Phylogenetic and spatial determinants of leaf endophyte microbiomes in the flowering plant genus Heuchera (Saxifragaceae)

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Premise : Endophytic plant-microbe interactions range from mutualistic relationships that confer important ecological and agricultural traits to neutral or quasi-parasitic relationships. In contrast to root-associated endophytes, the role of environmental and host-related factors for acquiring leaf endophyte communities remains relatively unexplored. Here we assess leaf endophyte diversity to test the hypothesis that membership of these microbial communities is driven primarily by abiotic environment and host phylogeny.

Methods: We used a broad geographic coverage of North America in the genus, Heuchera (Saxifragaceae). Bacterial and fungal communities were characterized with 16S and ITS amplicon sequencing, using QIIME2 to call operational taxonomic units and calculate species richness, Shannon diversity, and phylogenetic diversity. We assembled environmental predictors for microbial diversity at collection sites including latitude, elevation, temperature, precipitation, and soil parameters.

Results: We find differing assembly patterns for bacterial and fungal endophytes; we found that only host phylogeny is significantly associated with bacteria, while geographic distance alone was the best predictor of fungal community composition. Species richness and phylogenetic diversity are very similar across sites and species, with only fungi showing a response to aridity and precipitation for some metrics. Unlike what has been observed with root-associated microbial communities, in this system microbes show no relationship with pH or other soil factors.

Conclusions: Host phylogeny and geographic distance independently influence different microbial communities, while aridity and precipitation determine fungal diversity within leaves of Heuchera . Our results indicate the importance of detailed clade-based investigation of microbiomes and the complexity of microbiome assembly within specific plant organs.

Article activity feed