maintained it is thanks to certain commitments”, adds del Campo.
Rethinking symbiosis: the evolutionary legacy of corals
The new research could guide restoration policies involving cultivating corals ex situ for reintroduction. “We now have a better understanding of the physiology of corals, the great architects of marine ecosystems”, says Weiler. It could also help determine how microorganisms influence the animals’ response to climate change.
The study confirms that sleep is an ancestral mechanism, present since the first animals billions of years ago, and that it serves to repair DNA and tissues damaged during daily activity. "We often think that only animals with a brain need to sleep, but all living beings need to repair themselves in some way. Establishing an internal rhythm that facilitates this is a very ancient and successful evolutionary strategy”, adds del Campo.
For the first time, it has been shown that sleep could also be the key to maintaining relationships between species that evolved together. “This study invites us to rethink symbiotic relationships in nature and value the essential role they have played throughout evolutionary history”, concludes del Campo.
CSIC Comunicación
comunicacion@csic.es
END
Around 540 million years ago, Earth's biosphere underwent a pivotal transformation, shifting from a microbe-dominated world to one teeming with animal life, as nearly all major animal phyla appeared abruptly in the fossil record over a very short geological time interval. This landmark evolutionary event is known as the Cambrian Explosion. However, this surge in animal diversity was cut short around 513 million years ago by the Phanerozoic eon's first mass extinction, the Sinsk Event—with an extinction rate on par with the planet's five most severe mass extinctions, the so-called "Big Five." In its aftermath, global biodiversity ...
Stuttgart – Building things so small that they are smaller than the width of a human hair was previously achieved by using a method called two-photon polymerization, also known as 2PP – today’s state-of-the-art in 3D micro- and nanofabrication. Tiny sculptures such as a miniature replica of the Eiffel Tower or the Taj Mahal made the headlines.
While such creations are impressive to look at, their impact reaches much further. 3D micro- and nanofabrication techniques are important for many scientific fields, such as medicine, engineering and of course robotics.
However, there has been one major limitation up to now: miniature 3D objects can usually only be made ...
UVA Health scientists are reporting promising success as they pioneer a new way to create vaccines far more quickly, nimbly and inexpensively than ever before.
The University of Virginia School of Medicine’s Steven L. Zeichner, MD, PhD, is optimizing a vaccine-development platform he has created to accelerate how quickly life-saving vaccines can be designed and deployed during infectious-disease outbreaks such as the COVID-19 pandemic.
Zeichner’s approach could be even speedier than mRNA vaccines, and those were already far faster than traditional approaches. His platform also could ...
Background and Aims
Hepatic iron deposition (HID) in the reticuloendothelial system (RES) is associated with histological severity in metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD). This study aimed to assess the interaction between the transferrin (TF)-rs1049296 C>T variant and HID patterns on the risk of significant liver fibrosis in MASLD.
Methods
We analyzed 406 adults with liver biopsy-confirmed MASLD. HID was categorized as hepatocellular, RES, or mixed, based on Perl's ...
(WASHINGTON — Jan. 28, 2026) — The American Society of Hematology (ASH) released guidelines on the diagnosis of light chain (AL) amyloidosis, a rare and life-threatening disease of the bone marrow. The guidelines, published in the Society’s peer-reviewed journal Blood Advances, were developed following a rigorous review process and aim to improve and accelerate diagnosis for individuals living with the disorder.
“These guidelines will be a valuable resource not only for hematologists, but for clinicians across other specialties who care for patients with AL ...
Oak Brook, IL (USA) — The Society for Laboratory Automation and Screening (SLAS) has been awarded a $199,884 grant from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation to lead a multi-year initiative to develop education standards for laboratory automation, addressing a growing gap between the rapid adoption of automation technologies and formal training pathways for the scientific workforce.
The project, Standards for Automated Science Education, will establish evidence-based, interdisciplinary guidelines to help educators prepare students for the technical competencies required in modern laboratory ...
Background and Aims
Infections are frequent and lethal complications of acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF). Reliable biomarkers to distinguish fungal from bacterial infections remain limited. Given the central role of immune dysfunction in ACLF, we aimed to evaluate the diagnostic value of serum cytokines in differentiating invasive pulmonary aspergillosis (IPA) from bacterial pneumonia (BP) in HBV-associated ACLF.
Methods
This retrospective case-control study enrolled ACLF patients admitted to the Tongji Hospital, between 2018 and 2022. Patients were categorized into IPA, BP, and non-infection groups. The BP and non-infection groups were propensity score-matched ...
Desire on the Couch is a thought-provoking exhibition coming to San Francisco January 28th. Co-organized by the California Institute of Integral Studies (CIIS) and the Kinsey Institute, the exhibition traces a century-long struggle over how sexuality is measured, medicalized, and experienced. Visitors are invited to explore rarely-seen letters, photographs, and archival materials that reveal how ideas about sexuality and desire have long been argued over, resisted, and reimagined.
“Sexuality is an important topic because the way in which ...
Doctors may soon be able to tell just how sick a heart failure patient really is by using a routine MRI scan, thanks to new research from the University of East Anglia.
People with heart failure often need a test called right heart catheterisation, where a tube is inserted into the heart to measure oxygen levels in the blood. This helps doctors understand how severe the condition is.
But the invasive procedure is far from pleasant and carries risks, especially for older, frail or unwell patients.
In collaboration with researchers at the University of Leeds and Newcastle University, the team developed a way to estimate ...
The Kraft Center for Community Health at Mass General Brigham today announced the launch of the second annual Kraft Prize for Excellence and Innovation in Community Health, a national award recognizing organizations and innovators driving measurable improvements in community health with scalable, real-world models.
The prize will award $100,000 to one recipient addressing critical health challenges in any of a number of areas — cancer, cardiometabolic disease, substance use disorder, maternal health, ...