PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - M. González-Aravena AU - N.J. Kenny AU - M. Osorio AU - A. Font AU - A. Riesgo AU - C.A. Cárdenas TI - Warm Temperatures, Cool Sponges: The Effect of Increased Temperatures on the Antarctic Sponge <em>Isodictya</em> sp AID - 10.1101/416677 DP - 2019 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 416677 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/02/10/416677.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/02/10/416677.full AB - Although the cellular and molecular responses to exposure to relatively high temperatures (acute thermal stress or heat shock) have been studied previously, only sparse empirical evidence of how it affects cold-water species is available. As climate change becomes more pronounced in areas such as the Western Antarctic Peninsula, it has become crucial to understand the capacity of these species to respond to thermal stress.Here we use the Antarctic sponge Isodictya sp. to investigate how sessile organisms (particularly Porifera) can adjust to acute short-term heat stress, by exposing this species to 3 and 5 °C for 4 hours, corresponding to predicted temperatures under high-end 2080 IPCC-SRES scenarios. Assembling a de novo reference transcriptome (90,188 contigs, &gt;93.7% metazoan BUSCO genes) we have begun to discern the molecular componentry employed by Isodictya to adjust to environmental insult.Our initial analyses suggest that TGF-β, ubiquitin and hedgehog cascades are involved, alongside other genes. However, the degree and type of response changed little from 3 to 5 °C, suggesting that even moderate rises in temperature could cause stress at the limits of this organism’s capacity. Given the importance of sponges to Antarctic ecosystems, our findings are vital for discerning the consequences of increases in Antarctic ocean temperature on these and other species.