The tiny drivers behind plant ecology and evolution

IF 2.4 2区 生物学 Q2 PLANT SCIENCES
Jennifer A. Lau, Lana G. Bolin
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Here we describe the outsized roles microbial communities may play in three fundamental areas of plant ecology and evolution: maternal effects, phenotypic plasticity, and natural selection. These three topic areas are not exhaustive, and microorganisms likely influence many more study areas in plant biology (e.g., plant coexistence [Bever et al., <span>1997</span>], the expression of genetic variation [O'Brien et al., <span>2019</span>], and perhaps even reproductive isolation and speciation as observed in insect systems [Tiffin et al., <span>2001</span>]). However, our goal is to demonstrate some of the potential consequences of ignoring these microscopic millions and to convince plant ecologists and evolutionary biologists that considering microbial effects in our experiments may improve our understanding of how things actually work in a natural world that is dominated not by plants and plant genes but by the microbes associating with them.</p><p>Maternal effects in plants have been recognized for over a century (Roach and Wulff, <span>1987</span>), and plants have been relying on maternally inherited microbial symbionts for plant defense, abiotic stress tolerance, and even the very basics of plant function (e.g., plant capture of microbial ancestors of chloroplasts) since their earliest origins (Sagan, <span>1967</span>). Yet, we are only now beginning to investigate the roles that diverse soil and foliar microbial communities play in promoting adaptive maternal environmental effects.</p><p>Maternal environmental effects result when the maternal environment influences offspring phenotype. Moms often do this by altering resource provisioning to offspring (e.g., seed mass) or altering the chemical composition or epigenetic profile of seeds (e.g., transmission of mRNA or proteins or DNA methylation). Because soil and foliar microbes affect plant growth and can mimic and alter plant signaling pathways, they may also affect maternal resource availability and/or alter chemical signals to offspring (Figure 1a). In this way, microbial communities may function much like any other environmental factor. However, microbial communities may be even more likely to cause maternal effects through additional mechanisms: Microbes can be transmitted from mom to offspring on the seed coat, and a diversity of microbes, beyond the well-studied examples of vertically transmitted endophytes, are found packaged inside seeds (Gundel et al., <span>2017</span>; Figure 1b).</p><p>These microbial hitchhikers on and within seeds may be the first microbes to interact with plants before and after germination. As such, they may determine early offspring growth and phenotypes that may set offspring up for success in particular environmental conditions. For example, <i>Erwinia</i> bacteria within seeds can alter plant interactions with nitrogen-fixing rhizobia in the soil (Handelsman and Brill, <span>1985</span>). What determines which microbes enter the seeds is still not fully understood, but one intriguing study showed that the maternal soil moisture and nutrient environment altered the microbial community packaged into soybean seeds (Bintarti et al., <span>2022</span>). If seed-transmitted microbes are commonly determined by the maternal growth environment and beneficial, then they may be just as important as the resources, proteins, and mRNAs already known to prepare plant offspring for their future fates. Seed microbes can also be paternally derived (via transmission during pollinations) (Abdelfattah et al., <span>2022</span>; Figure 1c), potentially producing harder to explain paternal effects that could extend past pre-zygotic life stages and affect offspring phenotypes. Going forward, determining the role of microbes may help explain when maternal environmental effects are most likely to be strong and persistent throughout the plant lifespan. For example, microbe-mediated maternal effects may be particularly long-lasting if seed transmitted microbial communities result in priority effects that yield persistent differences in rhizosphere community composition or interactions with key belowground mutualists.</p><p>Phenotypic plasticity is the ability to produce alternate phenotypes in response to differing environments (DeWitt and Scheiner, <span>2004</span>) (Figure 1d), and microbes can play a role in mediating plant plastic responses to changing environments (Figure 1e, f). For example, microbes have particularly strong effects on plant phenological plasticity (O'Brien et al., <span>2021</span>), potentially helping plants contend with drought stress and climate warming. While this strong influence of microbes on plant phenology may seem strange, theory suggests that the evolution of microbe-mediated phenological plasticity could be favored when microbes provide more reliable or more easily detected environmental cues than stress itself (Metcalf et al., <span>2019</span>).</p><p>Given that both microbes and other aspects of the environment can elicit plastic responses in plants, it can be challenging to differentiate between plastic responses to an environmental factor or the microbial communities present in that environment (Figure 1d vs. 1e, f). As a result, few studies have partitioned direct effects of environmental stress on plant plasticity from the indirect effects that result because that stressor also influences microbes. However, in one of our recent studies, we found that while direct plant plastic responses to herbivory, salt, and herbicide stress were commonly weak or maladaptive, plastic responses of plants to microbial communities from those same stressors were typically adaptive (Bolin, <span>2023</span>). In other words, soil microbes may prevent plants from responding incorrectly to an environmental signal.