AI Article Synopsis

  • Plants use their root microbiome to fend off soil-borne fungal pathogens, with the effectiveness of this defense influenced by microbiome composition at infection time.
  • Research on the fungal pathogen Fusarium oxysporum showed that infections significantly altered the root microbiome's composition and gene expression based on the bean cultivar's resistance.
  • Findings indicated that the fox-resistant cultivar had a greater diversity and specific beneficial bacteria that may help suppress pathogens, alongside enriched genes associated with terpene biosynthesis, enhancing disease resistance.

Article Abstract

Background: Plants rely on their root microbiome as the first line of defense against soil-borne fungal pathogens. The abundance and activities of beneficial root microbial taxa at the time prior to and during fungal infection are key to their protective success. If and how invading fungal root pathogens can disrupt microbiome assembly and gene expression is still largely unknown. Here, we investigated the impact of the fungal pathogen Fusarium oxysporum (fox) on the assembly of rhizosphere and endosphere microbiomes of a fox-susceptible and fox-resistant common bean cultivar.

Results: Integration of 16S-amplicon, shotgun metagenome as well as metatranscriptome sequencing with community ecology analysis showed that fox infections significantly changed the composition and gene expression of the root microbiome in a cultivar-dependent manner. More specifically, fox infection led to increased microbial diversity, network complexity, and a higher proportion of the genera Flavobacterium, Bacillus, and Dyadobacter in the rhizosphere of the fox-resistant cultivar compared to the fox-susceptible cultivar. In the endosphere, root infection also led to changes in community assembly, with a higher abundance of the genera Sinorhizobium and Ensifer in the fox-resistant cultivar. Metagenome and metatranscriptome analyses further revealed the enrichment of terpene biosynthesis genes with a potential role in pathogen suppression in the fox-resistant cultivar upon fungal pathogen invasion.

Conclusion: Collectively, these results revealed a cultivar-dependent enrichment of specific bacterial genera and the activation of putative disease-suppressive functions in the rhizosphere and endosphere microbiome of common bean under siege.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10401788PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40793-023-00524-7DOI Listing

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