' Ōhi ' a乐花(Metrosideros polymorpha)的根瘤菌群为植物-微生物-无脊椎动物在地下的相互作用提供了见解

Annette Engel, Mireille Steck, Audrey Paterson, Amir Van Gieson, Megan Porter, Rebecca Chong
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However, root physicochemistry and rhizobiome microbial diversity and functional potential have received little attention. This study focuses on characterizing the ‘ōhi‘a rhizobiome, accessed from free-hanging roots inside lava tubes. Using these results, we can begin to evaluate the development and evolution of plant-microbe-invertebrate relationships. We explored lava tubes formed in flows of differing elevations and ages, from about 140 to 3000 years old, on Mauna Loa, Kīlauea, and Hualālai volcanoes on Hawai‘i Island. Invertebrate diversity was evaluated from root galleries and non-root galleries, in situ fluid physicochemistry was measured, and root and bare rock fluids (e.g., water, sap) were collected to determine major ion concentrations, as well as non-purgeable organic carbon (NPOC) and total nitrogen (TN) content. To verify root identity, DNA was extracted, and three sets of primers were used. After screening for only Metrosideros spp., the V4 region of the 16S rRNA gene was sequenced and taxonomy was assigned. Root fluids were viscous and ranged in color from clear to yellow to reddish orange. Root fluids had 2X to 10X higher major ion concentrations compared to rock water. The average root NPOC and TN concentrations were 192 mg/L and 5.2 mg/L, respectively, compared to rock water that had concentrations of 6.8 mg/L and 1.8 mg/L, respectively. Fluids from almost 300 root samples had pH values that ranged from 2.2 to 5.6 (average pH 4.63) and were lower than rock water (average pH 6.39). Root fluid pH was comparable to soil pH from montane wet forests dominated by ‘ōhi‘a (Selmants et al. 2016), which can grow in infertile soil with pH values as low as 3.6. On Hawai‘i, rain water pH averages 5.2 at sea level and systematically decreases with elevation to pH 4.3 at 2500 m (Miller and Yoshinaga 2012), but root fluid pH did not correlate with elevation, temperature, relative humidity, inorganic and organic constituents, or age of flow. Root fluid acidity is likely due to concentrated organic compounds, sourced as root exudates, and this habitat is acidic for the associated invertebrates. From 62 root samples, over 66% were identified to the genus Metrosideros . A few other identifications of roots from lava tube systems where there had been extensive clear-cutting and ranching included monkey pod tree, coconut palm, Ficus spp., and silky oak. The 16S rRNA gene sequence surveys revealed that root bacterial communities were dominated by few groups, including Burkholderiaceae, as well as Acetobacteraceae, Sphingomonadaceae, Acidobacteriaceae, Gemmataceae, Xanthobacteraceae, and Chitinophagaceae. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

根是夏威夷岛上玄武岩熔岩管洞的共同特征。在过去的50年里,在不同的火山和不同的气候条件下,在熔岩管的根部斑块中发现了新的洞穴适应无脊椎动物物种,包括水栖飞虱、蟋蟀、丝腿虫和蜘蛛。评估熔岩管通道上方表面的植被,以及熔岩管内根系的遗传特征,表明大多数根系属于本地先锋树' ōhi ' a lehua (Metrosideros polymorpha)。飞虱是地下食物网底部汁液的主要消费者。然而,对根系物理化学和根瘤菌群微生物多样性和功能潜力的研究却很少受到重视。本研究的重点是表征“ōhi”根瘤菌群,从熔岩管内自由悬挂的根中获取。利用这些结果,我们可以开始评估植物-微生物-无脊椎动物关系的发展和进化。我们探索了在夏威夷岛的莫纳罗亚火山、kk lauea火山和Hualālai火山上形成的不同海拔和年龄的熔岩管,从大约140年到3000年不等。从根廊和非根廊评估无脊椎动物多样性,测量原位流体物理化学,收集根和裸岩流体(如水、树液)以确定主要离子浓度,以及不可净化有机碳(NPOC)和总氮(TN)含量。为了验证根的身份,提取DNA,使用三组引物。筛选到单株Metrosideros spp.后,对其16S rRNA基因V4区进行测序并进行分类。根液是粘稠的,颜色从透明到黄色到红橙色不等。根液的主要离子浓度比岩石水高2至10倍。与岩石水的平均NPOC和TN浓度分别为6.8 mg/L和1.8 mg/L相比,其根平均NPOC和TN浓度分别为192 mg/L和5.2 mg/L。来自近300个根系样本的液体的pH值在2.2到5.6之间(平均pH值4.63),低于岩水(平均pH值6.39)。根液pH值与以' ōhi ' a (Selmants et al. 2016)为主的山地湿润森林的土壤pH值相当,该森林可以在pH值低至3.6的贫瘠土壤中生长。在夏威夷,雨水的pH值在海平面上平均为5.2,在海拔2500米处随海拔高度系统地降低至pH值4.3 (Miller and Yoshinaga 2012),但根液pH值与海拔、温度、相对湿度、无机和有机成分或水流年龄无关。根液的酸性可能是由于根分泌物中浓缩的有机化合物,而这个栖息地对相关的无脊椎动物来说是酸性的。从62份根样中鉴定出66%以上的根属属。在大量砍伐和放牧的熔岩管系统中,还发现了一些其他的树根,包括猴荚树、椰子树、榕树和丝栎。16S rRNA基因序列调查显示,根菌群落以burkholderaceae、Acetobacteraceae、Sphingomonadaceae、acidobacteraceae、Gemmataceae、Xanthobacteraceae和Chitinophagaceae等少数类群为主。然而,大多数的reads不能归类到一个特定的属,这表明根瘤菌群具有新的多样性。湿润气候的多样性更高。根群落不同于先前在“ōhi”中描述的花朵和叶子(Junker and Keller 2015)以及熔岩管岩石表面(Hathaway et al. 2014),其中微生物群被特别假定能够异养、甲烷化、重氮化和硝化。尽管大多数分类群可能是需氧异养生物,但对根瘤菌群代谢的推断较少。在burkholderaceae中,与Paraburkholderia属相关的序列相对丰度较高,其中包括已知的植物共生体,以及来自Acetobacteraceae的嗜酸属Acidocella和Acidisoma,这些序列主要来自最古老的熔岩流洞穴中,这些洞穴也具有最低的根pH值。这些细菌群很可能能够降解渗出物,并为无脊椎动物提供营养基质,而这些营养基质不是单独由根液(即韧皮部)提供的。由于“ōhi”a的生物化学细节一直缺失,表征熔岩管中的根瘤菌群将有助于更好地了解植物-微生物-无脊椎动物的潜在相互作用以及随着时间的推移的生态和进化关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Rhizobiome of ‘Ōhi‘a Lehua (Metrosideros polymorpha) Offers Insight into Plant-Microbe-Invertebrate Interactions in the Subsurface