</p><p>Differentiating between microbial effects and other environmental effects is important for several reasons. First, if microbes are the operators relaying the message that a stress is imminent, then the strength and quality of that signal is likely to vary across space and time as microbial community compositions shift. Furthermore, when plants and their microbial canaries become decoupled, as might be expected under climate change, the fidelity of cues might be weakened just when plants need them most. Second, the plant traits detecting a microbial cue are likely to differ from those detecting an abiotic cue. As a result, the evolution of plasticity may involve fundamentally different traits and genes when the cue is provided by microbes compared to when plants are directly sensing the abiotic environment.</p><p>The role of microbes in plant plasticity, however, matters beyond just identifying the correct messenger. Given the strong effects of microbes on plant traits, including (or ignoring) microbes will likely alter conclusions in many areas of ecology. For example, microbes have the potential to affect metrics commonly measured in trait-based plant community ecology (e.g., community weighted means or functional diversity) via their effects on plant traits. These effects may then scale up to affect plant community or ecosystem processes, and perhaps niche differentiation and plant coexistence. Yet, these community and ecosystem effects ultimately will depend on whether microbial communities have consistent or divergent effects on the traits of different plant species comprising the community. Only multispecies studies of the effects of microbial communities on plants can determine which is the case, and those remain rare in the plant–microbe realm. For all these reasons, inoculation with coevolved microbial communities may be warranted in greenhouse and growth chamber studies measuring plant traits, plant–plant interactions, and community properties.</p><p>Natural selection drives the diversity of adaptations observed across the plant kingdom, yet the quest to identify the causes of natural selection has been challenging (MacColl, <span>2011</span>). However, recent studies have shown that microbes may often be a strong but cryptic force driving natural selection on plant populations. As with phenotypic plasticity, the environment drives natural selection, and microbes are part of that environment. Accordingly, it can be challenging to differentiate between microbial selective agents vs. the abiotic environment (Figure 1e, g vs. h). However, when we did just that by inoculating replicate plant populations with microbial communities that had developed under different environmental stressors, we found that microbial communities that had responded to stress rivaled the direct effects of stress on plant natural selection (Bolin and Lau, <span>2024</span>). In nearly all cases, these stress-adapted microbial communities exerted selection in the opposite direction of the stress itself, reducing the magnitude of predicted plant evolutionary response and potentially buffering plants from extreme swings in the strength of natural selection in temporarily varying environments. Microbes on other plant organs may similarly alter natural selection. For example, Rebolleda-Gómez and co-authors (<span>2019</span>) hypothesized that because microbial volatiles can mask floral cues, thereby altering pollinator behavior, they may change the intensity or even the direction of selection acting on floral traits.</p><p>Studies showing that microbial community composition and/or diversity can influence patterns of natural selection are accumulating (e.g., Lau and Lennon, <span>2011</span>; Wagner et al., <span>2014</span>; Chaney and Baucom, <span>2020</span>; Petipas et al., <span>2020</span>), but like many drivers of natural selection, we still do not know the relative strength of microbial selective agents compared to other abiotic or biotic stressors. And too few studies have been conducted to discern whether selection on plant traits resulting from microbial responses to the environment commonly opposes the selective effects of the abiotic environment or whether microbial community responses instead might complement or reinforce abiotic selective agents. Studies partitioning microbial responses to the environment and environmental effects as employed in our study described above (Bolin and Lau, <span>2024</span>) and recommended in past reviews (e.g., Petipas et al., <span>2021</span>) will be needed to answer this question.</p><p>Plants, like humans, live in a microbial world. These microbes can't be ignored because they play key, but unseen, roles in both plant ecology and evolution. As a result, we should include natural, coevolved microbial communities in our experiments, lest we are misled by their exclusion as might occur in uninoculated greenhouse or growth chamber experiments or in experimental plantings outside extant plant populations. We also must be aware that plant evolutionary trajectories and plastic responses to environmental stressors may be much more variable than anticipated because they may be determined in part by the underlying microbial community present, and these microbial communities can vary among sites. Ultimately, for plants the world might be more stressful when they go it alone. For plant ecologists and evolutionary biologists, life also might be more stressful because our experimental design decisions just got a lot tougher and more complex if we are to realistically incorporate these unseen players into our understanding of plant ecology and evolution.</p><p>J.A.L. and L.G.B. jointly brainstormed the ideas presented in this essay, wrote the initial essay draft, and edited the essay.</p>","PeriodicalId":7691,"journal":{"name":"American Journal of Botany","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":2.4000,"publicationDate":"2024-04-26","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/ajb2.16324","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"American Journal of Botany","FirstCategoryId":"99","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ajb2.16324","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"生物学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"PLANT SCIENCES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

