Tomato cultivars with variable tolerances to water deficit differentially modulate the composition and interaction patterns of their rhizosphere microbial communities
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Gaete, Alexis
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Tomato cultivars with variable tolerances to water deficit differentially modulate the composition and interaction patterns of their rhizosphere microbial communities
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Abstract
Since drought is the leading environmental factor limiting crop productivity, and
plants have a significant impact in defining the assembly of plant-specific microbial
communities associated with roots, we aimed to determine the effect of thoroughly
selected water deficit tolerant and susceptible Solanum lycopersicum cultivars on their
rhizosphere microbiome and compared their response with plant-free soil microbial
communities. We identified a total of 4,248 bacterial and 276 fungal different operational
taxonomic units (OTUs) in soils by massive sequencing. We observed that tomato
cultivars significantly affected the alpha and beta diversity of their bacterial rhizosphere
communities but not their fungal communities compared with bulk soils (BSs), showing
a plant effect exclusively on the bacterial soil community. Also, an increase in alpha
diversity in response to water deficit of both bacteria and fungi was observed in the
susceptible rhizosphere (SRz) but not in the tolerant rhizosphere (TRz) cultivar, implying
a buffering effect of the tolerant cultivar on its rhizosphere microbial communities. Even
though water deficit did not affect the microbial diversity of the tolerant cultivar, the
interaction network analysis revealed that the TRz microbiota displayed the smallest
and least complex soil network in response to water deficit with the least number
of connected components, nodes, and edges. This reduction of the TRz network
also correlated with a more efficient community, reflected in increased cooperation
within kingdoms. Furthermore, we identified some specific bacteria and fungi in the TRz in response to water deficit, which, given that they belong to taxa with
known beneficial characteristics for plants, could be contributing to the tolerant
phenotype, highlighting the metabolic bidirectionality of the holobiont system. Future
assays involving characterization of root exudates and exchange of rhizospheres
between drought-tolerant and susceptible cultivars could determine the effect of
specific metabolites on the microbiome community and may elucidate their functional
contribution to the tolerance of plants to water deficit.
Patrocinador
ANID Fondecyt 3170523
11200319
11161083
3130660
1201278
supercomputing infrastructure of the NLHPC ECM-02
ANID Fondap Grant 15200002
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Artículo de publícación WoS Artículo de publicación SCOPUS
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Frontiers in Plant Science July 2021 Volume 12 Article 688533
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