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Methylobacterium, a major component of the culturable bacterial endophyte community of wild Brassica seed

BACKGROUND: Plants are commonly colonized by a wide diversity of microbial species and the relationships created can range from mutualistic through to parasitic. Microorganisms that typically form symptomless associations with internal plant tissues are termed endophytes. Endophytes associate with m...

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Autores principales: Roodi, Davood, Millner, James P., McGill, Craig, Johnson, Richard D., Jauregui, Ruy, Card, Stuart D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7357558/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32728495
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.9514
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author Roodi, Davood
Millner, James P.
McGill, Craig
Johnson, Richard D.
Jauregui, Ruy
Card, Stuart D.
author_facet Roodi, Davood
Millner, James P.
McGill, Craig
Johnson, Richard D.
Jauregui, Ruy
Card, Stuart D.
author_sort Roodi, Davood
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Plants are commonly colonized by a wide diversity of microbial species and the relationships created can range from mutualistic through to parasitic. Microorganisms that typically form symptomless associations with internal plant tissues are termed endophytes. Endophytes associate with most plant species found in natural and managed ecosystems. They are extremely important plant partners that provide improved stress tolerance to the host compared with plants that lack this symbiosis. Plant domestication has reduced endophyte diversity and therefore the wild relatives of many crop species remain untapped reservoirs of beneficial microbes. Brassica species display immense diversity and consequently provide the greatest assortment of products used by humans from a single plant genus important for agriculture, horticulture, bioremediation, medicine, soil conditioners, composting crops, and in the production of edible and industrial oils. Many endophytes are horizontally transmitted, but some can colonize the plant’s reproductive tissues, and this gives these symbionts an efficient mechanism of propagation via plant seed (termed vertical transmission). METHODS: This study surveyed 83 wild and landrace Brassica accessions composed of 14 different species with a worldwide distribution for seed-originating bacterial endophytes. Seed was stringently disinfected, sown within sterile tissue culture pots within a sterile environment and incubated. After approximately 1-month, direct isolation techniques were used to recover bacterial endophytes from roots and shoots of symptomless plants. Bacteria were identified based on the PCR amplification of partial 16S rDNA gene sequences and annotated using the BLASTn program against the NCBI rRNA database. A diversity index was used as a quantitative measure to reflect how many different bacterial species there were in the seed-originating microbial community of the Brassica accessions sampled. RESULTS: Bacterial endophytes were recovered from the majority of the Brassica accessions screened. 16S rDNA gene sequencing identified 19 different bacterial species belonging to three phyla, namely Actinobacteria, Firmicutes and Proteobacteria with the most frequently isolated species being Methylobacterium fujisawaense, Stenotrophomonas rhizophila and Pseudomonas lactis. Methylobacterium was the dominant genus composing 56% of the culturable isolated bacterial community and was common in 77% of accessions possessing culturable bacterial endophytes. Two selected isolates of Methylobacterium significantly promoted plant growth when inoculated into a cultivar of oilseed rape and inhibited the growth of the pathogen Leptosphaeria maculans in dual culture. This is the first report that investigates the seed-originating endophytic microorganisms of wild Brassica species and highlights the Brassica microbiome as a resource for plant growth promoting bacteria and biological control agents.
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spelling pubmed-73575582020-07-28 Methylobacterium, a major component of the culturable bacterial endophyte community of wild Brassica seed Roodi, Davood Millner, James P. McGill, Craig Johnson, Richard D. Jauregui, Ruy Card, Stuart D. PeerJ Agricultural Science BACKGROUND: Plants are commonly colonized by a wide diversity of microbial species and the relationships created can range from mutualistic through to parasitic. Microorganisms that typically form symptomless associations with internal plant tissues are termed endophytes. Endophytes associate with most plant species found in natural and managed ecosystems. They are extremely important plant partners that provide improved stress tolerance to the host compared with plants that lack this symbiosis. Plant domestication has reduced endophyte diversity and therefore the wild relatives of many crop species remain untapped reservoirs of beneficial microbes. Brassica species display immense diversity and consequently provide the greatest assortment of products used by humans from a single plant genus important for agriculture, horticulture, bioremediation, medicine, soil conditioners, composting crops, and in the production of edible and industrial oils. Many endophytes are horizontally transmitted, but some can colonize the plant’s reproductive tissues, and this gives these symbionts an efficient mechanism of propagation via plant seed (termed vertical transmission). METHODS: This study surveyed 83 wild and landrace Brassica accessions composed of 14 different species with a worldwide distribution for seed-originating bacterial endophytes. Seed was stringently disinfected, sown within sterile tissue culture pots within a sterile environment and incubated. After approximately 1-month, direct isolation techniques were used to recover bacterial endophytes from roots and shoots of symptomless plants. Bacteria were identified based on the PCR amplification of partial 16S rDNA gene sequences and annotated using the BLASTn program against the NCBI rRNA database. A diversity index was used as a quantitative measure to reflect how many different bacterial species there were in the seed-originating microbial community of the Brassica accessions sampled. RESULTS: Bacterial endophytes were recovered from the majority of the Brassica accessions screened. 16S rDNA gene sequencing identified 19 different bacterial species belonging to three phyla, namely Actinobacteria, Firmicutes and Proteobacteria with the most frequently isolated species being Methylobacterium fujisawaense, Stenotrophomonas rhizophila and Pseudomonas lactis. Methylobacterium was the dominant genus composing 56% of the culturable isolated bacterial community and was common in 77% of accessions possessing culturable bacterial endophytes. Two selected isolates of Methylobacterium significantly promoted plant growth when inoculated into a cultivar of oilseed rape and inhibited the growth of the pathogen Leptosphaeria maculans in dual culture. This is the first report that investigates the seed-originating endophytic microorganisms of wild Brassica species and highlights the Brassica microbiome as a resource for plant growth promoting bacteria and biological control agents. PeerJ Inc. 2020-07-10 /pmc/articles/PMC7357558/ /pubmed/32728495 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.9514 Text en © 2020 Roodi et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Agricultural Science
Roodi, Davood
Millner, James P.
McGill, Craig
Johnson, Richard D.
Jauregui, Ruy
Card, Stuart D.
Methylobacterium, a major component of the culturable bacterial endophyte community of wild Brassica seed
title Methylobacterium, a major component of the culturable bacterial endophyte community of wild Brassica seed
title_full Methylobacterium, a major component of the culturable bacterial endophyte community of wild Brassica seed
title_fullStr Methylobacterium, a major component of the culturable bacterial endophyte community of wild Brassica seed
title_full_unstemmed Methylobacterium, a major component of the culturable bacterial endophyte community of wild Brassica seed
title_short Methylobacterium, a major component of the culturable bacterial endophyte community of wild Brassica seed
title_sort methylobacterium, a major component of the culturable bacterial endophyte community of wild brassica seed
topic Agricultural Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7357558/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32728495
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.9514
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