Plants are the homes and hosts of a vast diversity of microbiota. These microbes help plants access nutrients, mimic plant hormones to alter plant traits, synthesize new compounds that help plants defend against enemies, and so much more. Their pervasiveness and power means that they also likely alter many of the phenomena long studied by plant ecologists and evolutionary biologists from plant coexistence to speciation. Ignoring microbes means that we may be under- or overestimating the magnitude of or misidentifying the proximal causes of several common outcomes in plant ecology and evolution. Yet, accounting for these cryptic copilots also is not easy because not only the presence of microbes, but also their community composition and evolutionary histories determine their effects. Here we describe the outsized roles microbial communities may play in three fundamental areas of plant ecology and evolution: maternal effects, phenotypic plasticity, and natural selection. These three topic areas are not exhaustive, and microorganisms likely influence many more study areas in plant biology (e.g., plant coexistence [Bever et al., 1997], the expression of genetic variation [O'Brien et al., 2019], and perhaps even reproductive isolation and speciation as observed in insect systems [Tiffin et al., 2001]). However, our goal is to demonstrate some of the potential consequences of ignoring these microscopic millions and to convince plant ecologists and evolutionary biologists that considering microbial effects in our experiments may improve our understanding of how things actually work in a natural world that is dominated not by plants and plant genes but by the microbes associating with them.

Maternal effects in plants have been recognized for over a century (Roach and Wulff, 1987), and plants have been relying on maternally inherited microbial symbionts for plant defense, abiotic stress tolerance, and even the very basics of plant function (e.g., plant capture of microbial ancestors of chloroplasts) since their earliest origins (Sagan, 1967). Yet, we are only now beginning to investigate the roles that diverse soil and foliar microbial communities play in promoting adaptive maternal environmental effects.

Maternal environmental effects result when the maternal environment influences offspring phenotype. Moms often do this by altering resource provisioning to offspring (e.g., seed mass) or altering the chemical composition or epigenetic profile of seeds (e.g., transmission of mRNA or proteins or DNA methylation). Because soil and foliar microbes affect plant growth and can mimic and alter plant signaling pathways, they may also affect maternal resource availability and/or alter chemical signals to offspring (Figure 1a). In this way, microbial communities may function much like any other environmental factor. However, microbial communities may be even more likely to cause maternal effects through additional mechanisms: Microbes can be transmitted from mom to offspring on the seed coat, and a diversity of microbes, beyond the well-studied examples of vertically transmitted endophytes, are found packaged inside seeds (Gundel et al., 2017; Figure 1b).

These microbial hitchhikers on and within seeds may be the first microbes to interact with plants before and after germination. As such, they may determine early offspring growth and phenotypes that may set offspring up for success in particular environmental conditions. For example, Erwinia bacteria within seeds can alter plant interactions with nitrogen-fixing rhizobia in the soil (Handelsman and Brill, 1985). What determines which microbes enter the seeds is still not fully understood, but one intriguing study showed that the maternal soil moisture and nutrient environment altered the microbial community packaged into soybean seeds (Bintarti et al., 2022). If seed-transmitted microbes are commonly determined by the maternal growth environment and beneficial, then they may be just as important as the resources, proteins, and mRNAs already known to prepare plant offspring for their future fates. Seed microbes can also be paternally derived (via transmission during pollinations) (Abdelfattah et al., 2022; Figure 1c), potentially producing harder to explain paternal effects that could extend past pre-zygotic life stages and affect offspring phenotypes. Going forward, determining the role of microbes may help explain when maternal environmental effects are most likely to be strong and persistent throughout the plant lifespan. For example, microbe-mediated maternal effects may be particularly long-lasting if seed transmitted microbial communities result in priority effects that yield persistent differences in rhizosphere community composition or interactions with key belowground mutualists.

Phenotypic plasticity is the ability to produce alternate phenotypes in response to differing environments (DeWitt and Scheiner, 2004) (Figure 1d), and microbes can play a role in mediating plant plastic responses to changing environments (Figure 1e, f). For example, microbes have particularly strong effects on plant phenological plasticity (O'Brien et al., 2021), potentially helping plants contend with drought stress and climate warming. While this strong influence of microbes on plant phenology may seem strange, theory suggests that the evolution of microbe-mediated phenological plasticity could be favored when microbes provide more reliable or more easily detected environmental cues than stress itself (Metcalf et al., 2019).

