Maignien Loïs, DeForce Emelia A, Chafee Meghan E, Eren A Murat, Simmons Sheri L
Bay Paul Center, Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, USA.
mBio. 2014 Jan 21;5(1):e00682-13. doi: 10.1128/mBio.00682-13.
Bacteria living on the aerial parts of plants (the phyllosphere) are globally abundant and ecologically significant communities and can have significant effects on their plant hosts. Despite their importance, little is known about the ecological processes that drive phyllosphere dynamics. Here, we describe the development of phyllosphere bacterial communities over time on the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana in a controlled greenhouse environment. We used a large number of replicate plants to identify repeatable dynamics in phyllosphere community assembly and reconstructed assembly history by measuring the composition of the airborne community immigrating to plant leaves. We used more than 260,000 sequences from the v5v6 hypervariable region of the 16S rRNA gene to characterize bacterial community structure on 32 plant and 21 air samples over 73 days. We observed strong, reproducible successional dynamics: phyllosphere communities initially mirrored airborne communities and subsequently converged to a distinct community composition. While the presence or absence of particular taxa in the phyllosphere was conserved across replicates, suggesting strong selection for community composition, the relative abundance of these taxa was highly variable and related to the spatial association of individual plants. Our results suggest that stochastic events in early colonization, coupled with dispersal limitation, generated alternate trajectories of bacterial community assembly within the context of deterministic selection for community membership.
Commensal bacteria associated with plants help protect their hosts against infection and promote growth. Bacteria associated with plant leaves (the "phyllosphere") are highly abundant and diverse communities, but we have very limited information about their ecology. Here, we describe the formation of phyllosphere communities on the plant model organism Arabidopsis thaliana. We grew a large number of plants in a greenhouse and measured bacterial diversity in the phyllosphere throughout the Arabidopsis life cycle. We also measured the diversity of airborne microbes landing on leaves. Our findings show that plants develop distinctive phyllosphere bacterial communities drawn from low-abundance air populations, suggesting the plant environment is favorable for particular organisms and not others. However, we also found that the relative abundances of bacteria in the phyllosphere are determined primarily by the physical proximity of individual plants. This suggests that a mixture of selective and random forces shapes phyllosphere communities.
生活在植物地上部分(叶际)的细菌是全球分布广泛且具有重要生态意义的群落,对其植物宿主可产生重大影响。尽管它们很重要,但对于驱动叶际动态变化的生态过程却知之甚少。在此,我们描述了在可控温室环境下,模式植物拟南芥叶际细菌群落随时间的发展情况。我们使用大量重复的植株来识别叶际群落组装过程中可重复的动态变化,并通过测量迁移到植物叶片上的空气传播群落的组成来重建组装历史。我们使用来自16S rRNA基因v5v6高变区的超过260,000个序列,对73天内32个植物样本和21个空气样本中的细菌群落结构进行了表征。我们观察到强烈的、可重复的演替动态:叶际群落最初反映空气传播群落,随后汇聚到一个独特的群落组成。虽然叶际中特定分类群的存在与否在重复样本中是保守的,这表明对群落组成有强烈的选择作用,但这些分类群的相对丰度高度可变,且与单个植物的空间关联有关。我们的结果表明,早期定殖中的随机事件,加上扩散限制,在对群落成员的确定性选择背景下,产生了细菌群落组装的不同轨迹。
与植物相关的共生细菌有助于保护其宿主免受感染并促进生长。与植物叶片(“叶际”)相关的细菌是高度丰富和多样的群落,但我们对其生态学的了解非常有限。在此,我们描述了植物模式生物拟南芥叶际群落的形成。我们在温室中种植了大量植株,并在拟南芥的整个生命周期中测量了叶际中的细菌多样性。我们还测量了落在叶片上的空气传播微生物的多样性。我们的研究结果表明,植物从低丰度的空气种群中发展出独特的叶际细菌群落,这表明植物环境对特定生物有利而对其他生物不利。然而,我们还发现,叶际中细菌的相对丰度主要由单个植物的物理距离决定。这表明选择性和随机力量的混合塑造了叶际群落。