Abstract
AbstractPlants secrete a complex array of organic compounds, constituting about a third of their photosynthetic products, into the surrounding soil. As a result, concentration gradients are established from the roots into the bulk soil, known as the rhizosphere. Soil microbes benefit from these root exudates for their survival and propagation, and consequently, the composition of the rhizosphere microbial community follows the gradient of available compounds, a phenomenon oftentimes referred to as the rhizosphere effect. However, the fine-grained changes in the microbial community along this soil-root gradient have not been well described. Yet such insights would enable us to underpin the ecological rules underlying root microbial community assembly. Therefore, here we harvested the roots of individualArabidopsis thalianaplants grown in three different natural soils at high-resolution, such that we could interrogate community assembly and predict microbial growth rate across consecutive, fine-grained, rhizosphere ‘compartments’. We found that the strength of the rhizosphere effect depends on root proximity and that microbial communities closer to the roots harbour related microbes. Closer to the roots, microbial community assembly became less random and more driven by selection-based processes. Intriguingly, we observed priority effects, where related microbes that arrive first are more likely to establish, and that microbes might use different ecological growth strategies to colonise the rhizosphere. All effects appeared to be independent from starting conditions as microbial community composition converged on the root despite different soil ‘microbial seed banks’. Together, our results provide a high-resolution view of the microbiome changes across the soil-root gradient.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory