| Literature DB >> 33910643 |
Javier A Ceja-Navarro1,2, Yuan Wang3, Daliang Ning4,5, Abelardo Arellano6, Leila Ramanculova6, Mengting Maggie Yuan7, Alyssa Byer7, Kelly D Craven3, Malay C Saha3, Eoin L Brodie7,8, Jennifer Pett-Ridge9, Mary K Firestone10,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite their widespread distribution and ecological importance, protists remain one of the least understood components of the soil and rhizosphere microbiome. Knowledge of the roles that protists play in stimulating organic matter decomposition and shaping microbiome dynamics continues to grow, but there remains a need to understand the extent to which biological and environmental factors mediate protist community assembly and dynamics. We hypothesize that protists communities are filtered by the influence of plants on their rhizosphere biological and physicochemical environment, resulting in patterns of protist diversity and composition that mirror previously observed diversity and successional dynamics in rhizosphere bacterial communities.Entities:
Keywords: Community assembly; Rhizosphere; Soil microbiome; Soil protist; Switchgrass
Year: 2021 PMID: 33910643 PMCID: PMC8082632 DOI: 10.1186/s40168-021-01042-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microbiome ISSN: 2049-2618 Impact factor: 14.650
Fig. 1Diversity and community composition of protists communities in two marginal soil sites in southern Oklahoma. a Alpha diversity of protist communities in the two marginal soil sites. In each boxplot, a point represents a replicated sample per site and its calculated diversity index, and the diamond symbols represent the mean. The box boundaries represent the first and third quartiles of the distribution and the median is represented as the horizontal line inside each box. Boxplots whiskers span 1.5 times the interquartile range of the distribution. b Ordination plot depicting community structure of protist communities in the CL and SL sites calculated from a weighted Unifrac similarity matrix. The trend surface of the variable moisture was plotted onto the ordination space using the ordisurf function of the vegan package. CL = Clay Loam, SL = Sandy Loam; n = 30 for SL, n = 29 for CL
Fig. 2Community composition dynamics from sampling time T1 to T5 for protists in bulk and rhizosphere soil samples. The percent value for each axis represents the proportion of total variation explained. The ellipses were calculated around barycenters with a confidence level of 0.99 using the stat_conf_ellipse function in ggpubr v.0.2.4. SL = Sandy Loam site, CL = Clay Loam site. N values correspond to the number of biological replicates that were used for analyses
Fig. 3Differential abundance patterns of protist groups in rhizosphere and bulk soil over time. Green color indicates log2-fold abundance increase in the rhizosphere, while brown color indicates an increase of abundance in bulk soil. Only groups with a log2-fold change higher than 0.8 and lower than − 0.8 are represented in the figure. Significant differences for the groups had an FDR corrected p value < 0.01. Feeding/nutrition preferences are indicated based on published reports (see “Materials and methods” section) for those groups identified at the genus level and that were detected as prevalent in the rhizosphere. b = bacterivore, o= omnivore (feeds on bacteria and protists), e = eukaryvore, pp = plant pathogen, ph = photosynthesis, ap = animal pathogen, fp = pathogen of fungi. SL = Sandy Loam site, CL = Clay Loam site. For the SL site n-values were as follows: Rhizosphere-T2 = 21, T3 = 12, T4 = 20, T5=28; bulk-T2 = 26, T3 = 29, T4 = 30, T5 = 29. For the CL site n-values were: Rhizosphere-T2 = 19, T3 = 24, T4 = 15, T5 = 21; bulk-T2 = 29, T3 = 28, T4 = 29, T5 = 28
Fig. 4a Succession of rhizosphere and bulk soil networks for protist communities over time. The five sampling points corresponded with different developmental stages of switchgrass plants in two sampling sites. Networks represent RMT co-occurrence models from biological replicates (minimum of 10) at each sampling point, where nodes represent ZOTUs or exact sequence variants, and links between nodes represent significant correlations. Modules are randomly colored. Red and blue links represent significant negative and positive correlations. b Network topological parameters for both sites over time for bulk and rhizosphere protists networks. SL = sandy loam site, CL = clay loam site
Protists identified as putative hub taxa within the rhizosphere networks from the Sandy Loam (red box) and Clay Loam (yellow box) sites
Hub taxa are module hubs and connectors which are identified based on their within-module connectivity (Zi > 2.5) and among-module connectivity (Pi > 0.62). Their removal from their corresponding networks may cause modules and networks to disassemble. Boxes filled in red color correspond to times in which a protist was identified as keystone element of a rhizosphere network from the Sandy Loam site while yellow filled box correspond to keystone groups at the Clay Loam site. T1 to T5 indicate the different sampling times. Feeding/nutrition preferences are indicated based on published reports (see materials and methods) for protists identified at the genus level. b bacterivore, e eukaryvore, o omnivore (feeds on bacteria and protists), ph photoautotroph, m mixotroph, pp plant pathogen
Fig. 5Relative importance of different ecological processes in protist community assembly. a Dispersal limitation and homogenous selection were the most influential ecological processes in both sampling sites for bulk soil and rhizosphere communities across sampling times. b Comparison between bulk soil and rhizosphere show that rhizosphere protists are under higher homogeneous selection but lower dispersal limitation during the growth and/or senescence of switchgrass. Significance is based on bootstrapping with 1000 replications. *P < 0.1; **P < 0.05; ***P < 0.01