Department of BioSciences, Program in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Rice University, 6100 Main Street, Houston, TX, 77005, USA.
Department of Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, 87131, USA.
Microb Ecol. 2017 Oct;74(3):640-653. doi: 10.1007/s00248-017-0964-4. Epub 2017 Mar 17.
Heritable microbes are abundant in nature and influential to their hosts and the communities in which they reside. However, drivers of variability in the prevalence of heritable symbionts and their rates of transmission are poorly resolved, particularly across host populations experiencing variable biotic and abiotic environments. To fill these gaps, we surveyed 25 populations of two native grasses (Elymus virginicus and Elymus canadensis) across the southern Great Plains (USA). Both grass species host heritable endophytic fungi (genus Epichloё) and can hybridize where their ranges overlap. From a subset of hosts, we characterized endophyte genotype using genetic loci that link to bioactive alkaloid production. First, we found mean vertical transmission rates and population-level prevalence were positively correlated, specifically for E. virginicus. However, both endophyte prevalence and transmission varied substantially across populations and did not strongly correlate with abiotic variables, with one exception: endophyte prevalence decreased as drought stress decreased for E. virginicus hosts. Second, we evaluated the potential influence of biotic factors and found that, after accounting for climate, endophyte genotype explained significant variation in symbiont inheritance. We also contrasted populations where host species co-occurred in sympatry vs. allopatry. Sympatry could potentially increase interspecific hybridization, but this variable did not associate with patterns of symbiont prevalence or transmission success. Our results reveal substantial variability in symbiont prevalence and transmission across host populations and identify symbiont genotype, and to a lesser extent, the abiotic environment as sources of this variation.
可遗传微生物在自然界中大量存在,对其宿主和所在群落具有深远影响。然而,可遗传共生体的流行率和传播率的变化驱动因素仍不清楚,尤其是在宿主种群经历不同生物和非生物环境的情况下。为了填补这些空白,我们调查了美国大平原南部的 25 个原生草种群(Elymus virginicus 和 Elymus canadensis)。这两种草都含有可遗传的内生真菌(Epichloё属),并且在它们的分布范围重叠的地方可以杂交。我们从一部分宿主中,使用与生物活性生物碱产生相关的遗传位点来描述内生菌基因型。首先,我们发现平均垂直传播率与种群水平的流行率呈正相关,特别是对于 E. virginicus。然而,内生菌的流行率和传播率在不同种群中差异很大,并且与非生物变量没有很强的相关性,只有一个例外:E. virginicus 宿主的内生菌流行率随着干旱胁迫的减少而降低。其次,我们评估了生物因素的潜在影响,发现在内生菌基因型解释了共生体遗传的显著变异后,气候仍然是一个重要的影响因素。我们还比较了宿主物种在同域共存和异域共存的种群。同域共存可能会增加种间杂交,但这个变量与共生体流行率或传播成功率的模式没有关联。我们的研究结果揭示了宿主种群中内生菌流行率和传播率的巨大变异性,并确定了内生菌基因型以及在较小程度上的非生物环境是这种变异性的来源。