Given that both microbes and other aspects of the environment can elicit plastic responses in plants, it can be challenging to differentiate between plastic responses to an environmental factor or the microbial communities present in that environment (Figure 1d vs. 1e, f). As a result, few studies have partitioned direct effects of environmental stress on plant plasticity from the indirect effects that result because that stressor also influences microbes. However, in one of our recent studies, we found that while direct plant plastic responses to herbivory, salt, and herbicide stress were commonly weak or maladaptive, plastic responses of plants to microbial communities from those same stressors were typically adaptive (Bolin, 2023). In other words, soil microbes may prevent plants from responding incorrectly to an environmental signal.

Differentiating between microbial effects and other environmental effects is important for several reasons. First, if microbes are the operators relaying the message that a stress is imminent, then the strength and quality of that signal is likely to vary across space and time as microbial community compositions shift. Furthermore, when plants and their microbial canaries become decoupled, as might be expected under climate change, the fidelity of cues might be weakened just when plants need them most. Second, the plant traits detecting a microbial cue are likely to differ from those detecting an abiotic cue. As a result, the evolution of plasticity may involve fundamentally different traits and genes when the cue is provided by microbes compared to when plants are directly sensing the abiotic environment.

The role of microbes in plant plasticity, however, matters beyond just identifying the correct messenger. Given the strong effects of microbes on plant traits, including (or ignoring) microbes will likely alter conclusions in many areas of ecology. For example, microbes have the potential to affect metrics commonly measured in trait-based plant community ecology (e.g., community weighted means or functional diversity) via their effects on plant traits. These effects may then scale up to affect plant community or ecosystem processes, and perhaps niche differentiation and plant coexistence. Yet, these community and ecosystem effects ultimately will depend on whether microbial communities have consistent or divergent effects on the traits of different plant species comprising the community. Only multispecies studies of the effects of microbial communities on plants can determine which is the case, and those remain rare in the plant–microbe realm. For all these reasons, inoculation with coevolved microbial communities may be warranted in greenhouse and growth chamber studies measuring plant traits, plant–plant interactions, and community properties.

Natural selection drives the diversity of adaptations observed across the plant kingdom, yet the quest to identify the causes of natural selection has been challenging (MacColl, 2011). However, recent studies have shown that microbes may often be a strong but cryptic force driving natural selection on plant populations. As with phenotypic plasticity, the environment drives natural selection, and microbes are part of that environment. Accordingly, it can be challenging to differentiate between microbial selective agents vs. the abiotic environment (Figure 1e, g vs. h). However, when we did just that by inoculating replicate plant populations with microbial communities that had developed under different environmental stressors, we found that microbial communities that had responded to stress rivaled the direct effects of stress on plant natural selection (Bolin and Lau, 2024). In nearly all cases, these stress-adapted microbial communities exerted selection in the opposite direction of the stress itself, reducing the magnitude of predicted plant evolutionary response and potentially buffering plants from extreme swings in the strength of natural selection in temporarily varying environments. Microbes on other plant organs may similarly alter natural selection. For example, Rebolleda-Gómez and co-authors (2019) hypothesized that because microbial volatiles can mask floral cues, thereby altering pollinator behavior, they may change the intensity or even the direction of selection acting on floral traits.

Studies showing that microbial community composition and/or diversity can influence patterns of natural selection are accumulating (e.g., Lau and Lennon, 2011; Wagner et al., 2014; Chaney and Baucom, 2020; Petipas et al., 2020), but like many drivers of natural selection, we still do not know the relative strength of microbial selective agents compared to other abiotic or biotic stressors. And too few studies have been conducted to discern whether selection on plant traits resulting from microbial responses to the environment commonly opposes the selective effects of the abiotic environment or whether microbial community responses instead might complement or reinforce abiotic selective agents. Studies partitioning microbial responses to the environment and environmental effects as employed in our study described above (Bolin and Lau, 2024) and recommended in past reviews (e.g., Petipas et al., 2021) will be needed to answer this question.

Plants, like humans, live in a microbial world. These microbes can't be ignored because they play key, but unseen, roles in both plant ecology and evolution. As a result, we should include natural, coevolved microbial communities in our experiments, lest we are misled by their exclusion as might occur in uninoculated greenhouse or growth chamber experiments or in experimental plantings outside extant plant populations. We also must be aware that plant evolutionary trajectories and plastic responses to environmental stressors may be much more variable than anticipated because they may be determined in part by the underlying microbial community present, and these microbial communities can vary among sites. Ultimately, for plants the world might be more stressful when they go it alone. For plant ecologists and evolutionary biologists, life also might be more stressful because our experimental design decisions just got a lot tougher and more complex if we are to realistically incorporate these unseen players into our understanding of plant ecology and evolution.

