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Truffle Microbiome Is Driven by Fruit Body Compartmentalization Rather than Soils Conditioned by Different Host Trees

Dong Liu, Jesús Pérez‐Moreno, Xinhua He, Roberto Garibay‐Orijel, Fuqiang Yu

2021mSphere27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Currently, the factors that drive the microbiome associated with truffles, the most highly prized fungi in the world, are largely unknown. We demonstrate for the first time here that truffle microbiome composition is strongly driven by associated compartments rather than by symbiotic host trees. The truffle microbiome was bacteria dominated, and its bacterial community formed a substantially more complex (with the higher numbers of nodes, links, and modules) interacting network compared to that of the fungal community. Network analysis showed a higher number of positive microbial interactions with each other in truffle tissues than in both bulk soil and peridium-adhering soil. For the first time, the fungal community structure associated with truffles using high-throughput sequencing, microbial networks, and keystone species analyses is presented. This study provides novel insights into the factors that drive the truffle microbiome dynamics and the recruitment and function of the microbiome components, showing that they are more complex than previously thought.

Topics & Concepts

TruffleMicrobiomeHost (biology)Compartmentalization (fire protection)BiologyEcologyBotanyGeneticsBiochemistryEnzymeMycorrhizal Fungi and Plant InteractionsPlant Pathogens and Fungal DiseasesPlant and animal studies
Truffle Microbiome Is Driven by Fruit Body Compartmentalization Rather than Soils Conditioned by Different Host Trees | Litcius