Abstract

Seed microbiota is becoming an emergent area of research. Host plant microbial diversity is increasingly well described, yet relatively little is known about the stressors driving plant endomicrobiota at the metaorganism level. The present work examines the role of horizontal and vertical transmission of bacterial microbiota in response to abiotic stress generated by arsenic. Horizontal transmission is achieved by bioaugmentation with the endophyte Rhodococcus rhodochrous, while vertical transmission comes via maternal inheritance from seeds. To achieve this goal, all experiments were conducted with two Jasione species. J. montana is tolerant to arsenic (As), whereas J. sessiliflora, being phylogenetically close to J. montana, was not previously described as As tolerant. The Jasione core bacterial endophytes are composed of genera Pseudomonas, Ralstonia, Undibacterium, Cutibacterium, and Kocuria and family Comamanadaceae across different environmental conditions. All these operational taxonomic units (OTUs) coexisted from seeds to the development of the seedling, independently of As stress, or bioaugmentation treatment and Jasione species. R. rhodochrous colonized efficiently both species, driving the endomicrobiota structure of Jasione with a stronger effect than As stress. Despite the fact that most of the OTUs identified inside Jasione seeds and seedlings belonged to rare microbiota, they represent a large bacterial reservoir offering important physiological and ecological traits to the host. Jasione traits co-regulated with R. rhodochrous, and the associated microbiota improved the host response to As stress. NGS-Illumina tools provided further knowledge about the ecological and functional roles of plant endophytes.

Highlights

  • Microorganisms with 3 billion years of evolution have acquired a wide range of metabolic activities, being able to colonize almost all ecological niches including plants and animals

  • The opposite pattern was observed on the number of lateral roots (LR)

  • Our findings suggest the Jasione traits are influenced by R. rhodochrous and associated microbiota (Ravanbakhsh et al, 2019) and improve host response to As stress

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Summary

Introduction

Microorganisms with 3 billion years of evolution have acquired a wide range of metabolic activities, being able to colonize almost all ecological niches including plants and animals. Plant microbiomes can modify the genomic and metabolic functions of their hosts, improving functions and stress tolerance (Cordovez et al, 2019). In this sense, plants are constituted by the genome. Plants have a set of microorganisms necessary for their survival considered as core or obligate microbiota (Hardoim et al, 2008; Vandenkoornhuyse et al, 2015; Trivedi et al, 2020), generally obtained by a vertical maternal route (Truyens et al, 2015; Klaedtke et al, 2016; Moreira et al, 2021). The lack of consensus on this term may lead to controversy

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