Phyllosphere microbial diversity and specific taxa mediate within-cultivar resistance to in cacao.

mSphere

Foreign Disease-Weed Science Research Unit, USDA-ARS, Fort Detrick , Frederick, Maryland, USA.

Published: October 2023

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Article Abstract

The oomycete pathogen , which causes black pod rot (BPR) on cacao ( L.), is responsible for devastating yield losses worldwide. Genetic variation in resistance to spp. is well documented among cacao cultivars, but variation has also been observed in the incidence of BPR even among trees of the same cultivar. In light of evidence that the naturally occurring phyllosphere microbiome can influence foliar disease resistance in other host-pathogen systems, it was hypothesized that differences in the phyllosphere microbiome between two field accessions of the cultivar Gainesville II 164 could be responsible for their contrasting resistance to . Bacterial alpha diversity was higher but fungal alpha diversity was lower in the more resistant accession MITC-331, and the accessions harbored phyllosphere microbiomes with distinct community compositions. Six bacterial and 82 fungal amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) differed in relative abundance between MITC-333 and MITC-331, including bacterial putative biocontrol agents and a high proportion of fungal pathogens, and nine fungal ASVs were correlated with increased lesion development. The roles of contrasting light availability and host mineral nutrition, particularly potassium, are also discussed. Results of this preliminary study can be used to guide research into microbiome-informed integrated pest management strategies effective against spp. in cacao. IMPORTANCE Up to 40% of the world's cacao is lost each year to diseases, the most devastating of which is black pod rot, caused by . Though disease resistance is often attributed to cacao genotypes (i.e., disease-resistant rootstocks), this study highlights the role of the microbiome in contributing to differences in resistance even among accessions of the same cacao cultivar. Future studies of plant-pathogen interactions may need to account for variation in the host microbiome, and optimizing the cacao phyllosphere microbiome could be a promising new direction for resistance research.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10597403PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/msphere.00013-23DOI Listing

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