Foliar mycoendophytome of an endemic plant of the Mediterranean biome (Myrtus communis) reveals the dominance of basidiomycete woody saprotrophs

PeerJ. 2020 Dec 3:8:e10487. doi: 10.7717/peerj.10487. eCollection 2020.

Abstract

The true myrtle, Myrtus communis, is a small perennial evergreen tree that occurs in Europe, Africa, and Asia with a circum-Mediterranean geographic distribution. Unfortunately, the Mediterranean Forests, where M. communis occurs, are critically endangered and are currently restricted to small fragmented areas in protected conservation units. In the present work, we performed, for the first time, a metabarcoding study on the spatial variation of fungal community structure in the foliar endophytome of this endemic plant of the Mediterranean biome, using bipartite network analysis as a model. The local bipartite network of Myrtus communis individuals and their foliar endophytic fungi is very low connected, with low nestedness, and moderately high specialization and modularity. Similar network patterns were also retrieved in both culture-dependent and amplicon metagenomics of foliar endophytes in distinct arboreal hosts in varied biomes. Furthermore, the majority of putative fungal endophytes species were basidiomycete woody saprotrophs of the orders Polyporales, Agaricales, and Hymenochaetales. Altogether, these findings suggest a possible adaptation of these wood-decaying fungi to cope with moisture limitation and spatial scarcity of their primary substrate (dead wood), which are totally consistent with the predictions of the viaphytism hypothesis that wood-decomposing fungi inhabit the internal leaf tissue of forest trees in order to enhance dispersal to substrates on the forest floor, by using leaves as vectors and as refugia, during periods of environmental stress.

Keywords: Bipartite networks; Community structure; Fungal endophytes; Metabarcoding; Myrtle.

Grants and funding

Financial support for this study was provided by the Comissión Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnología (CICYT), project (AGL2008-00572). Aline Bruna Martins Vaz has received a scholarship from Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (2010—Processo no 2330-10-5/CAPES) and CNPq (Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico of Brazil). José Siles and Inmaculada Sampedro have received support from the JAE program, which was co-financed by the Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC) and the European Social Funds, for the concession of a predoctoral grant (JAE-Predoc) to José Siles and a postdoctoral research contract (JAE-Doc) to Inmaculada Sampedro. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.