Kun Yan, Shuqi Ma, Qiliang Zhu, Huimei Tian, Yanping Wang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
How different stress responses by male and female plants are influenced by interactions with rhizosphere microbes remains unclear. In this study, we employed poplar as a dioecious model plant and quantified biotic associations between microorganisms to explore the relationship between microbial associations and plant adaptation. We propose a health index (HI) to comprehensively characterize the physiological characteristics and adaptive capacity of plants under stress. It was found that male poplars demonstrated higher salt stress tolerance than females, and root-secreted citric acid was significantly higher in the rhizospheres of male poplars. Positive biotic association among bacteria increased poplar HI significantly under salt stress, while fungal and cross-domain biotic association (bacteria-fungi) did not. We further identified a keystone bacterial taxon regulating bacterial biotic association, ASV_22706, which was itself regulated by citric acid and significantly positively correlated with host HI. The abundance of keystone fungal taxa was positively correlated with HI of male poplars and negatively correlated with HI of female poplars. Compared with female poplars, male poplars enriched more prebiotics and probiotics under stress. This work primarily reveals the relationship between adaptation differences and microbial interactions in dioecious plants, which suggests a microbial approach to improve plant adaptability to stress conditions.
期刊介绍:
Plant, Cell & Environment is a premier plant science journal, offering valuable insights into plant responses to their environment. Committed to publishing high-quality theoretical and experimental research, the journal covers a broad spectrum of factors, spanning from molecular to community levels. Researchers exploring various aspects of plant biology, physiology, and ecology contribute to the journal's comprehensive understanding of plant-environment interactions.