4.5 Article

Leaf Endophyte Community Composition and Network Structures Differ Between Tolerant and Susceptible English Boxwood

Journal

PHYTOBIOMES JOURNAL
Volume 7, Issue 2, Pages 160-171

Publisher

AMER PHYTOPATHOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1094/PBIOMES-02-23-0009-FI

Keywords

endophytes; metagenomics; microbiome; plant pathology

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The tolerance of English boxwood to boxwood blight is associated with the ratio of bacteria and fungi in the leaf tissue. Tolerant plants have a higher abundance of bacteria and lower abundance of fungi compared to susceptible plants. Network analysis shows that the tolerant community has a simpler and healthier network structure. Therefore, the resistance of English boxwood to blight is likely attributed to the dominance of bacteria and a synergic community network.
Differential tolerance of English boxwood to boxwood blight has been linked to the ratio of culturable bacterial and fungal dominance in the leaf tissue of representative samples. To further understand how the whole endophyte communities may involve the tolerance of large samples, we extracted DNA from healthy leaf tissue of previously identified 28 tolerant (T), 41 moderately tolerant (M), and 21 susceptible (S) English boxwood plants, then sequenced associated bacterial and fungal amplicons using the Nanopore MinION platform. The endophyte community did not differ in diversity among the T, M, and S plants but differed in the abundance of bacteria and fungi, particularly between T and S samples. The bacterial genera Brevundimonas and Ammonifex had higher relative abundance in the T and M communities than in the S community, in which the fungal genera Botrytis and Thermothelomyces and family Chaetomiaceae were more dominant. The same results were obtained when mother and daughter samples in the T community were compared with controls in the S community, suggesting bacteria as a work force in the T community. Cooccurrence network analyses revealed that the T network had more fungal hubs but was less complex, with more positive connections than the S network, suggesting that the T community was supported by a healthier network. The resistance of English boxwood to blight is likely attributed to bacteria dominance and a synergic community network. This study is foundational to constructing synthetic communities and using whole communities of tolerant plants through vegetative propagation for microbe-modulated immunity.

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