Abstract

Phosphate starvation response (PSR) in nonmycorrhizal plants comprises transcriptional reprogramming resulting in severe physiological changes to the roots and shoots and repression of plant immunity. Thus, plant-colonizing microorganisms—the plant microbiota—are exposed to direct influence by the soil’s phosphorus (P) content itself as well as to the indirect effects of soil P on the microbial niches shaped by the plant. The individual contribution of these factors to plant microbiota assembly remains unknown. To disentangle these direct and indirect effects, we planted PSR-deficient Arabidopsis mutants in a long-term managed soil P gradient and compared the composition of their shoot and root microbiota to wild-type plants across different P concentrations. PSR-deficiency had a larger effect on the composition of both bacterial and fungal plant-associated microbiota than soil P concentrations in both roots and shoots.To dissect plant–microbe interactions under variable P conditions, we conducted a microbiota reconstitution experiment. Using a 185-member bacterial synthetic community (SynCom) across a wide P concentration gradient in an agar matrix, we demonstrated a shift in the effect of bacteria on the plant from a neutral or positive interaction to a negative one, as measured by rosette size. This phenotypic shift was accompanied by changes in microbiota composition: the genus Burkholderia was specifically enriched in plant tissue under P starvation. Through a community drop-out experiment, we demonstrated that in the absence of Burkholderia from the SynCom, plant shoots accumulated higher ortophosphate (Pi) levels than shoots colonized with the full SynCom but only under Pi starvation conditions. Therefore, Pi-stressed plants are susceptible to colonization by latent opportunistic competitors found within their microbiome, thus exacerbating the plant’s Pi starvation.

Highlights

  • Plants provide the primary energy source for terrestrial heterotrophs, most of which are microbial

  • To better understand the effect of Phosphate starvation response (PSR) genes on the plant microbiome under both particular orthophosphate (Pi)-limiting and Pi-replete conditions, we investigated how microbiota adapted to varying soil P levels interact with the plant’s PSR

  • We grew wild-type Arabidopsis and the PSR mutants phf1 and phr1 phl1 in soils collected from the “Halle long-term soil fertilization experiment,” ongoing since 1949 [42]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Plants provide the primary energy source for terrestrial heterotrophs, most of which are microbial. The interaction of these microbial heterotrophs with plants ranges between the extremes of mutualistic symbiosis [1] and pathogenesis [2,3]. Correlations with soil microbial diversity, and by derivation, with plant microbiota composition and diversity, were observed for soil abiotic factors, such as pH [22,23,24,25], drought [25,26,27,28,29,30], and nutrient concentrations [22,25,31,32,33,34,35]. Available soil Pi concentrations influences where a plant–microbe interaction lies along the mutualism–pathogenicity continuum [17]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call