Heritable differences in abundance of bacterial rhizosphere taxa are correlated with fungal necrotrophic pathogen resistance

Author:

Pogoda Cloe S.1,Keepers Kyle G.1,Reinert Stephan1,Talukder Zahirul I.23,Smart Brian C.3,Attia Ziv1,Corwin Jason A.1,Money Kennedy L.3,Collier‐zans Erin C. E.1,Underwood William2,Gulya Thomas J.2,Quandt C. Alisha1ORCID,Kane Nolan C.1ORCID,Hulke Brent S.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Department University of Colorado Boulder Colorado USA

2. USDA‐ARS Sunflower and Plant Biology Research Unit Edward T Schafer Agricultural Research Center Fargo North Dakota USA

3. Department of Plant Sciences North Dakota State University Fargo North Dakota USA

Abstract

AbstractHost–microbe interactions are increasingly recognized as important drivers of organismal health, growth, longevity and community‐scale ecological processes. However, less is known about how genetic variation affects hosts' associated microbiomes and downstream phenotypes. We demonstrate that sunflower (Helianthus annuus) harbours substantial, heritable variation in microbial communities under field conditions. We show that microbial communities co‐vary with heritable variation in resistance to root infection caused by the necrotrophic pathogen Sclerotinia sclerotiorum and that plants grown in autoclaved soil showed almost complete elimination of pathogen resistance. Association mapping suggests at least 59 genetic locations with effects on both microbial relative abundance and Sclerotinia resistance. Although the genetic architecture appears quantitative, we have elucidated previously unexplained genetic variation for resistance to this pathogen. We identify new targets for plant breeding and demonstrate the potential for heritable microbial associations to play important roles in defence in natural and human‐altered environments.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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