Litcius/Paper detail

Longitudinal transmission of bacterial and fungal communities from seed to seed in rice

Hyun Kim, Jongbum Jeon, Kiseok Keith Lee, Yong‐Hwan Lee

2022Communications Biology70 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Vertical transmission of microbes is crucial for the persistence of host-associated microbial communities. Although vertical transmission of seed microbes has been reported from diverse plants, ecological mechanisms and dynamics of microbial communities from parent to progeny remain scarce. Here we reveal the veiled ecological mechanism governing transmission of bacterial and fungal communities in rice across two consecutive seasons. We identify 29 bacterial and 34 fungal members transmitted across generations. Abundance-based regression models allow to classify colonization types of the microbes. We find that they are late colonizers dominating each community at the ripening stage. Ecological models further show that the observed temporal colonization patterns are affected by niche change and neutrality. Source-sink modeling reveals that parental seeds and stem endosphere are major origins of progeny seed microbial communities. This study gives empirical evidence for ecological mechanism and dynamics of bacterial and fungal communities as an ecological continuum during seed-to-seed transmission.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyColonizationEcologyTransmission (telecommunications)CommunityNicheEcosystemElectrical engineeringEngineeringMycorrhizal Fungi and Plant InteractionsGut microbiota and healthEvolution and Genetic Dynamics