Nazir Rashid, Mazurier Sylvie, Yang Pu, Lemanceau Philippe, van Elsas Jan Dirk
Department of Environmental Sciences, COMSATS Institute of Information TechnologyAbbottabad, Pakistan; Department of Soil Environmental Science, Research Centre for Eco-environmental Sciences - Chinese Academy of SciencesBeijing, China.
Agroécologie, AgroSup Dijon, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté Dijon, France.
Front Microbiol. 2017 Jan 31;8:38. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2017.00038. eCollection 2017.
Bacteria and fungi constitute important organisms in many ecosystems, in particular terrestrial ones. Both organismal groups contribute significantly to biogeochemical cycling processes. Ecological theory postulates that bacteria capable of receiving benefits from host fungi are likely to evolve efficient association strategies. The purpose of this review is to examine the mechanisms that underpin the bacterial interactions with fungi in soil and other systems, with special focus on the type III secretion system (T3SS). Starting with a brief description of the versatility of the T3SS as an interaction system with diverse eukaryotic hosts, we subsequently examine the recent advances made in our understanding of its contribution to interactions with soil fungi. The analysis used data sets ranging from circumstantial evidence to gene-knockout-based experimental data. The initial finding that the abundance of T3SSs in microbiomes is often enhanced in fungal-affected habitats like the mycosphere and the mycorrhizosphere is now substantiated with in-depth knowledge of the specific systems involved. Different fungal-interactive bacteria, in positive or negative associations with partner fungi, harbor and express T3SSs, with different ecological outcomes. In some particular cases, bacterial T3SSs have been shown to modulate the physiology of its fungal partner, affecting its ecological characteristics and consequently shaping its own habitat. Overall, the analyses of the collective data set revealed that diverse T3SSs have assumed diverse roles in the interactions of bacteria with host fungi, as driven by ecological and evolutionary niche requirements.
细菌和真菌是许多生态系统中的重要生物,尤其是在陆地生态系统中。这两类生物对生物地球化学循环过程都有重要贡献。生态理论推测,能够从宿主真菌中获益的细菌可能会进化出高效的共生策略。本综述的目的是研究土壤和其他系统中细菌与真菌相互作用的潜在机制,特别关注III型分泌系统(T3SS)。首先简要描述T3SS作为与多种真核宿主相互作用系统的多功能性,随后我们将研究在理解其对与土壤真菌相互作用的贡献方面取得的最新进展。分析使用了从间接证据到基于基因敲除的实验数据等一系列数据集。最初发现,在受真菌影响的栖息地(如菌圈和菌根圈)中,微生物群落中T3SS的丰度通常会增加,现在这一发现已通过对所涉及的特定系统的深入了解得到证实。不同的与真菌相互作用的细菌,与伙伴真菌形成正相关或负相关,都拥有并表达T3SS,产生不同的生态结果。在某些特定情况下,细菌的T3SS已被证明可以调节其真菌伙伴的生理功能,影响其生态特征,从而塑造自身的栖息地。总体而言,对这些综合数据集的分析表明,受生态和进化生态位需求驱动,不同的T3SS在细菌与宿主真菌的相互作用中发挥了不同的作用。