Assembly of plant holobionts is governed by nematode communities and their associated microbiota, conditioned by preceding plants

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Assembly of plant holobionts is governed by nematode communities and their associated microbiota, conditioned by preceding plants

Authors

Heuer, H.; Schmalowski, D.; Abu, O. A.; Hoernlein, M.; Zimmerling, U.; Reinecke, J.; Richert-Poeggeler, K. R.; Babin, D.

Abstract

Plants form holobionts by associating with diverse microbiota. Self-organization gives rise to emergent properties of the holobiont, such as increased resistance to pathogens. However, the local factors contributing to the self-organization are not well understood. We hypothesized that nematode communities and their associated microbiota govern the rhizobiome of the model plant holobiont tomato in terms of its suppression of root invasion by the parasite Meloidogyne hapla, and that the soil legacy influences the suppressive potential mediated by these biota. In pot experiments, a resistant tomato holobiont was favored by assembly in the presence of a nematode community conditioned by tomato plants, compared to oilseed rape or fallow soil. Nematode communities conditioned by tagetes could enhance resistance even better than tomato. Microbiota from crushed tomato-conditioned nematode communities increased resistance of the tomato holobiont, compared to microbiota of nematode communities conditioned by maize, or heat-inactivated microbiota. The 0.2 micrometre filtered microbiota from crushed nematodes had the same effect, suggesting a role of nematode-associated bacteriophages in holobiont assembly. The results indicate that soil nematodes and their associated microbiota play a role in the local organization and stabilization of plant holobionts. They can influence the resistance of plants that subsequently grow in the same soil. From an applied perspective, crop rotation schemes that alter nematode-microbiota communities could be harnessed to engineer crop holobionts.

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