sábado, 28 de marzo de 2020
Influence of plant genotype and soil on the wheat rhizosphere microbiome: Evidences for a core microbiome across eight African and European soils
Simonin et al., 2020
Here, we assessed the relative influence of wheat genotype, agricultural
practices (conventional vs organic) and soil type on the rhizosphere
microbiome. We characterized the prokaryotic (archaea, bacteria) and
eukaryotic (fungi, protists) communities in soils from four different
countries (Cameroon, France, Italy, Senegal) and determined if a
rhizosphere core microbiome existed across these different countries.
The wheat genotype had a limited effect on the rhizosphere microbiome
(2% of variance) as the majority of the microbial taxa were consistently
associated to multiple wheat genotypes grown in the same soil. Large
differences in taxa richness and in community structure were observed
between the eight soils studied (57% variance) and the two agricultural
practices (10% variance). Despite these differences between soils, we
observed that 179 taxa (2 archaea, 104 bacteria, 41 fungi, 32 protists)
were consistently detected in the rhizosphere, constituting a core
microbiome. In addition to being prevalent, these core taxa were highly
abundant and collectively represented 50% of the reads in our dataset.
Based on these results, we identify a list of key taxa as future targets
of culturomics, metagenomics and wheat synthetic microbiomes.
Additionally, we show that protists are an integral part of the wheat
holobiont that is currently overlooked.
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