Soil cadmium stress affects the phyllosphere microbiome and associated pathogen resistance differently in male and female poplars

被引:14
|
作者
Lin, Tiantian [1 ]
Lu, Qi [1 ]
Zheng, Zhenlei [1 ]
Li, Shuying [1 ]
Li, Shujiang [1 ]
Liu, Yinggao [1 ]
Zhu, Tianhui [1 ]
Chen, Lianghua [1 ]
Yang, Chunlin [1 ]
Han, Shan [1 ]
机构
[1] Sichuan Agr Univ, Coll Forestry, Key Lab Forest Protect, Key Lab Natl Forestry & Grassland Adm Forest Resou, Chengdu 611130, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Biological toxicity; dioecious plants; elemental defense hypothesis; ecological function; heavy metals; leaf pathogenic fungus; microbial diversity; plant-pathogen interactions; Populus deltoides; Pestalotiopsis microspora; SEX-SPECIFIC RESPONSES; POPULUS-DELTOIDES; BIOLOGICAL-CONTROL; BIASED HERBIVORY; DIOECIOUS PLANTS; DISEASE; HYPERACCUMULATOR; ENHANCEMENT; BIOCONTROL; PROTECTS;
D O I
10.1093/jxb/erad034
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Soil cadmium stress alters the structure and function of the phyllosphere microbe community differently between male and female poplar plants, resulting in increased pathogen resistance of males compared to females Microorganisms associated with the phyllosphere play a crucial role in protecting plants from diseases, and their composition and diversity are strongly influenced by heavy metal contaminants. Dioecious plants are known to exhibit sexual dimorphism in metal accumulation and tolerance between male and female individuals. Hence, in this study we used male and female full-siblings of Populus deltoides to investigate whether the two sexes present differences in their phyllosphere microbiome structures and in their associated resistance to the leaf pathogenic fungus Pestalotiopsis microspora after exposure to excess soil cadmium (Cd). We found that Cd-treated male plants grew better and accumulated more leaf Cd than females. Cd stress reduced the lesion areas on leaves of both sexes after pathogen infection, but male plants exhibited better resistance than females. More importantly, Cd exposure differentially altered the structure and function of the phyllosphere microbiomes between the male and female plants, with more abundant ecologically beneficial microbes and decreased pathogenic fungal taxa harbored by male plants. In vitro toxicity tests suggested that the sexual difference in pathogen resistance could be attribute to both direct Cd toxicity and indirect shifts in the phyllosphere microbiome. This study provides new information relevant for understanding the underlying mechanisms of the effects of heavy metals involved in plant-pathogen interactions.
引用
收藏
页码:2188 / 2202
页数:15
相关论文
共 7 条
  • [1] Drought stress-mediated differences in phyllosphere microbiome and associated pathogen resistance between male and female poplars
    Lin, Tiantian
    Tang, Jiayao
    Li, Shuying
    Li, Shujiang
    Han, Shan
    Liu, Yinggao
    Yang, Chunlin
    Chen, Gang
    Chen, Lianghua
    Zhu, Tianhui
    PLANT JOURNAL, 2023, 115 (04): : 1100 - 1113
  • [2] Sexual differences in above- and belowground herbivore resistance between male and female poplars as affected by soil cadmium stress
    Lin, Tiantian
    Tang, Jiayao
    He, Fang
    Chen, Gang
    Shi, Yujie
    Wang, Xuegui
    Han, Shan
    Li, Shujiang
    Zhu, Tianhui
    Chen, Lianghua
    Science of the Total Environment, 2022, 803
  • [3] Sexual differences in above- and belowground herbivore resistance between male and female poplars as affected by soil cadmium stress
    Lin, Tiantian
    Tang, Jiayao
    He, Fang
    Chen, Gang
    Shi, Yujie
    Wang, Xuegui
    Han, Shan
    Li, Shujiang
    Zhu, Tianhui
    Chen, Lianghua
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2022, 803
  • [4] Repeated social defeat stress differently affects arthritis-associated hypersensitivity in male and female mice
    La Porta, Carmen
    Plum, Thomas
    Palme, Rupert
    Mack, Matthias
    Tappe-Theodor, Anke
    BRAIN BEHAVIOR AND IMMUNITY, 2024, 119 : 572 - 596
  • [5] Early-life stress affects behavioral and neurochemical parameters differently in male and female juvenile Wistar rats
    Noschang, C.
    Krolow, R.
    Arcego, D. M.
    Marcolin, M.
    Ferreira, A. G.
    Cunha, A. A.
    Wyse, A. T. S.
    Dalmaz, C.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROSCIENCE, 2020, 80 (06) : 547 - 557
  • [6] Exogenous nitrogen enhances poplar resistance to leaf herbivory and pathogen infection after exposure to soil cadmium stress
    Chen, Jiaping
    Qin, Siyu
    Tang, Jiayao
    Chen, Gang
    Xie, Jiulong
    Chen, Lianghua
    Han, Shan
    Wang, Xuegui
    Zhu, Tianhui
    Liu, Yinggao
    Lin, Tiantian
    ECOTOXICOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL SAFETY, 2021, 208
  • [7] Drought stress drives sex-specific differences in plant resistance against herbivores between male and female poplars through changes in transcriptional and metabolic profiles
    He, Fang
    Wu, Zhengqin
    Zhao, Zhengbao
    Chen, Gang
    Wang, Xuegui
    Cui, Xinglei
    Zhu, Tianhui
    Chen, Lianghua
    Yang, Peng
    Bi, Lingfeng
    Lin, Tiantian
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2022, 845