Microorganisms (Aug 2022)

Genotype-Specific Plastic Responses to Seed Bacteria under Drought Stress in <i>Lactuca serriola</i>

  • Seorin Jeong,
  • Tae-Min Kim,
  • Byungwook Choi,
  • Yousuk Kim,
  • Hwan Kim,
  • Eunsuk Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms10081604
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 8
p. 1604

Abstract

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Recent studies have demonstrated that seed-borne bacteria can enhance the performance of invasive plants in novel introduced habitats with environmental stresses. The effect of this plant-bacteria interaction may vary with plant species or even genotype; however, the genotype-dependent effects of seed bacteria have rarely been assessed. In this study, we examined the effects of bacterial strains isolated from seeds on the genotypes of an invasive xerophytic plant, Lactuca serriola. Plant genotypes were grown under drought conditions, and their plastic responses to bacterial infections were evaluated. Some genotypes produced more biomass, whereas others produced less biomass in response to infection with the same bacterial strain. Notably, the quantity of root-adhering soil depended on the bacterial treatment and plant genotypes and was positively correlated with the plastic responses of plant performance. Because tested bacteria could colonize the plant rhizosphere, bacterial infection appears to induce the differential formation of soil rhizosheaths among plant genotypes, consequently affecting the maintenance of soil water content under drought conditions. Given that drought tolerance is a critical attribute for the invasive success of L. serriola, these results imply that bacterial symbionts can facilitate the establishment of alien plant species, but their effects are likely genotype-specific.

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