J.A.L. and L.G.B. jointly brainstormed the ideas presented in this essay, wrote the initial essay draft, and edited the essay.

Abstract Image

植物生态和进化背后的微小驱动力
植物是种类繁多的微生物群的家园和宿主。这些微生物帮助植物获取养分,模仿植物激素改变植物性状,合成新的化合物帮助植物抵御敌人等等。它们的广泛存在和强大力量意味着,它们还可能改变植物生态学家和进化生物学家长期研究的许多现象,从植物共存到物种分化。忽视微生物意味着我们可能低估或高估了植物生态学和进化中一些常见结果的严重程度,或者错误地识别了这些结果的近因。然而,考虑这些隐蔽的合作者也并非易事,因为不仅是微生物的存在,它们的群落组成和进化历史也决定了它们的影响。在这里,我们描述了微生物群落在植物生态学和进化的三个基本领域可能发挥的巨大作用:母体效应、表型可塑性和自然选择。这三个主题领域并非详尽无遗,微生物可能会影响植物生物学的更多研究领域(例如,植物共生[Bever 等人,1997 年]、遗传变异的表达[O'Brien 等人,2019 年],甚至可能是昆虫系统中观察到的生殖隔离和物种分化[Tiffin 等人,2001 年])。然而,我们的目标是证明忽视这些微观百万分之一的潜在后果,并让植物生态学家和进化生物学家相信,在我们的实验中考虑微生物效应可能会提高我们对自然界中事物实际运作方式的理解。一个多世纪以来,人们已经认识到植物的母体效应(Roach 和 Wulff,1987 年),植物一直依赖母体遗传的微生物共生体来进行植物防御、非生物胁迫耐受性,甚至是植物的基本功能(例如:植物捕获微生物的祖先--藻类的藻类共生体)、萨根,1967 年)。然而,我们现在才开始研究多样化的土壤和叶面微生物群落在促进适应性母体环境效应中的作用。母体环境效应是指母体环境对后代表型的影响。母体通常通过改变后代的资源供给(如种子质量)或改变种子的化学成分或表观遗传特征(如 mRNA 或蛋白质或 DNA 甲基化的传递)来实现。由于土壤和叶面微生物会影响植物生长,并能模拟和改变植物信号通路,因此它们也可能会影响母体资源的可用性和/或改变后代的化学信号(图 1a)。因此,微生物群落的功能可能与其他环境因素非常相似。不过,微生物群落可能更有可能通过其他机制对母体产生影响:微生物可以通过种皮从母体传播给子代,除了研究得很清楚的垂直传播的内生菌外,在种子内部还发现了多种微生物(Gundel 等人,2017 年;图 1b)。因此,它们可能会决定后代的早期生长和表型,从而使后代在特定环境条件下获得成功。例如,种子中的 Erwinia 细菌可改变植物与土壤中固氮根瘤菌的相互作用(Handelsman 和 Brill,1985 年)。目前还不完全清楚是什么决定了哪些微生物进入种子,但一项有趣的研究表明,母体的土壤水分和养分环境改变了大豆种子中的微生物群落(Bintarti 等人,2022 年)。如果种子传播的微生物通常由母体生长环境决定并对母体有益,那么它们可能与已知的资源、蛋白质和 mRNA 一样重要,为植物后代未来的命运做好准备。种子微生物也可以由父本产生(通过授粉过程中的传播)(Abdelfattah 等人,2022 年;图 1c),可能会产生较难解释的父本效应,这种效应可能会延伸到合子前的生命阶段并影响后代的表型。展望未来,确定微生物的作用可能有助于解释母体环境效应何时最有可能在植物整个生命周期中产生强烈而持久的影响。例如,如果种子传播的微生物群落产生优先效应,导致根圈群落组成或与地下主要互生者的相互作用出现持续差异,那么微生物介导的母体效应可能会特别持久。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
American Journal of Botany
American Journal of Botany 生物-植物科学
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
6.70%
发文量
171
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Botany (AJB), the flagship journal of the Botanical Society of America (BSA), publishes peer-reviewed, innovative, significant research of interest to a wide audience of plant scientists in all areas of plant biology (structure, function, development, diversity, genetics, evolution, systematics), all levels of organization (molecular to ecosystem), and all plant groups and allied organisms (cyanobacteria, algae, fungi, and lichens). AJB requires authors to frame their research questions and discuss their results in terms of major questions of plant biology. In general, papers that are too narrowly focused, purely descriptive, natural history, broad surveys, or that contain only preliminary data will not be considered.
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