Roots are common features in basaltic lava tube caves on the island of Hawai‘i. For the past 50 years, new species of cave-adapted invertebrates, including cixiid planthoppers, crickets, thread-legged bugs, and spiders, have been discovered from root patches in lava tubes on different volcanoes and across variable climatic conditions. Assessing vegetation on the surface above lava tube passages, as well as genetic characterization of roots from within lava tubes, suggest that most roots belong to the native pioneer tree, ‘ōhi‘a lehua ( Metrosideros polymorpha ). Planthoppers are the primary consumers of sap at the base of the subsurface food web. However, root physicochemistry and rhizobiome microbial diversity and functional potential have received little attention. This study focuses on characterizing the ‘ōhi‘a rhizobiome, accessed from free-hanging roots inside lava tubes. Using these results, we can begin to evaluate the development and evolution of plant-microbe-invertebrate relationships. We explored lava tubes formed in flows of differing elevations and ages, from about 140 to 3000 years old, on Mauna Loa, Kīlauea, and Hualālai volcanoes on Hawai‘i Island. Invertebrate diversity was evaluated from root galleries and non-root galleries, in situ fluid physicochemistry was measured, and root and bare rock fluids (e.g., water, sap) were collected to determine major ion concentrations, as well as non-purgeable organic carbon (NPOC) and total nitrogen (TN) content. To verify root identity, DNA was extracted, and three sets of primers were used. After screening for only Metrosideros spp., the V4 region of the 16S rRNA gene was sequenced and taxonomy was assigned. Root fluids were viscous and ranged in color from clear to yellow to reddish orange. Root fluids had 2X to 10X higher major ion concentrations compared to rock water. The average root NPOC and TN concentrations were 192 mg/L and 5.2 mg/L, respectively, compared to rock water that had concentrations of 6.8 mg/L and 1.8 mg/L, respectively. Fluids from almost 300 root samples had pH values that ranged from 2.2 to 5.6 (average pH 4.63) and were lower than rock water (average pH 6.39). Root fluid pH was comparable to soil pH from montane wet forests dominated by ‘ōhi‘a (Selmants et al. 2016), which can grow in infertile soil with pH values as low as 3.6. On Hawai‘i, rain water pH averages 5.2 at sea level and systematically decreases with elevation to pH 4.3 at 2500 m (Miller and Yoshinaga 2012), but root fluid pH did not correlate with elevation, temperature, relative humidity, inorganic and organic constituents, or age of flow. Root fluid acidity is likely due to concentrated organic compounds, sourced as root exudates, and this habitat is acidic for the associated invertebrates. From 62 root samples, over 66% were identified to the genus Metrosideros . A few other identifications of roots from lava tube systems where there had been extensive clear-cutting and ranching included monkey pod tree, coconut palm, Ficus spp., and silky oak. The 16S rRNA gene sequence surveys revealed that root bacterial communities were dominated by few groups, including Burkholderiaceae, as well as Acetobacteraceae, Sphingomonadaceae, Acidobacteriaceae, Gemmataceae, Xanthobacteraceae, and Chitinophagaceae. However, most of the reads could not be classified to a specific genus, which suggested that the rhizobiome harbor novel diversity. Diversity was higher from wetter climates. The root communities were distinct from those described previously from ‘ōhi‘a flowers and leaves (Junker and Keller 2015) and lava tube rocky surfaces (Hathaway et al. 2014) where microbial groups were specifically presumed capable of heterotrophy, methanotrophy, diazotrophy, and nitrification. Less can be inferred for the rhizobiome metabolism, although most taxa are likely aerobic heterotrophs. Within the Burkholderiaceae, there were high relative abundances of sequences affiliated with the genus Paraburkholderia , which includes known plant symbionts, as well as the acidophilic genera Acidocella and Acidisoma from the Acetobacteraceae, which were retrieved predominately from caves in the oldest lava flows that also had the lowest root pH values. It is likely that the bacterial groups are capable of degrading exudates and providing nutritional substrates for invertebrate consumers that are not provided by root fluids (i.e., phloem) alone. As details about the biochemistry of ‘ōhi‘a have been missing, characterizing the rhizobiome from lava tubes will help to better understand potential plant-microbe-invertebrate interactions and ecological and evolutionary relationships through time. In particular, the microbial rhizobiome may produce compounds used by invertebrates nutritionally or that affect their behavior, and changes to the rhizobiome in response to environmental conditions may influence invertebrate interactions with the roots, which could be important to combat climate change effects or invasive species introductions.
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