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Temporal metabolite responsiveness of microbiota in the tea plant phyllosphere promotes continuous suppression of fungal pathogens

Authors :
Ping Xu
Xiaoyan Fan
Yuxiao Mao
Haiyan Cheng
Anan Xu
Wanyi Lai
Tianxing Lv
Yang Hu
Yanxia Nie
Xuxia Zheng
Qing Meng
Yuefei Wang
Tomislav Cernava
Mengcen Wang
Source :
Journal of Advanced Research, Vol 39, Iss , Pp 49-60 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2022.

Abstract

Introduction: A broad spectrum of rhizosphere bacteria and fungi were shown to play a central role for health, fitness and productivity of their host plants. However, implications of host metabolism on microbiota assembly in the phyllosphere and potential consequences for holobiont functioning were sparsely addressed. Previous observations indicated that tea plants might reduce disease occurrence in various forests located in their proximity; the underlying mechanisms and potential implications of the phyllosphere microbiota remained elusive. Objectives: This study aimed at deciphering microbiome assembly in the tea plant phyllosphere throughout shoot development as well as elucidating potential implications of host metabolites in this process. The main focus was to explore hidden interconnections between the homeostasis of the phyllosphere microbiome and resistance to fungal pathogens. Methods: Profiling of host metabolites and microbiome analyses based on high-throughput sequencing were integrated to identify drivers of microbiome assembly throughout shoot development in the phyllosphere of tea plants. This was complemented by tracking of beneficial microorganisms in all compartments of the plant. Synthetic assemblages (SynAss), bioassays and field surveys were implemented to verify functioning of the phyllosphere microbiota. Results: Theophylline and epigallocatechin gallate, two prevalent metabolites at the early and late shoot development stage respectively, were identified as the main drivers of microbial community assembly. Flavobacterium and Myriangium were distinct microbial responders at the early stage, while Parabacteroides and Mortierella were more enriched at the late stage. Reconstructed, stage-specific SynAss suppressed various tree phytopathogens by 13.0%-69.3% in vitro and reduced disease incidence by 8.24%-41.3% in vivo. Conclusion: The findings indicate that a functional phyllosphere microbiota was assembled along with development-specific metabolites in tea plants, which continuously suppressed prevalent fungal pathogens. The insights gained into the temporally resolved metabolite response of the tea plant microbiota could provide novel solutions for disease management.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20901232
Volume :
39
Issue :
49-60
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of Advanced Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.12c85124391f41ec8dae518d90335613
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jare.2021.10.003