Selective enrichment of specific bacterial taxa in downy mildew-affected spinach: Comparative analysis in laboratory and field conditions

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Abstract

Plants host diverse microbial communities that can be influenced by their hosts to mitigate biotic stress. Previous research demonstrated that distinct laboratory cultures of Hyaloperonospora arabidopsidis (Hpa) on Arabidopsis thaliana , consistently harbor nearly identical bacteria. In this study, we analyzed the bacterial phyllosphere communities of laboratory-grown spinach plants infected by the downy mildew pathogen Peronospora effusa (Pe). Using 16S amplicon sequencing, we identified 14 Amplicon Sequence Variants (ASVs), with diverse taxonomies, that were enriched in at least 3 out of 5 investigated Pe cultures. This small set of 14 ASVs occupied on average 6.9% of the total bacterial communities in healthy spinach plants, and 43.1% in Pe-inoculated plants. A specific Rhodococcus and a Paenarthrobacter ASV were particularly prevalent and abundant. To validate these findings outside of the laboratory, we planted a susceptible variety of spinach in 4 agricultural fields and sampled leaves from Pe-infected plants in 2 fields where this pathogen naturally occurred. Comparative microbiome analysis of diseased and healthy plants revealed significant enrichment of 16 and 31 ASVs in these 2 fields, respectively. Among these, the Paenarthrobacter ASV was enriched in one field and the Rhodococcus ASV in the other field, suggesting that disease-associated microbiota that are abundantly detected in Pe laboratory cultures are also associated with Pe-infected field plants. Additionally, we observed an overlap of ASVs that were associated with both Pe and Hpa, indicating that similar bacteria are linked to downy mildew disease across different hosts.

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