Published July 22, 2022 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Plant genetic effects on microbial hubs impact host fitness in repeated field trials

Description

Although complex interactions between hosts and microbial associates are increasingly well documented, we still know little about how and why hosts shape microbial communities in nature. In addition, host genetic effects on microbial communities vary widely depending on the environment, obscuring conclusions about which microbes are impacted and which plant functions are important. We characterized the leaf microbiota of 200 Arabidopsis thaliana genotypes in eight field experiments and detected consistent host effects on specific, broadly distributed microbial species (operational taxonomic unit [OTUs]). Host genetic effects disproportionately influenced central ecological hubs, with heritability of particular OTUs declining with their distance from the nearest hub within the microbial network. These host effects could reflect either OTUs preferentially associating with specific genotypes or differential microbial success within them. Host genetics associated with microbial hubs explained over 10% of the variation in lifetime seed production among host genotypes across sites and years. We successfully cultured one of these microbial hubs and demonstrated its growth-promoting effects on plants in sterile conditions. Finally, genome-wide association mapping identified many putatively causal genes with small effects on the relative abundance of microbial hubs across sites and years, and these genes were enriched for those involved in the synthesis of specialized metabolites, auxins, and the immune system. Using untargeted metabolomics, we corroborate the consistent association between variation in specialized metabolites and microbial hubs across field sites. Together, our results reveal that host genetic variation impacts the microbial communities in consistent ways across environments and that these effects contribute to fitness variation among host genotypes.

Data availability

All scripts used to perform the analyses presented in this paper, as well as nonessential but complementary figures, are available in the GitLab repository https://forgemia.inra.fr/bbrachi/microbiota_paper (52).
Data tables for OTU counts, seed-set estimates, and plant growth data for the B38 experiment are also available in a Zenodo repository (73).
Metabarcoding Illumina sequences (ITS and 16S amplicons) and the B38 sequence data have been deposited in National Center for Biotechnology Information under BioProject PRJNA707473 (74).

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1073/pnas.2201285119
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:9691

Related works

Funding

National Health Institutes
R01 GM 083068
Dropkin Foundation
fellowship
University of Chicago
New York University
European Union
Marie-Curie FP7 COFUND People Programme
AgreenSkills/AgreenSkills+
fellowship
Institute for Translational Medicine
NIH
CTSA Grant
Toulouse Occitanie
University of Bordeaux, France

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Ecology and Evolution