Santos-Medellín Christian, Edwards Joseph, Liechty Zachary, Nguyen Bao, Sundaresan Venkatesan
Department of Plant Biology, University of California, Davis, California, USA.
Department of Plant Biology, University of California, Davis, California, USA
mBio. 2017 Jul 18;8(4):e00764-17. doi: 10.1128/mBio.00764-17.
Plant roots support complex microbial communities that can influence plant growth, nutrition, and health. While extensive characterizations of the composition and spatial compartmentalization of these communities have been performed in different plant species, there is relatively little known about the impact of abiotic stresses on the root microbiota. Here, we have used rice as a model to explore the responses of root microbiomes to drought stress. Using four distinct genotypes, grown in soils from three different fields, we tracked the drought-induced changes in microbial composition in the rhizosphere (the soil immediately surrounding the root), the endosphere (the root interior), and unplanted soils. Drought significantly altered the overall bacterial and fungal compositions of all three communities, with the endosphere and rhizosphere compartments showing the greatest divergence from well-watered controls. The overall response of the bacterial microbiota to drought stress was taxonomically consistent across soils and cultivars and was primarily driven by an enrichment of multiple and , as well as a depletion of several and While there was some overlap in the changes observed in the rhizosphere and endosphere communities, several drought-responsive taxa were compartment specific, a pattern likely arising from preexisting compositional differences, as well as plant-mediated processes affecting individual compartments. These results reveal that drought stress, in addition to its well-characterized effects on plant physiology, also results in restructuring of root microbial communities and suggest the possibility that constituents of the altered plant microbiota might contribute to plant survival under extreme environmental conditions. With the likelihood that changes in global climate will adversely affect crop yields, the potential role of microbial communities in enhancing plant performance makes it important to elucidate the responses of plant microbiomes to environmental variation. By detailed characterization of the effect of drought stress on the root-associated microbiota of the crop plant rice, we show that the rhizosphere and endosphere communities undergo major compositional changes that involve shifts in the relative abundances of a taxonomically diverse set of bacteria in response to drought. These drought-responsive microbes, in particular those enriched under water deficit conditions, could potentially benefit the plant as they could contribute to tolerance to drought and other abiotic stresses, as well as provide protection from opportunistic infection by pathogenic microbes. The identification and future isolation of microbes that promote plant tolerance to drought could potentially be used to mitigate crop losses arising from adverse shifts in climate.
植物根系支持着复杂的微生物群落,这些群落会影响植物的生长、营养和健康。虽然已经对不同植物物种中这些群落的组成和空间分隔进行了广泛的表征,但关于非生物胁迫对根际微生物群的影响却知之甚少。在这里,我们以水稻为模型,探索根际微生物群对干旱胁迫的反应。我们使用了四种不同的基因型,种植在来自三个不同田地的土壤中,追踪了根际(紧邻根的土壤)、内生菌(根内部)和未种植土壤中干旱诱导的微生物组成变化。干旱显著改变了所有三个群落的总体细菌和真菌组成,其中内生菌和根际部分与水分充足的对照相比差异最大。细菌微生物群对干旱胁迫的总体反应在不同土壤和品种中在分类学上是一致的,主要是由多种[具体菌属1]和[具体菌属2]的富集以及几种[具体菌属3]和[具体菌属4]的减少驱动的。虽然在根际和内生菌群落中观察到的变化有一些重叠,但一些对干旱有反应的分类群是特定于不同部分的,这种模式可能源于先前存在的组成差异以及影响各个部分的植物介导过程。这些结果表明,干旱胁迫除了对植物生理有其已被充分表征的影响外,还会导致根际微生物群落的重组,并表明改变后的植物微生物群的成分可能有助于植物在极端环境条件下生存的可能性。鉴于全球气候变化可能会对作物产量产生不利影响,微生物群落在提高植物性能方面的潜在作用使得阐明植物微生物群对环境变化的反应变得很重要。通过详细表征干旱胁迫对作物水稻根际相关微生物群的影响,我们表明根际和内生菌群落经历了主要的组成变化,这些变化涉及分类学上多样的一组细菌相对丰度的变化以响应干旱。这些对干旱有反应的微生物,特别是那些在水分亏缺条件下富集的微生物,可能会使植物受益,因为它们可以有助于植物耐受干旱和其他非生物胁迫,以及提供对致病微生物机会性感染的保护。鉴定并在未来分离出促进植物耐受干旱的微生物可能会被用于减轻因气候不利变化而导致的作物损失。