Department of Biology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States of America.
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States of America.
PLoS Biol. 2019 Nov 13;17(11):e3000534. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3000534. eCollection 2019 Nov.
Phosphate starvation response (PSR) in nonmycorrhizal plants comprises transcriptional reprogramming resulting in severe physiological changes to the roots and shoots and repression of plant immunity. Thus, plant-colonizing microorganisms-the plant microbiota-are exposed to direct influence by the soil's phosphorus (P) content itself as well as to the indirect effects of soil P on the microbial niches shaped by the plant. The individual contribution of these factors to plant microbiota assembly remains unknown. To disentangle these direct and indirect effects, we planted PSR-deficient Arabidopsis mutants in a long-term managed soil P gradient and compared the composition of their shoot and root microbiota to wild-type plants across different P concentrations. PSR-deficiency had a larger effect on the composition of both bacterial and fungal plant-associated microbiota than soil P concentrations in both roots and shoots. To dissect plant-microbe interactions under variable P conditions, we conducted a microbiota reconstitution experiment. Using a 185-member bacterial synthetic community (SynCom) across a wide P concentration gradient in an agar matrix, we demonstrated a shift in the effect of bacteria on the plant from a neutral or positive interaction to a negative one, as measured by rosette size. This phenotypic shift was accompanied by changes in microbiota composition: the genus Burkholderia was specifically enriched in plant tissue under P starvation. Through a community drop-out experiment, we demonstrated that in the absence of Burkholderia from the SynCom, plant shoots accumulated higher ortophosphate (Pi) levels than shoots colonized with the full SynCom but only under Pi starvation conditions. Therefore, Pi-stressed plants are susceptible to colonization by latent opportunistic competitors found within their microbiome, thus exacerbating the plant's Pi starvation.
非菌根植物的磷酸盐饥饿响应(PSR)包括转录重编程,导致根部和地上部发生严重的生理变化,并抑制植物免疫。因此,植物定殖的微生物——植物微生物组——直接受到土壤磷(P)含量的影响,以及土壤 P 对植物形成的微生物生境的间接影响。这些因素对植物微生物组组装的单独贡献尚不清楚。为了厘清这些直接和间接的影响,我们在长期管理的土壤 P 梯度中种植了 PSR 缺陷型拟南芥突变体,并将其地上部和根部微生物组的组成与不同 P 浓度下的野生型植物进行了比较。PSR 缺陷对细菌和真菌植物相关微生物组的组成的影响大于根和地上部的土壤 P 浓度。为了在可变 P 条件下剖析植物-微生物相互作用,我们进行了微生物组重建实验。使用琼脂基质中广泛 P 浓度梯度的 185 个成员的细菌合成群落(SynCom),我们证明了细菌对植物的影响从中性或正相互作用转变为负相互作用,这可以通过罗勒大小来衡量。这种表型变化伴随着微生物组组成的变化:在 P 饥饿条件下,伯克霍尔德氏菌属在植物组织中特异性富集。通过群落脱落实验,我们证明在没有 Burkholderia 从 SynCom 中脱落的情况下,与完全 SynCom 定植的植物地上部相比,植物地上部积累了更高的正磷酸盐(Pi)水平,但仅在 Pi 饥饿条件下。因此,受 Pi 胁迫的植物容易被其微生物组中潜伏的机会性竞争者定植,从而加剧植物的 Pi 饥饿。