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Manipulation of the seagrass-associated microbiome reduces disease severity.

Olivia J GrahamEmily M AdamczykSiobhan SchenkPhoebe DawkinsSamantha BurkeEmily CheiKaitlyn CiszSukanya DayalJack ElstnerArjun Lev Pillai HausnerTaylor HughesOmisha ManglaniMiles McDonaldChloe MiklesAnna PoslednikAudrey VintonLaura Wegener ParfreyC Drew Harvell
Published in: Environmental microbiology (2024)
Host-associated microbes influence host health and function and can be a first line of defence against infections. While research increasingly shows that terrestrial plant microbiomes contribute to bacterial, fungal, and oomycete disease resistance, no comparable experimental work has investigated marine plant microbiomes or more diverse disease agents. We test the hypothesis that the eelgrass (Zostera marina) leaf microbiome increases resistance to seagrass wasting disease. From field eelgrass with paired diseased and asymptomatic tissue, 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing revealed that bacterial composition and richness varied markedly between diseased and asymptomatic tissue in one of the two years. This suggests that the influence of disease on eelgrass microbial communities may vary with environmental conditions. We next experimentally reduced the eelgrass microbiome with antibiotics and bleach, then inoculated plants with Labyrinthula zosterae, the causative agent of wasting disease. We detected significantly higher disease severity in eelgrass with a native microbiome than an experimentally reduced microbiome. Our results over multiple experiments do not support a protective role of the eelgrass microbiome against L. zosterae. Further studies of these marine host-microbe-pathogen relationships may continue to show new relationships between plant microbiomes and diseases.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • gene expression
  • transcription factor
  • genome wide
  • climate change
  • mass spectrometry
  • single molecule