Deciphering the effect of phytohormones on the phyllosphere microbiota of Eucommia ulmoides.

Microbiol Res

Institute of Fungus Resources, Department of Ecology/Key laboratory of Plant Resource Conservation and Germplasm Innovation in Mountainous Region (Ministry of Education), College of Life Sciences, Guizhou University, Guiyang 5 50025, Guizhou, China. Electronic address:

Published: January 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Phytohormones play a crucial role in plant-microbe communication but their impact on leaf-associated microbial communities remains unclear, particularly in Eucommia ulmoides.
  • Analysis shows that older leaves have lower levels of phytohormones like IAA and JA, yet possess a more diverse microbial community compared to tender leaves, dominated by Ascomycota and Actinobacteriota at the phylum level.
  • Key phytohormones IAA and IP significantly affect the composition of the leaf microbiota, suggesting that understanding these relationships could improve practices in sustainable agriculture and forestry management.

Article Abstract

Phytohormones are key signals mediating plant-microbe molecular communication. However, their roles in driving phyllosphere microbiota assembly remain unclear. Here, high throughput target assays for 12 phytohormones and microbial amplicon sequencing techniques were used to reveal the effects of hormone components on phyllosphere microbiota of Eucommia ulmoides. Most of the phytohormone components in old leaves were lower than in tender leaves, such as indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), salicylic acid (SA), and jasmonic acid (JA), but the phyllosphere microbial community diversity in the older leaves was significantly higher than in the tender leaves, with more complex and aggregated microbial cooccurrence network. The E. ulmoides phyllosphere microbiota at tender and older leaf stage were dominated by the same dominant taxa at the phylum level, with Ascomycota and Basidiomycota as the main fungal taxa and Actinobacteriota, Bacteroidota, Firmicutes and Proteobacteria as the main bacterial taxa. FUNGuild and FAPROTAX functional predictions revealed that the high abundance functional groups of the E. ulmoides phyllosphere microbes were similar at tender and old leaf stages, with fungal functions mainly involving in plant pathogen, undefined saprotroph and endophyte, and bacterial functions mainly involving in chemoheterotrophy, fermentation and aerobic_chemoheterotrophy. Additionally, mantel test and variance partitioning analysis showed that IAA and N6-(delta 2-isopentenyl)-adenine (IP) were key phytohormones impacting the E. ulmoides phyllosphere microbiota, and their effects were largely interdependent. Our results improve the understanding of composition, diversity, function and influencing factors of phyllosphere microbiota, which might provide cue for sustainable agriculture and forestry management via precise regulation of the phyllosphere microbiota.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.micres.2023.127513DOI Listing

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