Drought stress-mediated differences in phyllosphere microbiome and associated pathogen resistance between male and female poplars

Plant J. 2023 Aug;115(4):1100-1113. doi: 10.1111/tpj.16283. Epub 2023 Jul 5.

Abstract

Phyllosphere-associated microbes play a crucial role in plant-pathogen interactions while their composition and diversity are strongly influenced by drought stress. As dioecious plant species exhibited secondary dimorphism between the two sexes in response to drought stress, whether such difference will lead to sex-specific differences in phyllosphere microbiome and associated pathogen resistance between male and female conspecifics is still unknown. In this study, we subjected female and male full siblings of a dioecious poplar species to a short period of drought treatment followed by artificial infection of a leaf pathogenic fungus. Our results showed that male plants grew better than females with or without drought stress. Female control plants had more leaf lesion area than males after pathogen infection, whereas drought stress reversed such a difference. Further correlation and in vitro toxicity tests suggested that drought-mediated sexual differences in pathogen resistance between the two plant sexes could be attributed to the shifts in structure and function of phyllosphere-associated microbiome rather than the amount of leaf main defensive chemicals contained in plant leaves. Supportively, the microbiome analysis through high-throughput sequencing indicated that female phyllosphere enriched a higher abundance of ecologically beneficial microbes that serve as biological plant protectants, while males harbored abundant phytopathogens under drought-stressed conditions. The results could provide potential implications for the selection of suitable poplar sex to plants in drought or semi-drought habitats.

Keywords: Populus deltoides; dioecious plants; endophytes; epiphytes; pathogen resistance; plant-microbe interactions.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Droughts
  • Fungi
  • Microbiota*
  • Plant Leaves / physiology
  • Populus* / genetics