4.6 Article

Distribution of Bacterial Endophytes in the Non-lesion Tissues of Potato and Their Response to Potato Common Scab

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2021.616013

Keywords

plant microbiome; potato common scab; bacterial community distribution; endophytic source tracking; endophytes

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [42077027]
  2. Major Applied Agricultural Technology Innovation Projects of Shandong Province [SD2019ZZ009]
  3. China Ocean Mineral Resources Research and Development Association [DY135-B2-17]
  4. Beijing Key Laboratory of Biodiversity and Organic Farming [BOF201902]
  5. Potato Innovation Program for the Chief Expert of Shandong Province [SDAIT-16-01]
  6. National Key R&D Program of China [2017YFD0201100]
  7. Funds of the Shandong Double Tops Program

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This study clarified the distribution and composition of potato endophytes in tubers, roots, and stems, and demonstrated the response of endophytes in non-lesion tissues to potato common scab (PCS).
The response of plant endophytes to disease within infected tissues has been well demonstrated, but the corresponding response of endophytes in non-lesion tissues remains unclear. Here, we studied the composition and distribution of bacterial endophytes in potato roots (RE), stems (SE), and tubers (TE), and explored the response of endophytes in non-lesion tissues to potato common scab (PCS), which is a soil-borne disease caused by pathogenic Streptomyces and results in serious losses to the global economy every year. Via high-throughput sequencing, it was seen that the composition of endophytes in roots, stems, and tubers had significant differences (P < 0.05) and the distribution of the bacterial communities illustrated a gradient from soil to root to tuber/stem. PCS significantly reduced bacterial endophytes alpha-diversity indexes, including ACE and the number of observed operational taxonomic units (OTUs), of RE without significantly reducing the indexes of SE and TE. No significant effect on the composition of endophytes were caused by PCS in roots, tubers, or stems between high PCS severity (H) and low PCS severity (L) infections at the community level, but PCS did have a substantial impact on the relative abundance of several specific endophytes. Rhizobium and Sphingopyxis were significantly enriched in root endophytes with low PCS severity (REL); Delftia and Ochrobactrum were significantly enriched in stem endophytes with low PCS severity (SEL); Pedobacter, Delftia, and Asticcacaulis were significantly enriched in tuber endophytes with high PCS severity (TEH). OTU62, a potential PCS pathogen in this study, was capable of colonizing potato tubers, roots, and stems with few or no symptoms present. Co-occurrence networks showed that the number of correlations to OTU62 was higher than average in these three tissue types, suggesting the importance of OTU62 in endophytic communities. This study clarified the distribution and composition of potato endophytes in tubers, roots, and stems, and demonstrated the response of endophytes in non-lesion tissues to PCS.

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