Multidisciplinary Institute for Environmental Studies Ramón Margalef, Department of Marine Sciences and Applied Biology, University of Alicante, Apto. 99, 03080, Alicante, Spain.
Microb Ecol. 2012 Oct;64(3):668-79. doi: 10.1007/s00248-012-0066-2. Epub 2012 May 10.
Structure of fungal communities is known to be influenced by host plants and environmental conditions. However, in most cases, the dynamics of these variation patterns are poorly understood. In this work, we compared richness, diversity, and composition between assemblages of endophytic and rhizospheric fungi associated to roots of two plants with different lifestyles: the halophyte Inula crithmoides and the non-halophyte I. viscosa (syn. Dittrichia viscosa L.), along a spatially short salinity gradient. Roots and rhizospheric soil from these plants were collected at three points between a salt marsh and a sand dune, and fungi were isolated and characterized by ITS rDNA sequencing. Isolates were classified in a total of 90 operational taxonomic units (OTUs), belonging to 17 fungal orders within Ascomycota and Basidiomycota. Species composition of endophytic and soil communities significantly differed across samples. Endophyte communities of I. crithmoides and I. viscosa were only similar in the intermediate zone between the salt marsh and the dune, and while the latter displayed a single, generalist association of endophytes, I. crithmoides harbored different assemblages along the gradient, adapted to the specific soil conditions. In the lower salt marsh, root assemblages were strongly dominated by a single dark septate sterile fungus, also prevalent in other neighboring salt marshes. Interestingly, although its occurrence was positively correlated to soil salinity, in vitro assays revealed a strong inhibition of its growth by salts. Our results suggest that host lifestyle and soil characteristics have a strong effect on endophytic fungi and that environmental stress may entail tight plant-fungus relationships for adaptation to unfavorable conditions.
真菌群落的结构已知受宿主植物和环境条件的影响。然而,在大多数情况下,这些变化模式的动态仍知之甚少。在这项工作中,我们比较了两种具有不同生活方式的植物(盐生植物 Inula crithmoides 和非盐生植物 I. viscosa(syn. Dittrichia viscosa L.))根系内生和根际真菌的丰富度、多样性和组成,这些植物沿着一个短的空间盐分梯度。从这些植物的根和根际土壤中,在盐沼和沙丘之间的三个点采集了根和根际土壤,并通过 ITS rDNA 测序分离和鉴定了真菌。分离物共分为 90 个操作分类单元(OTUs),属于子囊菌门和担子菌门中的 17 个真菌目。内生和土壤群落的物种组成在不同样本中差异显著。I. crithmoides 和 I. viscosa 的内生群落仅在盐沼和沙丘之间的中间区域相似,而后者表现出单一的、普遍的内生菌共生关系,而 I. crithmoides 在梯度上则具有不同的组合,适应特定的土壤条件。在低盐沼中,根群落强烈地被一种单一的暗隔无菌真菌所主导,这种真菌在其他邻近的盐沼中也很普遍。有趣的是,尽管它的出现与土壤盐分呈正相关,但体外试验表明,盐分对其生长有强烈的抑制作用。我们的研究结果表明,宿主的生活方式和土壤特性对内生真菌有强烈的影响,环境胁迫可能需要植物与真菌之间的紧密关系来适应不利条件。