Multilevel analysis between Physcomitrium patens and Mortierellaceae endophytes explores potential long‐standing interaction among land plants and fungi

Author:

Mathieu Davis12,Bryson Abigail E.12,Hamberger Britta2,Singan Vasanth3,Keymanesh Keykhosrow3,Wang Mei3,Barry Kerrie3,Mondo Stephen345,Pangilinan Jasmyn3,Koriabine Maxim3,Grigoriev Igor V.36,Bonito Gregory17,Hamberger Björn12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Genetics and Genome Science Graduate Program Michigan State University East Lansing Michigan USA

2. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Michigan State University East Lansing Michigan USA

3. U.S. Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Berkeley California 94720 USA

4. Department of Agricultural Biology Colorado State University Fort Collins Colorado 80523 USA

5. Environmental Genomics and Systems Biology Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Berkeley California 94720 USA

6. Department of Plant and Microbial Biology University of California Berkeley Berkeley California 94720 USA

7. Department of Plant, Soil and Microbial Sciences Michigan State University East Lansing Michigan USA

Abstract

SUMMARYThe model moss species Physcomitrium patens has long been used for studying divergence of land plants spanning from bryophytes to angiosperms. In addition to its phylogenetic relationships, the limited number of differential tissues, and comparable morphology to the earliest embryophytes provide a system to represent basic plant architecture. Based on plant–fungal interactions today, it is hypothesized these kingdoms have a long‐standing relationship, predating plant terrestrialization. Mortierellaceae have origins diverging from other land fungi paralleling bryophyte divergence, are related to arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi but are free‐living, observed to interact with plants, and can be found in moss microbiomes globally. Due to their parallel origins, we assess here how two Mortierellaceae species, Linnemannia elongata and Benniella erionia, interact with P. patens in coculture. We also assess how Mollicute‐related or Burkholderia‐related endobacterial symbionts (MRE or BRE) of these fungi impact plant response. Coculture interactions are investigated through high‐throughput phenomics, microscopy, RNA‐sequencing, differential expression profiling, gene ontology enrichment, and comparisons among 99 other P. patens transcriptomic studies. Here we present new high‐throughput approaches for measuring P. patens growth, identify novel expression of over 800 genes that are not expressed on traditional agar media, identify subtle interactions between P. patens and Mortierellaceae, and observe changes to plant–fungal interactions dependent on whether MRE or BRE are present. Our study provides insights into how plants and fungal partners may have interacted based on their communications observed today as well as identifying L. elongata and B. erionia as modern fungal endophytes with P. patens.

Funder

AgBioResearch, Michigan State University

U.S. Department of Energy

Directorate for Biological Sciences

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Plant Science,Genetics

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