Metatranscriptomic dynamics after Verticillium dahliae infection and root damage in Olea europaea
Author
Arnau, Vicente
Martí, José Manuel
Arias Giraldo, Luis Felipe
Díaz Villanueva, Wladimiro
Arnau, Vicente
Rodríguez-Franco, Antonio
Garay, Carlos P.
Publisher
Springer NatureDate
2020Subject
Temporal metatranscriptomicsPolymicrobial infection
Verticillium wilt of olive
Olea europaea
Verticillium dahliae
Biotroph
Necrotroph
Hemibiotroph
Root damage
Endophytes
Rank dynamics
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Show full item recordAbstract
Background: The olive tree is of particular economic interest in the Mediterranean basin. Researchers have
conducted several studies on one of the most devastating disorders affecting this tree, the Verticillium wilt, which
causes substantial economic losses in numerous areas. We analyzed metatranscriptomic samples taken from a
previous study conducted on leaves and roots of Olea europaea that were infected with Verticillium dahliae. In
addition, we also analyzed mechanically damaged roots. The aim of our approach is to describe the dynamics of the
root microbiome after severe perturbations.
Results: Our results not only describe the dynamics of the microbial community associated with the disturbance, but
also show the high complexity of these systems and explain how this can lead to a conflicting assignment of the
various types of parasitism observed in a specific organism.
Conclusions: Our findings indicate that this infection, although led by Verticillium, is driven not by a single species,
but by a polymicrobial consortium that also includes natural endophytes of the olive tree. This community contains
both biotrophic and necrotrophic organisms that alternate and live together during the infection. In addition,
opportunistic organisms appear that take profit not from plant tissues, but from new emerging populations of
microorganisms. Therefore, this system can be described as a complex biological system composed of different
interacting communities. Notably, our work has important considerations when it comes to classifying the type of
parasitism of a given species.