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1.
Plant Environ Interact ; 5(2): e10137, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38482131

ABSTRACT

Leaves are colonized by a complex mix of microbes, termed the leaf microbiota. Even though the leaf microbiota is increasingly recognized as an integral part of plant life and health, our understanding of its interactions with the plant host is still limited. Here, mature, axenically grown Arabidopsis thaliana plants were spray inoculated with six diverse leaf-colonizing bacteria. The transcriptomic changes in leaves were tracked over time and significant changes in ethylene marker (ARL2) expression were observed only 2-4 days after spray inoculation. Whole-transcriptome sequencing revealed that 4 days after inoculation, leaf transcriptional changes to colonization by nonpathogenic and pathogenic bacteria differed in strength but not in the type of response. Inoculation of plants with different densities of the nonpathogenic bacterium Williamsia sp. Leaf354 showed that high bacterial titers resulted in disease phenotypes and led to severe transcriptional reprogramming with a strong focus on plant defense. An in silico epigenetic analysis of the data was congruent with the transcriptomic analysis. These findings suggest (1) that plant responses are not rapid after spray inoculation, (2) that plant responses only differ in strength, and (3) that plants respond to high titers of nonpathogenic bacteria with pathogen-like responses.

2.
Microorganisms ; 8(4)2020 Mar 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32218313

ABSTRACT

Plants are colonised by millions of microorganisms representing thousands of species withvarying effects on plant growth and health. The microbial communities found on plants arecompositionally consistent and their overall positive effect on the plant is well known. However,the effects of individual microbiota members on plant hosts and vice versa, as well as the underlyingmechanisms, remain largely unknown. Here, we describe "Litterbox", a highly controlled system toinvestigate plant-microbe interactions. Plants were grown gnotobiotically, otherwise sterile, onzeolite-clay, a soil replacement that retains enough moisture to avoid subsequent watering.Litterbox-grown plants resemble greenhouse-grown plants more closely than agar-grown plantsand exhibit lower leaf epiphyte densities (106 cfu/g), reflecting natural conditions. Apolydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) sheet was used to cover the zeolite, significantly lowering thebacterial load in the zeolite and rhizosphere. This reduced the likelihood of potential systemicresponses in leaves induced by microbial rhizosphere colonisation. We present results of exampleexperiments studying the transcriptional responses of leaves to defined microbiota members andthe spatial distribution of bacteria on leaves. We anticipate that this versatile and affordable plantgrowth system will promote microbiota research and help in elucidating plant-microbe interactionsand their underlying mechanisms.

3.
J Adv Res ; 19: 57-65, 2019 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31341670

ABSTRACT

Bacteria establish complex, compositionally consistent communities on healthy leaves. Ecological processes such as dispersal, diversification, ecological drift, and selection as well as leaf surface physicochemistry and topology impact community assembly. Since the leaf surface is an oligotrophic environment, species interactions such as competition and cooperation may be major contributors to shape community structure. Furthermore, the plant immune system impacts on microbial community composition, as plant cells respond to bacterial molecules and shape their responses according to the mixture of molecules present. Such tunability of the plant immune network likely enables the plant host to differentiate between pathogenic and non-pathogenic colonisers, avoiding costly immune responses to non-pathogenic colonisers. Plant immune responses are either systemically distributed or locally confined, which in turn affects the colonisation pattern of the associated microbiota. However, how each of these factors impacts the bacterial community is unclear. To better understand this impact, bacterial communities need to be studied at a micrometre resolution, which is the scale that is relevant to the members of the community. Here, current insights into the driving factors influencing the assembly of leaf surface-colonising bacterial communities are discussed, with a special focus on plant host immunity as an emerging factor contributing to bacterial leaf colonisation.

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