Fungal endophytes can modulate plant invasion

IF 11 1区 生物学 Q1 BIOLOGY Biological Reviews Pub Date : 2024-04-17 DOI:10.1111/brv.13085
Nicholas W. Bard, Quentin C. B. Cronk, T. Jonathan Davies
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Abstract

Symbiotic organisms may contribute to a host plant's success or failure to grow, its ability to maintain viable populations, and potentially, its probability of establishment and spread outside its native range. Intercellular and intracellular microbial symbionts that are asymptomatic in their plant host during some or all of their life cycle – endophytes – can form mutualistic, commensal, or pathogenic relationships, and sometimes novel associations with alien plants. Fungal endophytes are likely the most common endosymbiont infecting plants, with life-history, morphological, physiological, and plant-symbiotic traits that are distinct from other endophytic guilds. Here, we review the community dynamics of fungal endophytes during the process of plant invasion, and how their functional role may shift during the different stages of invasion: transport, introduction (colonisation), establishment, and spread. Each invasion stage presents distinct ecological filters that an alien plant must overcome to advance to the subsequent stage of invasion. Endophytes can alternately aid the host in overcoming stage-specific filters, or contribute to the barriers imposed by filters (e.g. biotic resistance), thereby affecting invasion pathways. A few fungi can be transported as seed endophytes from their native range and be vertically transmitted to future generations in the non-native range, especially in graminoids. In other plant groups, alien plants mostly acquire endophytes via horizontal transmission from the invaded plant community, and the host endophyte community is shaped by host filtering and biogeographic factors (e.g. dispersal limitation, environmental filtering). Endophytes infecting alien plants (both those transported with their host and those accumulated in the non-native range) may influence invasion success by affecting plant growth, reproduction, environmental tolerance, and pathogen and herbivory defences; however, the direction and magnitude of these effects can be contingent upon the host identity, life stage, ecological conditions, and invasion stage. This context dependence may cause endophytic fungi to shift to a non-endophytic (e.g. pathogenic) functional life stage in the same or different hosts, which can modify alien–native plant community dynamics. We conclude by identifying paths in which alien hosts can exploit the context dependency of endophyte function in novel abiotic and biotic conditions and at the different stages of invasion.

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真菌内生菌可调节植物入侵
共生生物可能会影响宿主植物生长的成败、维持种群存活的能力以及在原生地以外建立和传播的可能性。细胞间和细胞内的微生物共生体(内生菌)在其部分或全部生命周期中对其植物宿主无症状,可与外来植物形成互生、共生或致病关系,有时还会形成新的关联。真菌内生菌可能是感染植物的最常见的内生共生体,其生命史、形态学、生理学和植物共生特性与其他内生菌界系截然不同。在此,我们将回顾真菌内生菌在植物入侵过程中的群落动态,以及它们的功能作用在入侵的不同阶段(迁移、引入(定殖)、建立和传播)是如何转变的。每个入侵阶段都有不同的生态屏障,外来植物必须克服这些屏障才能进入下一个入侵阶段。内生真菌可以帮助宿主克服特定阶段的过滤器,也可以帮助宿主克服过滤器设置的障碍(如生物抗性),从而影响入侵途径。少数真菌可以作为种子内生菌从原生地迁移到非原生地,并垂直传播给后代,尤其是禾本科植物。在其他植物类群中,外来植物大多通过被入侵植物群落的水平传播获得内生真菌,宿主内生真菌群落是由宿主过滤和生物地理因素(如扩散限制、环境过滤)形成的。感染外来植物的内生菌(包括随宿主迁移的内生菌和在非本地范围内积累的内生菌)可能会影响植物的生长、繁殖、环境耐受性以及病原体和食草动物的防御能力,从而影响入侵的成功率;然而,这些影响的方向和程度可能取决于宿主的身份、生命阶段、生态条件和入侵阶段。这种环境依赖性可能会导致内生真菌在相同或不同的寄主中转向非内生(如致病)功能的生命阶段,从而改变外来-本地植物群落的动态。最后,我们确定了外来宿主在新的非生物和生物条件下以及入侵的不同阶段利用内生真菌功能的环境依赖性的途径。
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来源期刊
Biological Reviews
Biological Reviews 生物-生物学
CiteScore
21.30
自引率
2.00%
发文量
99
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Biological Reviews is a scientific journal that covers a wide range of topics in the biological sciences. It publishes several review articles per issue, which are aimed at both non-specialist biologists and researchers in the field. The articles are scholarly and include extensive bibliographies. Authors are instructed to be aware of the diverse readership and write their articles accordingly. The reviews in Biological Reviews serve as comprehensive introductions to specific fields, presenting the current state of the art and highlighting gaps in knowledge. Each article can be up to 20,000 words long and includes an abstract, a thorough introduction, and a statement of conclusions. The journal focuses on publishing synthetic reviews, which are based on existing literature and address important biological questions. These reviews are interesting to a broad readership and are timely, often related to fast-moving fields or new discoveries. A key aspect of a synthetic review is that it goes beyond simply compiling information and instead analyzes the collected data to create a new theoretical or conceptual framework that can significantly impact the field. Biological Reviews is abstracted and indexed in various databases, including Abstracts on Hygiene & Communicable Diseases, Academic Search, AgBiotech News & Information, AgBiotechNet, AGRICOLA Database, GeoRef, Global Health, SCOPUS, Weed Abstracts, and Reaction Citation Index, among others.
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