4.7 Article

Distinct Phyllosphere Microbiome of Wild Tomato Species in Central Peru upon Dysbiosis

Journal

MICROBIAL ECOLOGY
Volume 85, Issue 1, Pages 168-183

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00248-021-01947-w

Keywords

Microbial colonization; Phyllosphere; Microbiome; Tomatoes; Dysbiosis

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Plants are colonized by a variety of microbes that can influence their development, fitness, and reproduction. This study investigates the microbiota of different tomato species in natural environments. It identifies the core microbiome in wild tomato species and reveals the impact of sampling time, geographical location, host genotype, and plant health on the overall phyllosphere microbiome. Dysbiosis affects the microbial composition in a host species-dependent manner, with healthy leaves having an enrichment of plant-promoting microbial taxa and dysbiotic leaves containing plant pathogens.
Plants are colonized by myriads of microbes across kingdoms, which affect host development, fitness, and reproduction. Hence, plant microbiomes have been explored across a broad range of host species, including model organisms, crops, and trees under controlled and natural conditions. Tomato is one of the world's most important vegetable crops; however, little is known about the microbiota of wild tomato species. To obtain insights into the tomato microbiota occurring in natural environments, we sampled epiphytic microbes from leaves of four tomato species, Solanum habrochaites, S. corneliomulleri, S. peruvianum, and S. pimpinellifolium, from two geographical locations within the Lima region of Peru over 2 consecutive years. Here, a high-throughput sequencing approach was applied to investigate microbial compositions including bacteria, fungi, and eukaryotes across tomato species and geographical locations. The phyllosphere microbiome composition varies between hosts and location. Yet, we identified persistent microbes across tomato species that form the tomato microbial core community. In addition, we phenotypically defined healthy and dysbiotic samples and performed a downstream analysis to reveal the impact on microbial community structures. To do so, we compared microbial diversities, unique OTUs, relative abundances of core taxa, and microbial hub taxa, as well as co-occurrence network characteristics in healthy and dysbiotic tomato leaves and found that dysbiosis affects the phyllosphere microbial composition in a host species-dependent manner. Yet, overall, the present data suggests an enrichment of plant-promoting microbial taxa in healthy leaves, whereas numerous microbial taxa containing plant pathogens occurred in dysbiotic leaves. Concluding, we identify the core phyllosphere microbiome of wild tomato species, and show that the overall phyllosphere microbiome can be impacted by sampling time point, geographical location, host genotype, and plant health. Future studies in these components will help understand the microbial contribution to plant health in natural systems and can be of use in cultivated tomatoes.

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