The association betweenDioscorea sansibarensisandOrrella dioscoreaeas a model for hereditary leaf symbiosis

Author:

Acar Tessa,Moreau Sandra,Jardinaud Marie-Françoise,Houdinet Gabriella,Maviane-Macia Felicia,De Meyer Frédéric,Hoste Bart,Leroux Olivier,Coen Olivier,le Ru Aurélie,Peeters Nemo,Carlier AurelienORCID

Abstract

AbstractHereditary, or vertically-transmitted, symbioses affect a large number of animal species and some plants. The precise mechanisms underlying transmission of functions of these associations are often difficult to describe, due to the difficulty in separating the symbiotic partners. This is especially the case for plant-bacteria hereditary symbioses, which lack experimentally tractable model systems. Here, we demonstrate the potential of the leaf symbiosis between the wild yamDioscorea sansibarensisand the bacteriumOrrella dioscoreae(O. dioscoreae) as a model system for hereditary symbiosis.O. dioscoreaeis easy to grow and genetically manipulate, which is unusual for hereditary symbionts. These properties allowed us to design an effective antimicrobial treatment to rid plants of bacteria and generate whole aposymbiotic plants, which can later be re-inoculated with bacterial cultures. Aposymbiotic plants did not differ morphologically from symbiotic plants and the leaf forerunner tip containing the symbiotic glands formed normally even in the absence of bacteria, but microscopic differences between symbiotic and aposymbiotic glands highlight the influence of bacteria on the development of trichomes and secretion of mucilage. This is to our knowledge the first leaf symbiosis where both host and symbiont can be grown separately and where the symbiont can be genetically altered and reintroduced to the host.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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