Literature DB >> 34168223

Transmitting silks of maize have a complex and dynamic microbiome.

Eman M Khalaf1,2, Anuja Shrestha1, Jeffrey Rinne1, Michael D J Lynch3, Charles R Shearer1, Victor Limay-Rios4, Lana M Reid5, Manish N Raizada6.   

Abstract

In corn/maize, silks emerging from cobs capture pollen, and transmit resident sperm nuclei to eggs. There are > 20 million silks per U.S. maize acre. Fungal pathogens invade developing grain using silk channels, including Fusarium graminearum (Fg, temperate environments) and devastating carcinogen-producers (Africa/tropics). Fg contaminates cereal grains with mycotoxins, in particular Deoxynivalenol (DON), known for adverse health effects on humans and livestock. Fitness selection should promote defensive/healthy silks. Here, we report that maize silks, known as styles in other plants, possess complex and dynamic microbiomes at the critical pollen-fungal transmission interval (henceforth: transmitting style microbiome, TSM). Diverse maize genotypes were field-grown in two trial years. MiSeq 16S rRNA gene sequencing of 328 open-pollinated silk samples (healthy/Fg-infected) revealed that the TSM contains > 5000 taxa spanning the prokaryotic tree of life (47 phyla/1300 genera), including nitrogen-fixers. The TSM of silk tip tissue displayed seasonal responsiveness, but possessed a reproducible core of 7-11 MiSeq-amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) dominated by a single Pantoea MiSeq-taxon (15-26% of sequence-counts). Fg-infection collapsed TSM diversity and disturbed predicted metabolic functionality, but doubled overall microbiome size/counts, primarily by elevating 7-25 MiSeq-ASVs, suggestive of a selective microbiome response against infection. This study establishes the maize silk as a model for fundamental/applied research of plant reproductive microbiomes.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 34168223     DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-92648-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Rep        ISSN: 2045-2322            Impact factor:   4.379


  58 in total

Review 1.  Germline Development and Fertilization Mechanisms in Maize.

Authors:  Liang-Zi Zhou; Martina Juranić; Thomas Dresselhaus
Journal:  Mol Plant       Date:  2017-02-15       Impact factor: 13.164

Review 2.  Maize reproductive development and kernel set under limited plant growth environments.

Authors:  Lucas Borrás; Lucas N Vitantonio-Mazzini
Journal:  J Exp Bot       Date:  2018-06-06       Impact factor: 6.992

3.  The growth of vegetative and reproductive structures (leaves and silks) respond similarly to hydraulic cues in maize.

Authors:  Olivier Turc; Marie Bouteillé; Avan Fuad-Hassan; Claude Welcker; François Tardieu
Journal:  New Phytol       Date:  2016-07-12       Impact factor: 10.151

4.  Floral organs act as environmental filters and interact with pollinators to structure the yellow monkeyflower (Mimulus guttatus) floral microbiome.

Authors:  María Rebolleda Gómez; Tia-Lynn Ashman
Journal:  Mol Ecol       Date:  2019-11-12       Impact factor: 6.185

5.  Identification and purification of an adenylate kinase-associated protein that influences the thermolability of adenylate kinase from a temperature-sensitive adk mutant of Escherichia coli.

Authors:  R J Huss; M Glaser
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  1983-11-10       Impact factor: 5.157

Review 6.  Cervicovaginal Microbiota and Reproductive Health: The Virtue of Simplicity.

Authors:  Melis N Anahtar; David B Gootenberg; Caroline M Mitchell; Douglas S Kwon
Journal:  Cell Host Microbe       Date:  2018-02-14       Impact factor: 21.023

7.  Epiphytic colonization of pear stigmas and hypanthia by bacteria during primary bloom.

Authors:  V O Stockwell; R J McLaughlin; M D Henkels; J E Loper; D Sugar; R G Roberts
Journal:  Phytopathology       Date:  1999-12       Impact factor: 4.025

Review 8.  Deoxynivalenol, gut microbiota and immunotoxicity: A potential approach?

Authors:  Yuxiao Liao; Zhao Peng; Liangkai Chen; Andreas K Nüssler; Liegang Liu; Wei Yang
Journal:  Food Chem Toxicol       Date:  2018-01-10       Impact factor: 6.023

9.  The microbiota continuum along the female reproductive tract and its relation to uterine-related diseases.

Authors:  Chen Chen; Xiaolei Song; Weixia Wei; Huanzi Zhong; Juanjuan Dai; Zhou Lan; Fei Li; Xinlei Yu; Qiang Feng; Zirong Wang; Hailiang Xie; Xiaomin Chen; Chunwei Zeng; Bo Wen; Liping Zeng; Hui Du; Huiru Tang; Changlu Xu; Yan Xia; Huihua Xia; Huanming Yang; Jian Wang; Jun Wang; Lise Madsen; Susanne Brix; Karsten Kristiansen; Xun Xu; Junhua Li; Ruifang Wu; Huijue Jia
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2017-10-17       Impact factor: 14.919

10.  Temporal and spatial dynamics in the apple flower microbiome in the presence of the phytopathogen Erwinia amylovora.

Authors:  Zhouqi Cui; Regan B Huntley; Quan Zeng; Blaire Steven
Journal:  ISME J       Date:  2020-10-06       Impact factor: 10.302

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  1 in total

1.  Patterns of Microbiome Composition Vary Across Spatial Scales in a Specialist Insect.

Authors:  Kyle J Paddock; Deborah L Finke; Kyung Seok Kim; Thomas W Sappington; Bruce E Hibbard
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2022-06-02       Impact factor: 6.064

  1 in total

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