| Literature DB >> 32988416 |
Shawn P Brown1,2,3, Michael A Grillo1,4, Justin C Podowski1,5, Katy D Heath6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Understanding the genetic and environmental factors that structure plant microbiomes is necessary for leveraging these interactions to address critical needs in agriculture, conservation, and sustainability. Legumes, which form root nodule symbioses with nitrogen-fixing rhizobia, have served as model plants for understanding the genetics and evolution of beneficial plant-microbe interactions for decades, and thus have added value as models of plant-microbiome interactions. Here we use a common garden experiment with 16S rRNA gene amplicon and shotgun metagenomic sequencing to study the drivers of microbiome diversity and composition in three genotypes of the model legume Medicago truncatula grown in two native soil communities.Entities:
Keywords: Common garden; Evolution; Genetic variation; Mutualism; Nodule microbiome
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32988416 PMCID: PMC7523075 DOI: 10.1186/s40168-020-00915-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microbiome ISSN: 2049-2618 Impact factor: 14.650
Results from modified principal variance component analysis (PVCA) enumerating the amount of community variation explained by soil origin (France of Corsica), plant genotype (G1, G27, G96), plant compartments (rhizosphere, root, nodule, leaf) and all possible interactions. Further, diversity estimator ANOVA results are presented across the same design. Complement of Simpson’s Diversity and Evenness were transformed using logit transformation and richness was transformed using Box-Cox functions prior to analysis
| Test | Variance explained—PVCA (%) | Diversity (1-D) | Evenness ( | OTU richness ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Soil origin | 3.207 | |||
| Genotype | 1.274 | |||
| Compartment | 3.231 | |||
| Soil origin × genotype | 3.222 | |||
| Soil origin × compartment | 23.098 | |||
| Genotype × compartment | 6.295 | |||
| Soil origin × genotype × compartment | 0.369 | |||
| Residual | 59.302 |
Fig. 1Bacterial diversity metrics (a) and abundance (mean ± SE) of the most abundant bacterial OTUs (b) for the four compartments studied. All estimates are based on iterative subsampling (1500 sequences per iteration at 1000 iterations). Letters represent significant differences (Tukey HSD) across compartments
PerMANOVAs by compartment testing for the effects of soil origin (Corsica or France) and plant genotype on bacterial community composition. PerMANOVA tests are based on a Bray-Curtis dissimilarity matrix using an iterative subsampling of a depth of 1500 sequences (1000 iterations) per sample. Pseudo-F test statistics, degrees of freedom, and P values are presented, and significant tests are displayed in bold and in italics
| Test | Soil origin Pseudo- | Soil origin | Genotype Pseudo- | Genotype |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rhizosphere | 0.679 | |||
| Root | 0.374 | |||
| Nodule | 0.330 | 0.941 | ||
| Leaf | 0.801 | 0.411 |
Fig. 2Bacterial communities in the root endosphere respond to plant genotype. a Nonmetric multidimensional scaling plot (Bray-Curtis) of bacterial root endophytes plotted by genotype, with insert showing Axis 2 loading scores (explains 48.36% of community variation) across genotypes (ANOVA). b Average bacteria Bray-Curtis dissimilarity values between paired rhizosphere and root endosphere samples (samples are paired by plant)
Fig. 3Paired effect size analysis of the 20 most abundant OTUs comparing relative abundances of each OTU within the same plant between root and nodule (a), rhizosphere and root (b), and root and leaf (c) compartments. Bacterial genera are on the left and OTU number presented parenthetically. Presented are quintiles (minimum, 25%, median, 75%, maximum) of paired effect size [e.g., nodule − root/(nodule + root)] where a value of 1.0 indicates this OTU is only found in the nodules where as a value of − 1.0 means the genus was only found in the Root. Tests for significant enrichment of OTUs between compartments using Wilcoxon signed-rank tests are presented where significant and indicated with tests statistics and p values
Fig. 4Genomic content of Ensifer from root versus nodule endosphere compartments from shotgun metagenomic sequencing data, shown as the median proportion of reads mapping to the symbiotic plasmid (pSymB in black, pSymA in white) relative to the chromosome. Lower and upper bounds of each box depict the first and third quartiles, respectively, with whiskers representing the range of observed values