Abstract
Studies on bacterial plant diseases have thus far
been focused on the single bacterial species causing
the disease, with very little attention given to the
many other microorganisms present in the microbiome.
This study intends to use pathobiome analysis
of the rice foot rot disease, caused by Dickeya
zeae, as a case study to investigate the effects of this
bacterial pathogen to the total resident microbiome
and to highlight possible interactions between the
pathogen and the members of the community
involved in the disease process. The microbiome of
asymptomatic and the pathobiome of foot-rot symptomatic
field-grown rice plants over two growing
periods and belonging to two rice cultivars were
determined via 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing.
Results showed that the presence of D. zeae is associated
with an alteration of the resident bacterial
community in terms of species composition, abundance
and richness, leading to the formation of
microbial consortia linked to the disease state. Several
bacterial species were significantly co-presented
with the pathogen in the two growing periods
suggesting that they could be involved in the disease
process. Besides, culture-dependent isolation and in
planta inoculation studies of a bacterial member of
the pathobiome, identified as positive correlated with
the pathogen in our in silico analysis, indicated that it
benefits from the presence of D. zeae. A similar
microbiome/pathobiome experiment was also performed
in a symptomatically different rice disease
evidencing that not all plant diseases have the same
consequence/relationship with the plant microbiome.
This study moves away from a pathogen-focused
stance and goes towards a more ecological perception
considering the effect of the entire microbial
community which could be involved in the pathogenesis,
persistence, transmission and evolution of plant
pathogens.
Lingua originale | Inglese |
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pagine (da-a) | 7671-7687 |
Numero di pagine | 17 |
Rivista | Environmental Microbiology |
Volume | 23 |
Numero di pubblicazione | 12 |
DOI | |
Stato di pubblicazione | Pubblicato - 2021 |
Keywords
- 16S rRNA
- Dickeya zeae
- microbiome analysis
- pathogens
- rice