| Literature DB >> 35346369 |
Gabriele Berg1,2,3, Tomislav Cernava4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: One promise of the recently presented microbiome definition suggested that, in combination with unifying concepts and standards, microbiome research could be important for solving new challenges associated with anthropogenic-driven changes in various microbiota. With this commentary we want to further elaborate this suggestion, because we noticed specific signatures in microbiota affected by the Anthropocene.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35346369 PMCID: PMC8959079 DOI: 10.1186/s40168-021-01224-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microbiome ISSN: 2049-2618 Impact factor: 14.650
Examples for the anthropogenic impact on microbiome signatures in plant holobionts and in terrestrial ecosystems in the Anthropocene from all over the world
| Anthropocene signature | Analyzed factor | Ecosystem/holobiont | Resulting microbiome signatures | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Global warming | Cropping systems | Warmer temperatures cause an increase of the relative abundance of soil-borne fungal plant pathogens. | [ | |
| Cherry | Warming increased the abundance of fungal plant pathogens with higher host infection rates as a consequence. | [ | ||
| Bog ecosystem | Microbiome shifts were observed in controlled warming experiments. A decreased diversity of bacteria and diazotrophs as well as a reduced nitrogen fixation rate was observed. | [ | ||
| Oak trees | Increased temperature resulted in lower microbial diversity under controlled conditions. It was also followed by an increase in pathogen occurrence. | [ | ||
| Grasslands | A decreased ‘drift’ was observed over time, which enhances homogeneous selection that is primarily imposed on | [ | ||
| Soil leaf litter layer | A short-term adaptation and altered diversity were observed. Non-random, parallel mutations in genes related to nutrient acquisition, stress response, and exopolysaccharide production were characteristic for adaption. | [ | ||
| Drought | Grasslands | Changes in soil functioning and plant community composition were observed and shown to be shaped via the modification of plant–soil feedbacks under drought conditions. | [ | |
| Pine and oak trees | Microbiota shifts and a decrease in diversity were reported. | [ | ||
| Erosion | Soil | Adaptions were characterized by low microbial network complexity. A decrease in functionality but increase in the relative abundances of some bacterial families involved in N cycling, such as | [ | |
| Nitrogen fertilization | Wheat roots and rhizosphere | Overuse of nitrogen fertilizers causes microbiome shifts towards Proteobacteria. | [ | |
| Wheat rhizosphere | Bacterial community richness and diversity decreased after plants were supplemented with inorganic nitrogen. | [ | ||
| Soil | Protist diversity is indirectly reduced by bacterial and fungal community shifts caused by nitrogen inputs in agricultural soils | [ | ||
| Different forest ecosystems | Nitrogen fertilization substantially reduced the diversity and abundance of nitrogen-fixing bacterial communities under elevated atmospheric CO2 conditions. | [ | ||
| Phosphorous fertilization | Soil (ryegrass) | One-time inorganic phosphate amendments caused shifts in soil bacterial and fungal communities and reduced mycorrhization rate in ryegrass. | [ | |
| Phosphorous and nitrogen fertilization | Barley | Long-term nitrogen fertilization was shown to affect arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal communities while long-term phosphorous fertilization limited phosphorous provision to plants. | [ | |
| Microplastics | Soil | Contamination of different soils with microplastics resulted in a specific enrichment of antibiotic resistance genes. The effect was further enhanced by elevated temperature. | [ | |
| Antibiotics, heavy metals, and microplastics | Soil | Enhanced antibiotic resistance occurrence was observed in manured soil. | [ | |
| Microplastics | Soil | Altered soil and microbiome structure were liked to microplastics contamination. | [ | |
| Neonicotinoid seed treatments | Phyllosphere and soil in soybean-corn agroecosystem | Microbiota shifts were reflected by a decline in the relative abundance of some potentially beneficial soil bacteria (bacteria involved in the N cycle) in response to pesticide applications. | [ | |
| Engineered nanomaterials: SiO2, TiO2, and Fe3O4 | Maize rhizosphere | A reduction of N-fixing bacteria and iron-redox bacteria was reported along microbiome shifts. Occurrence of plant growth promoting bacteria was enhanced. | [ | |
| Broad-spectrum fungicide: N-(3,5-dichlorophenyl) succinimide | Tobacco phyllosphere | Pesticide applications caused a microbiome shift towards a higher prevalence of Gammaproteobacteria in the phyllosphere of treated plants. | [ | |
| Antibiotic treatment | Oilseed rape | Mutation frequencies can explain differentiation between plant and clinical | [ | |
| Breeding of high-yield crops | Various crop plants | An overall tendency of microbiome shifts from k- to r-strategists was demonstrated. | [ | |
| Breeding of high-yield crops | Maize | It was shown that more recently developed germplasm recruited fewer microbial taxa with the genetic capability for sustainable N provisioning and larger populations of microorganisms that contribute to N losses. | [ | |
| UV-B radiation | Peanut phyllopshere | Characterization of 200 phyllosphere isolates indicated that the predominant UV-tolerant members were | [ | |
| Maize phyllosphere | UV-B radiation can affect bacterial diversity in the phyllosphere via the host plant’s gene products encoded on identified chromosomal quantitative trait loci (QTL). | [ | ||
| Maize phyllosphere | A strong tendency toward increased 16S rDNA sequence diversity was observed in UV-exposed samples. | [ | ||
| Agricultural intensification | Various crop plants | A reduced network complexity and a reduced abundance of keystone taxa were described. | [ | |
| Diverse | Global microbiome | An enrichment of Firmicutes and hypermutation genes in global microbiomes was observed. | [ | |
| Diverse | Soil | Local increase of bacterial diversity and a global-scale homogenization of the soil microbiome was described. Additionally, soil-borne fungal pathogens were shown to accumulate which is accompanied by a reduction of beneficial microbes. | [ | |
| Drought and nitrogen availability | Rhizosphere of | Rhizospheric fungi are more sensitive to N and water addition than bacteria. Low N input and drought increased microbial co-occurrence network complexity. | [ |
Fig. 1Planetary Boundaries and their impact on microbiome signatures in plant holobionts. *Increased evenness and diversity of plant microbiomes are often observed as a response to abiotic stress factors. In the long term, these changes can lead to dysbiosis and higher susceptibility to pathogens (biotic stress) which is commonly connected to decreased evenness and diversity